In a packed airplane hangar at the Bowling Green-Warren County Regional Airport, Senator Rand Paul addresses a crowd of over 100 people in his hometown of Bowling Green on Monday.

"It's good to be home," says Paul.

Bowling Green was the last stop of the day for the Paul campaign tour or Kentucky.

Other state officials were there as well to reassure their faith in Senator Paul.

"He's always had bedrock beliefs in what makes this country great," says Rep. Brett Guthrie of Kentucky's second district.

Kentucky Republicans are looking to make history tomorrow.

"This is going to be the first time in in history of the Commonwealth of Kentucky that Republicans have held the state house, the state senate, and the governor's mansion," says Michael Lee Meredith, representative from Kentucky's 19th district.

Senator Paul says the other side of the aisle isn't doing what is right for the country.

"These people believe that they know best. They think that centralized control, they think you heap all the power in Washington, that somehow that'll be better," he says. "The one thing that our founding fathers understood was that power is a corrupting influence, that we don't want too much power centralized in Washington, we don't want too much power centralized in the hands of one person."

Paul says he is all about protecting the liberties provided by the constitution of the United States of America:

"The constitution was never about restraining you. It was about restraining your government. My hope is that the next generation will understand that and we will join together tomorrow to fight for liberty, the constitution and prosperity for this great nation."