The Myth of Ted Cruz’s Principles

 

flip_flopsThe conservative movement is clearly in a severe, anti-establishment mood. Its origins are easily diagnosed, if not easily treated. It evolved out of the George W. Bush presidency, viewed as a failure by many on the right. After squandering two years of one-party Republican rule in Washington by expanding entitlements and failing to address the long-term drivers of our debt, the groundwork was laid for a new batch of conservatives who would move the party further to the right and put principles ahead of their own quest for power and influence.

So the story goes like this: A group of Washington elites have no desire to move the country’s laws in a conservative direction. Instead, they’re going along and getting along while grasping for ever-more authority. In this version of reality, the Republican leadership, not the Democrats and the majority of the country who voted for them, are responsible for the leftward drift of government institutions.

You might be tempted to mock this view, but there’s strong evidence that indeed, a cunning and ruthless Washington elite uses conservatives for their electoral support — with no intention of pursuing conservatives’ goals. Namely, we have a particular political opportunist, forged in the very cradle of the establishment, who has managed to convince nearly the entirety of the base that he’s the most principled conservative in office.

How can I make such a claim about conservative darling Ted Cruz? I read his book.

The story of Ted Cruz does not begin with his 2012 Senate run. He’s best understood by his time working for the George W. Bush campaign in 2000. He labored tirelessly to become part of the very establishment he would later criticize. In an interview with a Princeton alumni publication in 2000, Cruz said:

“One of the reasons I was so eager to help Bush is the way he has described himself, as a compassionate conservative. That’s how I have always conceived of my own political views.”

Cruz was a very conventional Republican who backed his party, held many moderate positions, and eagerly sought ways to clamber up the ladder of government. In 2004, Cruz contributed to a book titled Reflections on the War on Terror, Defense of the Family, and Revival of the Economy. While many on the right were criticizing Bush for ramping up deficit spending without addressing the long-term drivers of our debt, Cruz wrote that those concerns were overstated. He supported the No Child Left Behind Act, and wrote the following gem:

As President Bush put it in the 2000 campaign, when voters hear “Abolish the Department of Education,” a lot of voters just hear “Abolish Education” and back away.”

Cruz used the same language as Bush on the subject of immigrants: “Americans by choice.” In 2000, he wrote a five-page memo for the campaign urging Bush to secure the border, but show compassion:

“But, at the same time, we need to remember that many of those coming here are coming to feed their families, to have a chance at a better life.”

It can be disorienting the first time you discover just how conventional a politician Cruz is.  In a high school bio, Cruz’s plan and ambition are made clear:

Upon graduation Ted hopes to attend Princeton University and major in Political Science and Economics. From there he wants to attend law school (possibly Harvard) and achieve a successful law practice. He then wants to pursue his real goal – a career in politics. Ted would like to run for various political offices and eventually achieve a strong enough reputation and track record to run for – and win – President of the United States.

Criticizing politicians for ambition can be self-defeating. No good conservative should want that much power, but if no good conservatives seek power, our ideals go unrepresented in government. Reality requires us to tolerate a certain level of ambition from our representatives. Yet even by Washington insider standards, Cruz’s ambition was off-putting.

In his book, A Time for Self-Promotion Truth, Cruz said being passed over for a senior position in the Bush White House after working for the campaign was “a crushing blow.” Cruz was angling for a spot in the White House Counsel’s office under Bush the younger.  When offered a lower position that he’d hoped, Cruz walked away. Former White House spokesman Ari Fleisher (one of the few members of the Bush team who says he likes Cruz) explained the situation:

Ted’s bosses were very put off by him and by how ambitious he was. And that’s why Ted got basically put in an agency very far from the White House during the transition.

Between a cantankerous personality and an ambition so palpable as to scare men who do little but deal with ambition, Cruz found himself outside the GOP establishment. Not outside of it by choice, or because of ideological distance, but because few who dealt with Ted Cruz liked Ted Cruz.

With the insider track to power now closed off, Cruz needed a different path. Conveniently, his exclusion from any position of relevance in the Bush administration turned out to be a boon. As dissatisfaction with the Republican Party and the “establishment” grew, Cruz had an avenue into national government. It merely required him to overhaul his principles.

There is of course nothing inherently wrong with changing one’s views over time. Many life experiences can cause a change of heart and mind. Few will openly admit their transition was prompted by a poll. Ted Cruz is among their ranks.

In A Time for Naked Opportunism Truth, Cruz openly explains his political transition to the hard-right. While exploring the possibility of a Senate run in 2012, Cruz commissioned polls to judge the likelihood of his success and the mood of the electorate:

In our first benchmark poll, we asked a series of questions to assess where I stood compared to Dewhurst. One of those questions would become famous internally in our campaign: Question 10. It asked voters if they would be more or less likely to support me if they knew that “Ted Cruz understands that politicians from both parties have let us down. Cruz is a proven conservative we can trust to provide new leadership in the Senate to reduce the size of government and defend the Constitution.”

Those sentences polled over 80 percent among Republicans in Texas, and were liked by a majority of independents. So was born the Ted Cruz we know today. The man who once laughed off efforts to abolish the Department of Education would come to call for its abolition — not because he had any change of heart, but because it was the way to raise money and win in Texas.

Understanding this helps us make sense of some of the bizarre policy proposals and strategies Cruz has offered over the years. His ambition, and his need to set himself to the right of everyone in politics, help to explain his tenuous relationship with the truth.

Mike Lee joins Cruz in having a perfect 100-percent conservative voting record from Heritage action. The two are often painted as allies in the Senate, true believers acting as a thorn in the side of the RINOs. One can imagine Lee’s shock back in October when he presented a criminal justice reform bill to the judiciary committee, only to have Ted Cruz lie about its contents and impact.

Cruz claimed the bill would lead to 7,000 prisoners being released. He repeatedly referred to violent criminals being let out on the street. Since Cruz graduated from Harvard Law School and argued cases in front of the Supreme Court, we must conclude he can read. Of the two categories of criminals that would have been affected by the bill and might have conceivably gone on to be violent offenders, there were only 3,433 inmates. Of these, many had committed no violent crime, and all faced a review process before their sentences would be reduced. Some violent offences even had their mandatory minimums increased by the law. These facts are readily ascertained when you dig into the issue.

In response, Lee made changes to the bill that would close off these two categories if any potential violent offenders might be released, leaving Cruz no legitimate grievance. Cruz remains opposed to the bill. Ironically, Cruz supported the bill a year ago, when it was significantly more lenient than the current incarnations.

Mike Lee learned the hard way that if Ted Cruz cannot position himself to your right because there is no space there, he will invent it.

Lee is not the only member of the new generation of stalwart conservatives to discover Cruz will lie and shift positions to enhance his own image at the expense of theirs.

In his book, A Time for Talking out of my Rear Truth, Cruz wrote that Rand Paul (90 percent Conservative Action score) let him down on Obamacare when he spoke for a few minutes during Cruz’s 21-hour faux filibuster during the 2013 government shutdown.  He said that Paul seemed intent on bolstering the GOP leadership’s attacks to undermine Cruz’s efforts. “I marveled that Rand had decided not to be with us in this fight.”

Cruz described the anger he and Mike Lee felt when Paul suggested there would have to be compromise to make Obamacare less bad. The trouble for Cruz is that we live in the 21st century, and transcripts of these exchanges exist. There was not an ounce of hostility when Paul and Cruz had their exchange on the Senate floor. The two repeatedly praised each other, and Cruz even said “The question Sen. Rand Paul asked was an excellent question.”

Paul further pointed out that Cruz sent Rand a lovely letter thanking him for his help during the shutdown. Cruz’s book paints a picture of Rand Paul that’s 180 degrees at odds with his own statements about Paul’s efforts at the time. In a recurring theme, we must ask ourselves: Which Ted Cruz was lying?

Was Ted Cruz lying when he repeatedly stated in interviews that he supported the Gang of Eight bill and its amnesty, or is Ted Cruz now lying now when he claims it was a poison pill and he was lying in interview after interview when he said he supported it? It’s a strange poison pill that makes a patient healthier, which Cruz acknowledged his amendment did at the time. (Though to be fair to Cruz, he claims he was lying.)

And a second point to those advocacy groups that are so passionately engaged. In my view if this committee rejects this amendment — and I think everyone here views it as quite likely this committee will choose to reject this amendment —  in my view that decision will make it much much more likely that this entire bill will fail in the House of Representatives. [Emphasis added.] I don’t want immigration reform to fail. I want immigration reform to pass. And so I would urge people of good faith on both sides of the aisle if the objective is to pass common sense immigration reform that secures the borders, that improves legal immigration and that allows those who are here illegally to come in out of the shadows, then we should look for areas of bipartisan agreement and compromise to come together. And this amendment, I believe if this amendment were to pass, the chances of this bill passing into law would increase dramatically. And so I would urge the committee to give it full consideration and to adopt the amendment.

We certainly know Cruz supported amnesty during his time on the Bush campaign. This means his repeated claims during the debates that he never supported legalization do not fly, even if you grant his “I was lying” defense on the Gang of Eight. Which is more likely, that Ted Cruz was always, secretly, a principled immigration hawk despite a mountain of evidence to the contrary, or that he saw an opportunity to position himself to the right of Marco Rubio (94 percent Heritage action rating) and seized the opportunity?

Every time Cruz attacks his fellow Republicans (generally for holding positions that he himself held shortly before), his profile rises among the base, and his fundraising explodes.  Following the shutdown, Cruz’s fundraising doubled from the previous quarter. As Cruz burns his party around him, no new one rises to take its place. His most frequent targets aren’t the moderates of the party, but the true conservatives. As long as Ted Cruz is the only voice in the wilderness fighting the government Leviathan, then only Ted Cruz can be trusted by the base, and only Ted Cruz is worthy of donations and support. Mike Lee was unable to turn his joint support for the shutdown into almost any fundraising. You are either Ted Cruz, or you are the problem in Washington.

How Cruz intends to make any lasting changes in government when his actions so frequently damage the allies he need to enact such change is only an interesting question if you believe that Ted Cruz is acting out of principle, not opportunism in pursuit of the presidency.

Cruz’s sudden conversion to the right-most possible position of any given issue is not seamless. He often miscalibrates, or abandons conservatism entirely to support the more popular position.

When the Trans Pacific Partnership came into focus, many on the right doubted that Barack Obama could share an ideal with them and began to wonder what secrets had been buried in the deal. In reality, every president since perhaps Hoover has taken steps to enlarge free trade. Democratic and Republican administrations alike have always improved our economy by pursuing trade deals with an ever-larger group of countries.

Conservative populists eventually began to speak out against the deal, some out of distrust for Obama, others out of a misguided belief that protectionism helps American workers more than it hurts them. Cruz was naturally there to bend on principle and seize the opportunity. His current stance is that he opposes the deal as it contains secret immigration provisions. Again, we must conclude from Cruz’s legal career that he can read, and therefore know that he is lying. The text of the TPP is readily available. It is based on numerous existing trade deals that the United States already has in place.

A principled conservative would support free trade even when it is unpopular with his base.

Cruz’s position on taxes is even more bizarre. He wishes to abolish the IRS, and repeats this mantra at every campaign stop and every debate where he has the opportunity. Abolishing the IRS is not impossible. The Fair Tax proposal contains a plausible plan for no longer requiring a federal tax collection agency. A national sales tax that replaces all other taxes and uses existing state sales tax collection agencies could plausibly exist without an IRS. If only Cruz had simply copied and pasted this plan as his own.

Cruz has proposed a value-added tax, famous for making taxpaying enormously more complex for corporations and making the tax burden invisible to those who pay it. Aside from the obvious complaints — such a tax will not replace an income tax, but will end up existing alongside it, as in Europe — the complexity of a VAT would almost assuredly require an IRS as large as it is today or larger.

When pressed on this question, Cruz has acknowledged that there will still be an agency that handles tax responsibilities. This reduces Cruz’s promise to one of renaming the agency. This has not stopped Cruz from repeating his abolish-the-IRS mantra to his loyal fan base, who love the way Cruz lies to them.

Ted Cruz is playing a character for an audience of conservatives who feel betrayed by the George W. Bush Administration. There was a time when I overlooked his incessant lying and self-promotion, because his commitment to the role made him a useful vote in the Senate. But you have to wonder how committed he’ll be to the part when Question 10 of his poll is put before the general electorate. It will respond differently from the Texas electorate. Will he flip as quickly as he did to protectionism? If not, will he continue to fundraise by tearing down the people he’ll need as allies if he’s to do things like repeal Obamacare?

We can confidently say that Ted Cruz is driven by ambition, not principle. One might reply that this is true of all politicians. Perhaps, but when did the argument for Ted Cruz become that he is no worse than other politicians? Why should we get into the tank for a political opportunist only because he trashes other political opportunists?

We despise every other politician for talking a good game but failing to get anything done. Why would we exempt Ted Cruz?

Published in Elections, General, Politics
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  1. RightAngles Member
    RightAngles
    @RightAngles

    How Cruz intends to make any lasting changes in government when his actions so frequently damage the allies he need to enact such change is only an interesting question if you believe that Ted Cruz is acting out of principle, not opportunism in pursuit of the presidency.

    The above is my main fear should he even win, which I don’t think he can. Your strikethrough book titles are hilarious! As many of you know, I live in Texas and didn’t vote for Cruz for senate because I disliked him on sight and I dislike him more every day. I loved your post and wish you’d written it months ago and that it had been picked up by the press. Even if the true believers discount it, as we’ve seen in the comments here, it might have done some good toward stopping this repulsive slimeball.

    Having said that, if he is our nominee I will vote for him and support him. Nobody is slimier than Hillary or anyone they might put up in her place.

    • #31
  2. James Madison Member
    James Madison
    @JamesMadison

    Frank Soto does it again. I still refer back to his post regarding the Second Amendment and Christianity. If you haven’t read it, look it Frank and find it…

    Frank Soto does his homework, checks his facts and tells a tale that holds one deeply entranced. He is unfortunately correct.

    Cruz is a creation of Cruz. He grew up in a home headed by a father who was a recreation of himself as an evangelical preacher. The ability to sell oneself as something new or different rises to an art form with some preachers – call it the high holies of tent preachery. Ted Cruz watched and observed.

    He is gifted, but in a way that never rings quite true. If I could, I would put him on the Supreme Court as a safe vote, and then borrow Justice Thomas’ roll of duct tape to keep Cruz’s mouth shut. We want his Supreme Court vote, not his smarmy opinion.

    • #32
  3. genferei Member
    genferei
    @genferei

    Claire Berlinski, Ed.:

    genferei: everyone knew the GOP had a once-in-several-generations bench depth,

    Talk about pride going before a fall, eh?

    Well, quite. Let us not forget that each and every one of the folks now confidently predicting what will happen, what voters think, and who will appeal to the electorate has been spectacularly wrong about almost everything that matters in the last 9 months.

    • #33
  4. katievs Inactive
    katievs
    @katievs

    So much of the worst being said about Cruz seems to me a matter of interpretation.

    Someone yesterday called him a slime ball for competing in FL. Someone else called him “disgusting” because one of his campaign staff tweeted out the CNN story about a Rubio adviser urging him to drop out in FL. Both seem to me ridiculous—over-the-top sour grapes.

    In politics “principled” doesn’t mean eschewing strategy or ambition or maneuvering. It means having the chops to stand your ground in the face of pressure to cave; it means being more committed to certain fundamentals (such as the Constitution, the rule of law, promises to constituents, etc.) than to winning.

    In my judgement, Cruz has proven better about all that than Rubio.

    The Republicans hating on him these days seem to me rather circular in their arguments—viz. they assume he’s a phony and a liar, and therefore judge everything he says and does as evidence of his nefariousness.

    I’m not buying it. I can’t believe that the likes of Greg Abbott and Jay Nordlinger and Andrew McCarthy and David Limbaugh would speak so highly of someone so low.

    • #34
  5. katievs Inactive
    katievs
    @katievs

    None of which is to say I imagine he’s the savior. I just think he’s the best option we have right now, and one who may actually turn out to be pretty darn good. Better than we could have hoped or expected, in terms of both electability and governing.

    • #35
  6. Mate De Inactive
    Mate De
    @MateDe

    James Madison:Cruz is a creation of Cruz. He grew up in a home headed by a father who was a recreation of himself as an evangelical preacher. The ability to sell oneself as something new or different rises to an art form with some preachers – call it the high holies of tent preachery. Ted Cruz watched and observed.

    Um, I am not sure what you mean that “Cruz is creation of Cruz”. I mean who isn’t? And his dad was a preacher…….. so? Is there evidence that his father is a fraud or something?  I really don’t understand the criticism.

    • #36
  7. PHCheese Inactive
    PHCheese
    @PHCheese

    You want to be liked in Washington get a dog. I forget who said it.

    • #37
  8. genferei Member
    genferei
    @genferei

    PHCheese: You want to be liked in Washington get a dog. I forget who said it.

    Harry Truman, so they say.

    • #38
  9. Columbo Inactive
    Columbo
    @Columbo

    katievs:So much of the worst being said about Cruz seems to me a matter of interpretation.

    Someone yesterday called him a slime ball for competing in FL. Someone else called him “disgusting” because one of his campaign staffed tweeted out the CNN story about a Rubio adviser urging him to drop out in FL. Both seem to me ridiculous—over-the-top sour grapes.

    In politics “principled” doesn’t mean eschewing strategy or ambition or or maneuvering. It means having the chops to stand your ground in the face of pressure; it means being more committed to certain fundamentals (such as the Constitution, the rule of law, promises to constituents, etc.) than about winning.

    In my judgement, Cruz has proven better about all that than Rubio.

    The Republicans hating on him these days seem to me rather circular in their arguments—viz. they assume he’s a phony and a liar, and therefore judge everything he says and does as evidence of his nefariousness.

    I’m not buying it. I can’t believe that the likes of Greg Abbott and Jay Nordlinger and Andrew McCarthy and David Limbaugh would speak so highly of someone so low.

    THIS.

    • #39
  10. Frank Soto Member
    Frank Soto
    @FrankSoto

    Fake John/Jane Galt:Nice hit piece. When did you start doing oppos?

    You’ve met me.  Do you think I wrote something I didn’t believe?

    • #40
  11. Frank Soto Member
    Frank Soto
    @FrankSoto

    Mate De: good piece, Could have done without the blatent snarkiness that shows your cards that you have nothing but disdain for the man. If the goal was to change Cruz supporters minds I think because of the snarkiness this will not work, hadn’t for me. remember you catch more flies with honey rather than vinegar.

    Disdain grows when a man is as untruthful as Cruz.  The post was written when I reached the point where I simply could not stomach anymore of his lies.

    • #41
  12. The King Prawn Inactive
    The King Prawn
    @TheKingPrawn

    Caveat emptor — for all of them. We only do ourselves a disservice if we refuse to honestly evaluate those who seek the presidency. What makes each candidate’s supporters annoying to supporters of another is their inability or unwillingness to honestly confront the negative aspects of their chosen man.

    Tuck: There’s no savior coming in American politics.

    Just so. We face apolitical problems that cannot be solved by political solutions, government, government programs, and especially not by messianic politicians. Snake oil still cannot cure what ails you.

    • #42
  13. dittoheadadt Inactive
    dittoheadadt
    @dittoheadadt

    Funny, both Marco’s and Ted’s candidacies were questioned here in Ricochet not long ago, in the context of “Why either of them rather than Carly Fiorina?”

    Seems the question is more relevant now than ever.

    Man, did America ever miss a golden opportunity in not getting behind Carly, or what?  We’re going to regret it for a long time to come, IMO.

    • #43
  14. Western Chauvinist Member
    Western Chauvinist
    @WesternChauvinist

    SPOILER ALERT:

    Dearest Frank, I will henceforth and forever think of you as Lady Edith Crawley, Marchioness of Hexham — Truth Teller.

    But, really, did you have to stand on the ramparts of Brancaster Castle and shout about the lovechild you’ve brought into the marriage? Some things are best kept in the family.

    • #44
  15. Frank Soto Member
    Frank Soto
    @FrankSoto

    Midget Faded Rattlesnake:

    Frank Soto:There was a time when I overlooked his incessant lying and self-promotion, because his commitment to the role made him a useful vote in the Senate.

    Well, that time seemed more recent than that. I think of you as too honest to write a post like this otherwise if you already knew.

    Midge,

    As I wrote in the comments of that post, I prefer to judge candidates on their voting records, as getting into motivations gets messy.  Cruz simply won’t allow me to do it.  His followers tend to view him as the only real conservative, while he is tearing down other more effective ones.

    I have mostly bit my tongue over Cruz’s lies, as I expect lies from politicians.  He has exceeded my limit.

    • #45
  16. Mate De Inactive
    Mate De
    @MateDe

    Frank Soto:

    Mate De: good piece, Could have done without the blatent snarkiness that shows your cards that you have nothing but disdain for the man. If the goal was to change Cruz supporters minds I think because of the snarkiness this will not work, hadn’t for me. remember you catch more flies with honey rather than vinegar.

    Disdain grows when a man is as untruthful as Cruz. The post was written when I reached the point where I simply could not stomach anymore of his lies.

    You know I could say the same thing about Rubio. We all have to fight our confirmation bias, everything in the post could be put on any politician, including Rubio. Who lost me when he said that he was willing to lose an election rather then be wrong on life, sure great words but his actions did not reflect that. He was unwilling to shut down the government to deny funding to Planned Parenthood. When it came down to it, not so willing to lose the election then be wrong on life. But some are going to have to swallow that bitter pill, if we want to save our Republic from the left, who is the real enemy.

    • #46
  17. Ed G. Member
    Ed G.
    @EdG

    katievs:So much of the worst being said about Cruz seems to me a matter of interpretation.

    […..]

    Yes, that seems to be going around this cycle. And just about everybody seems to be interpreting with such bias as to render the interpretations incomplete at best.

    • #47
  18. Matt Upton Inactive
    Matt Upton
    @MattUpton

    Useful post, even (or especially) for a Cruz supporter like myself. It prevents any illusions of a political messiah.

    • #48
  19. Mate De Inactive
    Mate De
    @MateDe

    dittoheadadt:Funny, both Marco’s and Ted’s candidacies were questioned here in Ricochet not long ago, in the context of “Why either of them rather than Carly Fiorina?”

    Seems the question is more relevant now than ever.

    Man, did America ever miss a golden opportunity in not getting behind Carly, or what? We’re going to regret it for a long time to come, IMO.

    Not sure, Carly’s campaign never really got off the ground. I’m sure folks would have dug up dirt on her that would make her unsuitable. Although I really did like her. I wish she got more play in the election.

    • #49
  20. Ed G. Member
    Ed G.
    @EdG

    Mate De:

    James Madison:Cruz is a creation of Cruz. He grew up in a home headed by a father who was a recreation of himself as an evangelical preacher. The ability to sell oneself as something new or different rises to an art form with some preachers – call it the high holies of tent preachery. Ted Cruz watched and observed.

    Um, I am not sure what you mean that “Cruz is creation of Cruz”. I mean who isn’t? And his dad was a preacher…….. so? Is there evidence that his father is a fraud or something? I really don’t understand the criticism.

    Apparently Cruz is the Great Gatsby, come from nothing and disappearing back into nothing just as quickly and without fanfare.

    I guess that makes Trump the Tom Buchanan.

    • #50
  21. Whiskey Sam Inactive
    Whiskey Sam
    @WhiskeySam

    My God, Cruz is a politican?!  I am shocked!  Does anyone else know about this?  What’s next, you’re going to tell me Rubio isn’t honest about the Gang of 8?  Trump isn’t a Republican?

    • #51
  22. Frank Soto Member
    Frank Soto
    @FrankSoto

    Whiskey Sam:My God, Cruz is a politican?! I am shocked! Does anyone else know about this? What’s next, you’re going to tell me Rubio isn’t honest about the Gang of 8? Trump isn’t a Republican?

    From Dave’s post yesterday.

    Rather than a candidate who has only recently begun espousing conservative positions (and even then, haphazardly and without any foundational understanding), or a candidate who spoke of conservative principles with respect to immigration but was immediately beguiled by the instruments of accommodation near in DC, it’s time to embrace the principles of America’s founding and take advantage of that rarest of opportunities: The chance to elect as president the first genuine constitutional conservative to come along in over 30 years.

    You may have not be under any illusions about Cruz’s principles being of questionable usefulness, but plenty are.

    • #52
  23. Aaron Miller Inactive
    Aaron Miller
    @AaronMiller

    Aside from the customary snark, this is an informative and well written article. Months ago, it would have prompted a useful discussion in which the context of every point could have been debated. Today, it is an idle complaint.

    Unless I’m mistaken, the only way Rubio can now win the nomination is if he is elected by convention delegates in defiance of the popular vote. So arguments to his benefit are now wasted on us.

    We don’t elect Presidents to legislate. We elect them to stamp legislation according to the brand they advertised (not always equal to personal beliefs), to face foreign threats, and to employ the bully pulpit to inspirational effect. Which candidate is clear about America’s and conservatism’s enemies? Which candidate promotes an ideal of limited government?

    • #53
  24. Western Chauvinist Member
    Western Chauvinist
    @WesternChauvinist

    Frank Soto:

    Whiskey Sam:My God, Cruz is a politican?! I am shocked! Does anyone else know about this? What’s next, you’re going to tell me Rubio isn’t honest about the Gang of 8? Trump isn’t a Republican?

    Dave’s post yesterday.

    Rather than a candidate who has only recently begun espousing conservative positions (and even then, haphazardly and without any foundational understanding), or a candidate who spoke of conservative principles with respect to immigration but was immediately beguiled by the instruments of accommodation near in DC, it’s time to embrace the principles of America’s founding and take advantage of that rarest of opportunities: The chance to elect as president the first genuine constitutional conservative to come along in over 30 years.

    You may have not be under any illusions about Cruz’s principles being of questionable usefulness, but plenty are.

    This is why Ted Cruz is perfect for Scalia’s post. All the constitutional knowledge one could hope for — lifelong tenure. He would have reached the top and could set aside his less than healthy political ambition.

    If I were the Dowager Queen, Rubio would be the nominee (I think his squishy positions suit the politics of the possible, and he’s otherwise conservative enough, and is the only plausible Republican candidate in net positive approval territory other than Kasich (blech)), and he would arrange to nominate Cruz to the SCOTUS as part of a deal with the Senate.

    Unfortunately, I’m not. :-(

    • #54
  25. Columbo Inactive
    Columbo
    @Columbo

    katievs:None of which is to say I imagine he’s the savior. I just think he’s the best option we have right now, and one who may actually turn out to be pretty darn good. Better than we could have hoped or expected, in terms of both electability and governing.

    David French has a great post on Twitter (@DavidAFrench) …

    The grassroots hatred for the establishment is giving us Trump. The establishment’s hatred for Cruz is also giving us Trump.

    • #55
  26. Ned Vaughn Inactive
    Ned Vaughn
    @NedVaughn

    Terrific post, Frank! Thank you very much for taking the time.

    • #56
  27. Tuck Inactive
    Tuck
    @Tuck

    Frank Soto:

    Disdain grows when a man is as untruthful as Cruz. The post was written when I reached the point where I simply could not stomach anymore of his lies.

    So you’re going to vote for Trump, then?

    • #57
  28. Western Chauvinist Member
    Western Chauvinist
    @WesternChauvinist

    Columbo:

    katievs:None of which is to say I imagine he’s the savior. I just think he’s the best option we have right now, and one who may actually turn out to be pretty darn good. Better than we could have hoped or expected, in terms of both electability and governing.

    David French has a great post on Twitter (@DavidAFrench) …

    The grassroots hatred for the establishment is giving us Trump. The establishment’s hatred for Cruz is also giving us Trump.

    I heard Prager say something very interesting about the destruction of Israel recently. He said Jews understand the nation of Israel was (twice!) destroyed by gratuitous hatred among them. That’s how I see Republicans this cycle.

    I think Ted Cruz is better suited to the Court and Marco Rubio has the “it” factor Cruz lacks for the general election. However, I don’t hate either of them and would prefer we start tearing apart Democrats (who are so richly deserving) rather than each other. But, maybe that’s just me.

    • #58
  29. Mate De Inactive
    Mate De
    @MateDe

    Tuck:

    Frank Soto:

    Disdain grows when a man is as untruthful as Cruz. The post was written when I reached the point where I simply could not stomach anymore of his lies.

    So you’re going to vote for Trump, then?

    Or worse. Hillary?

    • #59
  30. Frank Soto Member
    Frank Soto
    @FrankSoto

    Tuck:

    Frank Soto:

    Disdain grows when a man is as untruthful as Cruz. The post was written when I reached the point where I simply could not stomach anymore of his lies.

    So you’re going to vote for Trump, then?

    Georgia has already voted.

    • #60
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