Posted on 08/03/2015 10:21:04 AM PDT by SoConPubbie
As longtime readers may remember, Ted Cruz and I are old, dear friends. We met on the 2000 George W. Bush campaign. I had taken a six-week leave of absence from National Review; Ted was a domestic-policy adviser. We bonded, to use an Oprah-esque word. We had many a late-night discussion at Earl Campbells barbecue joint, and other places.
Did I mention that the campaign was headquartered in Austin? I guess I didnt. It was.
Speaking of bonding, Ted met an economic-policy whiz named Heidi Nelson on that campaign. They were later married.
I first wrote about Ted, at least in an extensive way, in May 2009: A Great Reaganite Hope. He was running for state attorney general. The race did not continue, however, because the AG position did not come open. This had to do with Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison and her career vacillations. I wont take the time to explain . . .
. . . because Ted was soon running for the U.S. Senate. He announced in January 2011, and I wrote about him again that very day: My Candidate in Texas. Both of us happened to be in Palo Alto, of all places, that day. We talked late into the night.
He announced for president last March. I happened to see him in New York that night. As I remarked to him then, it seems like two seconds ago that we were at Earl Campbells, musing about things political. I figured he would rise in politics one day. (Im still looking at dogcatcher.) I could not have told you his rise would be so speedy.
As you would expect, Im supporting Ted for president. Im also advising him, when he asks me to. This is the luxury of an opinion journalist (especially when said journalist is open about what hes up to).
The fact that I am pro-Ted does not mean that I am anti-others. For instance, Im a big fan of Jeb Bush, always have been. I think hes one of the best people in public life. About a month ago, Rich Lowry said to me, Youre the only person in the country who loves both Ted and Jeb. I doubt it. But if I am, so be it.
I also love Marco. Do you have any idea how many Cuban Americans from Miami are in my Rolodex, or the modern equivalent? When Im with them, I feel Im with my very own.
By the way, when Ted was running for the Senate, I wrote (something like), My great fear is that, sometime in the future, our two princes, Ted and Marco, will be dueling down the stretch for the Republican nomination. I thought this might happen in, say, the 2020s. But lo . . .
I love Bobby. I love Carly. I have great respect for Walker, Perry, Christie, and so on. I belong to the embarrassment-of-riches school. I think the Republican field is deep, broad, and impressive.
Put Trump and Carson to one side, if you would, because they are special cases. I could vote for any of the candidates, comfortably, with the exception of Rand Paul. Thats because my views on foreign policy and national security are too far from his. Nevertheless, I respect him, and am always willing to hear him.
Back to Ted. Do I agree with everything he thinks, says, and does? Heavens no. And he doesnt agree with everything I think, say, and do. Were friends and allies, not clones. If I met a clone of mine, I might shrink back.
Im going to extol Ted for a minute, in the way I have before:
Hes what I call an all rounder. (The term comes from cricket, I believe.) Ted is powerfully versatile. Hes a free-marketeer who knows economics. Hes a legal eagle, of course. Hes wonkish on domestic policy. He knows his foreign policy, and is a hawk. He also values human rights. And hes a social conservative (though I wish we had a better term for that).
He grasps what ails our country and has the gumption to do something about it. He can talk, which is always an asset in a politician and leader. He is evidently fearless.
And, again, hes my friend. I love him and Heidi and their family. Also, Teds an even better friend in bad times than in good.
Do you know how strange it is to have a friend running for president? Its odd enough to have one in the U.S. Senate.
Anyway, I wanted readers to know about all this. Ill be writing far less about the Republican primaries than I normally would, of course. Last time around, I critiqued just about every GOP debate. Thats not going to happen this time.
Can America live without my political analysis? America will just have to stumble through, as it has coped with depression, war, and other challenges.
When I do write about the presidential campaign, Ill link to this post, to provide a disclosure. There may be times I dont do it because a link would be unnecessary, or even self-regarding or grandstanding.
Whatever happens next year, in the primaries and in November, God bless America. See you later.
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[For instance, Im a big fan of Jeb Bush, always have been]
Stopped reading right there.
Ted’s my man.
That said, I’d like to see him beat on the EPA more; they are killing us. This from Peabody Energy, one of the largest coal produces (2 hrs ago):
ST. LOUIS, Aug. 3, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Peabody Energy today urged further action by courts, Congress, states, consumer groups and industrial/residential electricity customers to turn back the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) rules to reduce carbon dioxide emissions on electricity generating plants.
Studies show the rules will punish American families and businesses with higher energy costs and damage electric reliability, while having no notable benefit even under climate theory. They would put our energy system at serious risk and further slow our nation’s tepid economic growth. A technology path not artificial caps and taxes is the far better approach to address carbon concerns over time.
It is clear to us that the rules fail on legal, policy and practical grounds. Unprecedented early opposition to the rules has been advanced from members of Congress, governors, legislatures, attorneys general, and business and consumer groups.
Americans need relief from “pain at the plug” costs given record electricity rates even amid reduced oil and natural gas prices. Coal provides some of the lowest cost electricity in America and the economy, jobs and households will suffer if these rules move forward. Jurisdictions including Europe, Australia, Ontario and California that have tried such policies have suffered soaring electricity costs and economic harm.
The Administration is forcing utilities to increase use of renewables and other high-cost fuels, driving up electricity prices to new records. This past year was the most expensive year ever for electricity in the United States, and electricity rates have increased at twice the pace of household incomes since 2000. Mandating greater reliance on expensive, heavily subsidized renewables, which the plan will require, is also not the solution. After more than 60 years of propping up renewables with over $85 billion in subsidies, wind and solar only provide about 5 percent of U.S. electricity.
America’s energy policy should be guided by the dire need for affordable energy faced by more than 100 million Americans who qualify for energy assistance. More than half of Americans also have said as little as a $20 increase in their monthly utility bill would cause hardship.
Peabody believes that we can achieve our environmental goals today with an alternative policy path:
Insistence on low-cost electricity;
Investment in efficiency improvements at existing plants;
Deployment of high-efficiency low emissions supercritical coal plants; and
Greater research and development to commercialize next-generation coal technologies including carbon capture, use and storage.
Today’s advanced supercritical coal plants are in broad use globally and are equipped with technologies that can drive key emissions rates that are 75 percent lower than the U.S. coal fleet average. They also deliver a carbon dioxide emissions rate that is as much as 25 percent lower than the oldest coal plants in the U.S. fleet. Every new large supercritical plant offers the equivalent carbon benefit of removing 1 million cars from the road.
Peabody Energy (BTU) is the world’s largest private-sector coal company and a global leader in sustainable mining, energy access and clean coal solutions. The company serves metallurgical and thermal coal customers in more than 25 countries on six continents. For further information, visit PeabodyEnergy.com and AdvancedEnergyForLife.com.
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