Posted on 03/27/2015 8:35:25 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
A broad cross-section of Republican officeholders, major donors and conservative pundits are agreed on one thing: Ted Cruz has no chance to be elected president. The junior senator from Texas marked the fifth anniversary of the signing of ObamaCare by announcing his candidacy for the presidency today at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia and no one in the chattering classes thinks he has a prayer of being sworn into office as commander-in-chief in January 2017. Just about everyone thinks his positions on the issues are too extreme and that his advocacy of the 2013 government shutdown and the complete antipathy of the rest of the Senate and the party establishment make it impossible for him to win. Even those who sympathize with his politics tend to agree that he just isnt likeable enough to gain his partys nomination, let alone win a general election against a Democrat. But his detractors need to understand something. As his announcement this morning showed us, he is a fabulous speaker and a dynamic personality with a unique appeal. The scenario that Cruz is hoping will make him the GOP nominee may be a very shot indeed but it is not crazy.
When stacked against those of his Republican competitors, its easy to see why few think the Texan has much of a chance. The party elites that are, as Nate Cohn rightly points out in his New York Times Upshot column about Cruz today, still important to winning nominations, are united in their opposition to him. He will raise money but nowhere near as much as Jeb Bush or even other conservatives like Scott Walker. Nor can he claim to be the sole candidate seeking to appeal to Tea Party conservatives, who tend to adore him, or even the evangelicals that he is courting by announcing at the school founded by the Rev. Jerry Falwell.
Cruz is also widely hated by most of his Senate colleagues and tends not to come across as a guy most people would want to have a beer with. Last weeks viral story about Cruz supposedly scaring a little girl at a New Hampshire event was inaccurate and unfair. If anything, a look at the tape of the encounter showed him to be sensitive and actually quite caring about the childs reaction to his rhetoric about President Obama setting the world on fire. But it resonated because that is how most adults, Republicans and Democrats alike, tend to think about him. Indeed, I think the likeability factor is a much more important obstacle for Cruz to overcome than his ideology. As a recent Wall Street Journal poll illustrated, the number of those who can envision supporting him barely outnumber those who say they can never back him.
But even if admit up front that Cruzs path to victory is as steep as can be imagined, the party establishment and others that loathe him would still be foolish to underestimate him or his power to play a serious role in the GOP race.
If there is anything that we have learned about him in the two and a half years since he began throwing bombs in the Senate and upsetting his colleagues, it is that Cruz is utterly undaunted by criticism or long odds. In the view of more moderate conservatives, that makes him unwilling to listen to common sense. But it also gives him a certain power that more realistic figures lack. You may think Ted Cruz is over-the-top but he does not care.
He brings to the race certain strengths that his rivals lack. As I noted backed in December, If youre going to make comparisons to 2012 candidates, imagine someone with the folksiness of Rick Perry (albeit in a Cuban Texan version), the passion of Santorum on populist and social conservative issues, the debating skill of Newt Gingrich, and the wonkish grasp of details of a Mitt Romney and you have a fair idea of what Cruz brings to the table.
Though debates will not be as ubiquitous this time as they were in 2012, they will still be crucial. Cruzs ability to eviscerate opponents is something his opponents should fear. Nor is he, despite his embrace of suicidal tactics like the shutdown, someone who will embrace crackpot positions on vaccines or show ignorance about foreign policy.
Jeb Bush is the darling of the establishment. Scott Walker is in a sweet spot that can embrace the party establishment, Tea Partiers and evangelicals. Rand Paul has the libertarians. Marco Rubio is the strongest voice on foreign policy and can also appeal to both wings of the party. Mike Huckabee will compete with him for the populist vote and Rick Santorum for religious conservatives. Others will have their own strengths. But the sheer size and strength of this field (especially compared to 2012) makes is more likely that someone we now consider an outlier may break through. Cruz isnt likely to be the one who will do so but neither is it insane to think that he might. Others also face long odds, but few have his potent political skills.
The problem for those writing off Cruzs candidacy as absurd is that the very same factors that make him so unappealing to his Senate colleagues and the party establishment can endear him to grassroots voters. He may be inexperienced in office with only two years in the Senate on his resume but he is also untainted by the compromises that responsible officials must make because he has never compromised on any issue. If Cruz can tap into the Tea Party base and become its standard bearer, he will be a formidable candidate in the early primary states. After that, it will be anyones game. Right now, thats about as realistic a scenario as any of his competitors can claim.
None of that changes the fact that it is hard to see how he could win a general election and Republicans who want to win are not only never going to consider him but will move heaven and earth to stop him if he does get close to the nomination. But they should not assume that this is a possibility theyll never have to contemplate. The Ted Cruz scenario for Republicans is a very long shot but those chuckling about his early announcement are making assumptions that the party base may not back up.
They know he is a better thinker, debater, orator, and closer to the conservative base than anyone else.
I am energized for the first time in a while. Since Reagan, to be exact.
The GOP-e will perceive a Cruz candidacy as a Goldwater candidacy.
And they dealt with the Goldwater candidacy by not funding him -- or supporting him in any way.
Will they be that stupid...again?
If soo, it WILL be the end of the Republican Party.
The whole point of a political campaign is to persuade people.
OK, these guys think the point is to win, only. Preferably without persuading anyone, because then you have to actually say something and that makes you a target; better to say nothing obvious, just hint and gesture and make people think you said what they wanted you to say without actually provably saying it, and even better just hope people will vote for you by accident and you don’t actually have to say anything at all, you just sneak into office through the side door unnoticed.
Or, you try actually standing for something. Argue a case, and try to change peoples’ minds and hearts.
For me, its Cruz or Cruz. I’m not interested in anything GOPe is selling.
What would motivate the other 200 million, minus underage, to get to the poll?
Maybe a little fire breathing, a little honesty, a little, umm, oh yeah, constitutionalism?
Reagan didn't just get a few dems on his side, he got people off their duff because they BELIEVED him.
If 9/11 changed things for about 5 years, a nuclear weapon would change them for at least 10.
It will take extreme leadership to lead this nation out of the chaos it is in.
TED CRUZ 2016
I’m in.
What a bunch of blah blah blah from Tobin.
Importantly, in many respects, George W. Bush ran as "the next Reagan". That's not what we got. But he won, too.
The thing is, Cruz is great and thankfully, he's no Goldwater, who did himself in and who was fighting against the ghost of an assassinated JFK. Neither of which Cruz will face.
A good litigator is persuasive by nature and by trade. The other side knows this and it is what scares the pants off them about Cruz.
All true. There's little danger of the voting public perceiving Cruz as Goldwater.
But the issue you've raised -- and it's an important one -- is how the GOP-e would react to his candidacy. They could still perceive him as Goldwater. They're dense enough. And scared enough.
In any event, the GOP-e are the biggest obstacle to a Cruz candidacy. The primaries will be tougher than the general.
But if we all get out there and help Cruz win the primaries, in EVERY way that we can ( get started NOW...talking about him to friends, family, and strangers even and then give time, effort, and money ), then the general won't be nearly as difficult.......even IF the RNC/GOP-E work against him.
I'm with ya 100%.
I started my "pitches" the day Cruz announced. So far, I've got quite a lot convinced and one group is an almost 100% "HISPANIC" Tea Party group, who are VERY excited and happy with about him running.
I'm still working on a couple of people who really like him, but I'm getting the "can he win" ? Which I counter with :"Well, he won't if YOU don't get out and vote for him!"...which is sealing the deal.
EXCUSE THE TAGINE...I HAVE NO IDEA WHERE IT CAME FROM
bump
Cruz is also widely hated by most of his Senate colleagues
All the more reason to like him given who is senate colleagues are don’t chya think?
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