Posted on 07/07/2015 5:38:40 PM PDT by VinL
Ted Cruz has methodically built a roster of state leaders to help him fire up social conservatives in the South. He may have gotten more than he bargained for.
In the last month alone, three of his state co-chairs have drawn fire over comments related to everything from Sharia law to the victims of the African-American church shooting in Charleston, S.C. That dynamic was thrown into sharp relief in recent weeks, as the debate in South Carolina unfolded over whether to take down the Confederate flag from the statehouse grounds.
One state co-chair said the victims of the Charleston shooting waited their turn to be shot. Another has emerged as the voice of the opposition to removing the rebel flag from the statehouse, likening that effort to a Stalinist purge. Separately, in Tennessee, his state chairman had once accused a Muslim state appointee of being a Shariah compliant finance expert, a comment that sparked outrage in some corners when he was tapped for the position with Cruz in early June.
When asked about his surrogates inflammatory comments, the Cruz campaign had their backs.They are respected in their states, they are terrific organizers, they are working hard to help win the nomination and we have every confidence they have the ability to do that, said Cruz spokesman Rick Tyler.
Their ability to hold their tongues is more in doubt.
On Monday, South Carolina state Sen. Lee Bright, the co-chair who is a leading opponent of taking down the flag, generated headlines and raised eyebrows in South Carolina and beyond when he gave a vehement floor speech opposing the flag removal. In the address, he warned that the devil is taking control of this land and went on an anti-gay rights tangent, calling the pro-gay rainbow symbol the abomination colors.
(Cruzs campaign has said he believes the flag is a state issue.)
I dont know how that helps, said Chip Felkel, a prominent longtime Republican operative who lives in Brights district, of the implications of the state senators remarks for Cruz. Its guilt by association.
Despite Brights efforts, the Senate voted this week, 36-3, to take the flag down. The state House of Representatives takes the bill up next. State Rep. Bill Chumley, another Cruz co-chair who will be voting in the House, has also indicated opposition to removing the flag. He was the one to comment on the Charleston victims, a remark for which he has since apologized.
These gentlemen a term Id use loosely at this point maybe they feel they represent their constituents, but the train has left the station, its time to turn the page and they are not doing themselves or Sen. Cruz any favors, continued Felkel, who worked for George W. Bush but is currently unaffiliated in the presidential race. The longer this is drawn out, the uglier it gets, [with] national implications. Every one of these guys are looking at whos on their team, who their supporters are and thats going to carry over to other states. I think it cannot be a positive based on how this is playing out in the media.
The backlash was made more clear this week in the early-voting state of Iowa. On Monday, GOP Chairman Jeff Kaufmann told Radio Iowa, while speaking about a local incident involving the flag, that he will not tolerate having it connected to the GOP.
There are 17,000 young Iowa men that are laying in graves that fought against that very flag and everything it stood for, Kaufmann said. Theres really not a lot of conversation to have about that.
But Cruzs spokesman said that of course the campaign stands behind Chumley and Bright, in addition to Kevin Kookogey, the Tennessee state chair.
egarding Bright, Tyler said, Hes an elected official, a state senator, you have to garner a certain amount of support to be an elected state senator he has agreed to do this on behalf of the senator and we are grateful for it.
Bright, who represents the conservative Upstate region, mounted an unsuccessful primary challenge to Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) last cycle. In 2012, he was former Rep. Michele Bachmanns South Carolina chair (Chumley also worked for her), and then switched his allegiances to Ron Paul after she dropped out.
I would encourage presidential candidates to let us deal with this, Bright said of the flag issue in an interview with POLITICO last month. Its deeply rooted history for a lot of us. Im not going to stand by and let our ancestors memories be besmirched. Its one thing to just take down the flag. They want us to concede that the soldiers that fell for the Confederacy were a bunch of racists, and Im not going to concede that.
When South Carolinas Republican leadership first called for the flag to come down late last month, following the Charleston shooting, Cruzs campaign said the senator would leave the flag issue to the state. His campaign maintained that position Tuesday following the Senate vote. That position stands out in a GOP field where many other presidential contenders lauded the state officials efforts to take it down.
Its a state issue, let them resolve it, Tyler said. Bright is a South Carolinian its completely appropriate he argues the point of view he has. I dont think it prevailed, but he argued it.
Cruz is used to being out of step with the Republican establishment his 2013 spearheading of a government shutdown, and his support for a group that primaried GOP incumbents in 2014, cemented that dynamic. And his position on the Confederate flag in South Carolina, along with his alliance with Bright, ensures that hes at odds with the GOP leadership of South Carolina, too, note some Palmetto State operatives.
A lot of people Cruz has associated himself with are extraordinarily wrong on the flag, said a senior South Carolina Republican official. Theres no depth he wont stoop to to pander. Hes not well-liked by the Republican establishment, and this is more confirmation of that.
Of course, Cruz isnt trying to win over the establishment. Plenty of his deeply conservative supporters are energized by people, like Cruzs Tennessee chair, who promise to take on Sharia law. And in South Carolina, there remains a pocket of Republican voters who do not want to see the Confederate flag come down, though its not clear how large that group is. Other Republican presidential candidates, who supported Gov. Nikki Haley in her call for the flag to come down, may have alienated those voters but Cruz hasnt.
From his standpoint, its not bad politics, said someone working for a rival campaign. If you look at, how do you distinguish yourself in a crowded field, in a state as important as South Carolina, that would be one way of doing it. As a long-term strategy, it may be short-sighted, but they are playing the short game.
Its not just the establishment calling for the flag to come down, though. Prominent Christian conservatives, including leading Southern Baptists, have also taken that position.
Glenn McCall, South Carolinas Republican National Committeeman and a supporter of bringing the flag down, said he thinks that at on the national stage, the flag issue may blow over by the time of the primary. But at least at a state level, he said, those who dont back bringing down the flag are losing a chance to embrace Christian unity.
Those supporting him will support him, those supporting other folks are not going to change their opinion one way or another, he said of Cruz. But at a state level, among those who oppose taking the flag down, I just hate that theyre missing an opportunity theyre all missing an opportunity to stand with their brothers and sisters in the faith.
The GOPee are Angry Wacko Birds.
Im an old dog; I dont get too excited. I dont get caught up in all the mass hysteria. Tim Howard
When you are in a war, choose th fight where the terrain is favorable. Fighting on terrain tha favors the enemy is crazy. That is something Trump has understood in framing the illegal alien issue focus on the crime of the illegals that the dems enabled.
The flag isn’t a battle on favorable terrain for conservatives.
I am guessing Cruz understands Sun Tzu.
They haven’t seen ‘angry’ yet.
—South Carolina state Sen. Lee Bright, the co-chair who is a leading opponent of taking down the flag, generated headlines and raised eyebrows in South Carolina and beyond when he gave a vehement floor speech opposing the flag removal. In the address, he warned that the devil is taking control of this land and went on an anti-gay rights tangent, calling the pro-gay rainbow symbol the abomination colors.—
Politico talks like this is a bad thing. This provides hope that SoCar didn’t follow Haley’s shamelessly ignorant call to remove the flag. Fortunately the people are wise to it correct history and historical meaning.
Ted Cruz is doing just fine. The more he stands for what’s right the more he’s going to be criticized. Incidentally, the kinds of criticism don’t really hald any water, it’s mostly the ‘drive by’ kind (A Rush Limbaugh coined phrase).
Hillary will never be tarred and feathered or held accountable for what Democrats say
Maybe not, but the mental imagery is delicious.
Thanks.
You're not from around here are ya...???
As the calendar continues to turn. There are more and more Confederate flags flying here in Upstate South Carolina. Road side stands are popping up and in parking lots offering the flag for sale. The bastardization of the flag has caused the complete opposite effect here in the Upstate.
That is excellent news; music to my ears.
Thanks.
“I don’t feel no way’s tarred.”
Ah ha ha!
Thanks for the helpful tips for the Cruz campaign Mr. Aug 1, 2014. Glad you rushed over to FR as soon as you realized conservatives need your help after enduring just a few years of the Obama administration.
Or maybe you’re just that young. Either way, Cruz is handling himself just fine. Strange how all of these helpful tips and warnings about Cruz failing miserably come from relatively new members on FR.
Hey Guys,
Get a load of this guy!
IBTZ
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