Posted on 04/20/2015 10:51:54 AM PDT by VinL
The first time I met Ted Cruz, he argued with me. The second time I met Ted Cruz, he argued with me. It wasnt personal, of course. Ted Cruz simply loves to argue.
Those two incidents told me a lot about Cruz. The first time was at an event in Florida in February 2012, months before he won the Texas GOP Senate nomination. I had never met him, but he wandered up to me and started complaining about my assessment of the Republican primary in the Lone Star State.
I told him to come to my office for an interview and to discuss the race, and he did a few weeks later.
I had no idea if the tea party favorite would win the GOP nomination, but I knew I wanted to learn about his views, his upbringing, his education and professional background. He wouldnt have any of that. He was there to prosecute his case, insisting he would defeat the early favorite in the race, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst. And he did.
There is no self-doubt in the junior senator from Texas, who has an impressive résumé and has already entered the race for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination.
Cruz has an undergraduate degree from Princeton and a law degree from Harvard. He clerked for Chief Justice William Rehnquist, served in the President George W. Bush Justice Department and as solicitor general of Texas, all before the 2012 victory when he knocked off the states sitting lieutenant governor in the Republican primary.
The Texan is one of the more combative and confrontational conservatives in the race for his partys nomination. That has made him a favorite on the right and a punching bag to liberals and many in the national media.
Unlike some other hopefuls in the contest, Cruz regards caution and compromise as a violation of principle. He has encouraged House Republicans to take on their more pragmatic legislative leaders, earning him a reputation as one of the leaders of the GOPs tea party wing.
Cruzs positions on hot-button issues from immigration and Common Core to taxes, spending, abortion and national defense resonate well with the Republican base, but it is his take-no-prisoners style and willingness to combat Democrats and the entire liberal establishment that make him such a favorite among those conservatives who are watching government get bigger.
The freshman senator is one of a handful of Republican presidential hopefuls along with Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum and Ben Carson competing for evangelical and tea party conservatives in the Iowa caucuses. Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul is also a significant problem for Cruz, since Paul has considerable appeal among anti-establishment conservatives.
The importance of the many evangelical conservatives in Iowa, the first test in the nominating process, should not be underestimated.
The 2012 Iowa entrance poll conducted by Edison Research for multiple media clients showed 57 percent of caucus attendees called themselves born again or evangelical Christians, and just shy of two-thirds (64 percent) of respondents said they supported the tea party.
New Hampshire GOP primary voters (a group that includes a large number of independents) arent nearly as religious or conservative as Iowans who will go to the caucuses, but South Carolina Republican primary voters are. In 2012, 65 percent of those who voted in the Palmetto State Republican primary self-identified as born again or evangelical Christians and 64 percent said they supported the tea party.
Obviously, if a single Republican hopeful can emerge as the consensus candidate of the evangelical and tea party faction, that candidate would be a factor well into the nominating process.
The recent national debate over religious freedom and gay rights is likely to elevate cultural issues for evangelical social conservatives, giving Cruz and his competitors another talking point to woo caucus-goers and boost evangelical participation.
But while Cruz is likely to engender passion among his supporters, he is regarded by many others in his party as unappealing and, even worse, unacceptable. To his critics, he is a self-promoting snake oil salesman, an unflattering comparison that suggests he is both untrustworthy and unscrupulous.
They find his language too inflammatory and confrontational, and many regard him as a disastrous general election nominee who would not only lose the presidential election but damage the partys prospects down-ballot.
The kind of Republicans who supported Mitt Romney and John McCain in the past will never embrace Cruz, of course. But it isnt clear that the Texas senator can attract much more than the hardcore tea party and movement conservative crowd, which, while an important segment of the GOP, isnt large enough to select the partys presidential nominee.
So while Cruz is an interesting candidate and certainly could play a role in the unfolding GOP race, he probably needs to broaden his message and change his style to win his partys nomination. And given what I know of the Texas senator, thats not happening
Ted Cruz would fit right in here
;-)
Unlike Democrats who ALWAYS compromise,not like Cruz he says my way or the highway and we can’t have a candidate like that
He’d fit in on the religion forum,
but not anywhere else..
“I came here to have an argument”
“No you didn’t”
> Both the dimwits and RINOs are scared of Cruz.
Because they can’t tag him with the usual “conservatives are stupid” label.
Democrats don’t compromise, they lie.
RINOs compromise.
I purposefully posted that to be wrong! I knew I would get called out!
Or, maybe not.
;-)
Cruz causing the return of the liberal head bangers, they are hurting and all the blood on their walls belongs to them.
Apparently when it comes to wanted to run for president, only “Yes Men/Women” need apply....
Article translation - Rothenbreg: Cruz is not someone whose ass I’d want to kiss (not global community supporter) and he completely failed at kissing my ass so I’ll write something appropriately damaging.
Very good interiew. Thank you so much for posting the link.
I’m the same way. I love to argue, and I frequently win.
“That has made him a ... punching bag to liberals and many in the national media.”
Only when he isn’t in the room with them punch back :)
They can’t counter his arguments so they accuse him of being argumentative. That’s liberals for Ya.
Not like those paragons of statesmanship Bob Dole, John McCain, and Mitt Romney. They got 'er done with aplomb!
Or if Cruz gets the nomination, what he will do to Hillary Clinton in the Presidential debates even with the moderators stacked against him. We could see Hillary's really ugly side show up....
Apparently he is winning or they would not start the name calling.
Pray America is waking
“Ted Cruz would fit right in here at FR.
No he wouldnt. :)”
Excuse me, is this five minutes or the full half hour?
[It isnt arguing when youre right.]
MSM and education have conditioned people to believe that arguing is disagreeing with the PC position. They have lost the art of debate.
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