Posted on 12/23/2014 2:28:03 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
After leading a losing and disastrous gambit that shut down the government over Obamacare last year, Sen. Ted Cruz brushed his critics aside. Im not serving in office because I desperately needed 99 new friends.
Fair enough no one would confuse him for a Dale Carnegie groupie.
But the fact remains that to be an effective senator, the Texas Republican needs to get other members to work with him. And, at the moment, the collective membership of the worlds greatest deliberative body would rather stick needles in their eyes.
Last week, Cruz brought the 113th session of Congress to a painful close, keeping senators in D.C. for a Saturday session pressing a constitutional point of order that attracted just 22 votes and paving the way for Harry Reid to speed consideration on dozens of nominations for President Obama. Cruz ultimately apologized to his fellow Republicans for the schedule inconvenience, while Democrats took to Twitter thanking him for making possible the approval of a controversial pick for surgeon general.
The freshman insists Reid would have jammed the nominations through in any event. Hes probably right, but that assertion misses the larger point. In the U.S. Senate, making noise is easy, getting things done is hard. Its not enough to want to do something or even to say you want to do it. You have to find a way to do it. The vote Cruz demanded was futile and everyone knew it. Yet Cruz still insisted on calling it up at the 11th hour without even giving his own colleagues fair warning.
In interviews, Cruz spoke as if he was forcing a meaningful and decisive vote on the illegal executive amnesty. It was neither. Does anyone seriously believe that the 20 Republicans who opposed Cruzs motion support Obamas end-run around Congress? Even Pat Toomey, one of the chambers strongest conservatives, turned Cruz down, explaining he just couldnt find anything unconstitutional about the spending bill (spending being a power the Constitution grants explicitly to Congress).
If Cruzs real goal was to draw attention to himself, mission accomplished. Like Elizabeth Warren, hes learned quickly that in the Senate there is rarely a downside to being a big, loud No. It grabs headlines, panders to a political base, and carries zero political risk. What more could a self-absorbed senator want? To actually accomplish something, perhaps, which neither has yet done in their short congressional careers.
Which brings us to 2015, the opportunity for Republicans, and the challenge for Cruz.
Next year, the Republican-led Congress will pass big pieces of legislation. It will produce a budget and send spending bills to the president. It will act on the Keystone pipeline and other energy concerns and even take up trade and immigration policy. Still, the practical requirements of 218 votes in the House and 60 in the Senate requires that no significant bill can perfectly reflect the view of any one individual.
Like every other member of Congress, Ted Cruz needs to decide if he wants to participate in the process of shaping legislation which means, on occasion, supporting less than perfect outcomes or not. Make no mistake, effectiveness is not a matter of making friends, its a matter of earning professional respect. And right now, there is little to be found for the junior senator from Texas.
To date, his disdain for working with his colleagues has come through loud and clear. Cruz called the spending bill approved last week a perfect example of Washington corruption. Having voted against plenty of spending bills in my time, Im sure it was filled with billions in unnecessary spending. Calling out a bad bill is one thing, but maligning the motives of everyone who disagrees with you burns the very bridges needed to get anything done in the future.
Theres also nothing new in the idea of being a Senate maverick. John McCain has employed that approach more effectively than anyone. To his credit, however, McCain never loses sight of the most fundamental aspects of crafting legislation: At the end of the day, you need to be able to strike a deal and you need to have someone willing to work with you at the table.
It appears the Texans inspiration comes not from McCain but his 2008 running mate. Cruz has become the Sarah Palin of the Senate, going rogue and insisting hes the only one speaking truth to power. That may work in a governors office or on a talk show but not on the Senate floor. Then again, it may not matter. President Obama proved you dont have to be an effective senator to succeed in Washington. He may be Teds real role model after all.
Well, he at least has a washed-up has-been Senator ragging on him. Or would it be more correct to describe Sununu as a “never-was”?
Well, Johnny He doesn’t want to be an effective Senator. He wants to be an effective Conservative President. I hope to God e has the opportunity!
Sununu is still alive?
Whatev. I didn’t care 30 years ago when he was relevant. I certainly don’t care now.
No, John, no he doesn't. I voted for him to stir up the moribund Senate, not pass legislation.
/johnny
These old GOP establishment hacks are simply pathetic and belong in Shady Acres retirement villages for RINO’s.
Sununu:
Are you just a fool or are you filled with evil?
Sununu is a dork.
Sununu can be good on talk shows from time to time, esposing the conservative point of view, but one should not forget that during the last big campaign, he was deep into the Mitt Romney camp.
sunumu is a pathetic, washed-up, crusty old rino. Who cares what he “says”? It was probably written since he slobbers when he speaks. Really...why don’t these old losers fade away? Have a Merry Christmas!
Yep, the ‘RATS, the RINOs, the mainstream media ... ... and the Bushes... ... will always tell you who they fear.
TED CRUZ, 2016
Let’s UNITE behind Ted early and defeat the standard “split the conservative vote” tactics.
Cruz has his eyes on the highest office in the land, not some one-out-of-a-hundred senate seat.
I’m hopping over to his PAC to give him $50 that I don’t have.
He’s setting things up in Red Hampshire for the GOP-e.
I’m cruzin with cruz!
Shut up and go away John and let those of us who care about the country do our job
precisely.
imagine that, an insider establish puke RINO saying that Ted Cruz is irrelevant. obviously the establishment pukes have serious doubts about maintaining their own political strength as it clearly dwindles outside of DC.
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