Posted on 03/24/2015 2:05:32 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
The launch of Sen. Ted Cruzs presidential bid Monday has prompted an outpouring of excitement and delight from Democrats.
To liberal activists, the firebrand Texan is much too far to the right for the nation at large and too extreme to even win the Republican nomination.
But they want nothing more than for him to run strongly throughout the primary season. The more momentum he develops, they argue, the more likely he is to push the eventual GOP nominee further to the right than that person will want to go.
I cant believe Christmas has come so early, Chris Kofinis, a former aide to ex-Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.) during his 2008 presidential campaign, said gleefully. Ted Cruz makes a good bogeyman, said Jamal Simmons, another Democratic strategist who has worked for several presidential campaigns.
It is not just political professionals who are rejoicing over Cruzs announcement.
#TedCruz is in! liberal comedian and TV host Bill Maher tweeted Monday. Yeah, man whats not to love about a guy who acts like Joe McCarthy and sweats like Richard Nixon?
Cruzs Republican supporters, naturally, believe he will prove the naysayers wrong. They argue his outsider appeal and fervent conservatism is just what the nation needs.
They also note that the GOP has racked up an unenviable track record in the past two election cycles, choosing presidential nominees Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) in 2008 and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney in 2012 who were deemed electable by Washington insiders yet defeated handily by President Obama.
The Cruz loyalists are also likely to hark back even further, noting how Ronald Reagan was once thought to be too conservative for the nations tastes.
A fellow Republican, former President Ford, called Reagan unelectable in the spring of 1979, less than two years before Reagan would thump incumbent Democratic former President Carter and usher in a new era of conservative ascendancy.
The Reagan parallel gives even some Democrats food for thought.
I recall the legend of folks in the Carter White House saying they wanted to run against Ronald Reagan. So I approach the GOP field with a degree of humility, Paul Begala, a strategist for President Clintons 1992 victorious presidential campaign, said in an email to The Hill.
Begala added that Cruz has Barack Obamas education and Sarah Palins politics. He could unify the three anti-establishment [GOP] factions: for the Tea Party, he engineered the government shutdown; for the Christian evangelicals, he opposes a womans right to choose even in the case of rape and incest; and for the libertarians, he says Social Security is a Ponzi scheme. To paraphrase George W. Bush, I would not misunderestimate Sen. Cruz.
The longtime pundits phrasing, of course, slyly highlighted the reasons many Democrats believe Cruz simply cant get elected in a nationwide race.
They contend that the traditional conservative rhetoric of his announcement speech and his choice of Liberty University, the evangelical college founded by the late Jerry Falwell, as the venue point to Cruz as a kind of anachronism who might have had a better chance if he were running in 1976 rather than in 2016.
The Republican Party is going to have to decide whether it wants to win, given the reality of where the American voter is, or do they want to keep tilting at windmills? Kofinis said. Cruz is a windmill-tilter. He wants the country to be something its not and hasnt been for 20 or 30 years. Its more diverse and not as conservative on social issues.
Democrats are already seeking to portray Cruz as emblematic of the GOP at large.
No sooner had Cruz launched his campaign Monday than the Democratic National Committee blasted out an email to reporters in which DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz (Fla.) labeled the Texan as the de facto leader of the Republican Party in recent years.
That phrase also alluded to Cruzs role in the 2013 government shutdown that was aimed at defunding ObamaCare and was widely seen as a failure for Republicans. Earlier that year, McCain famously referred to Cruz as among his partys wacko birds. On Monday, centrist Rep. Pete King (R-N.Y.) derided him as a carnival barker.
The across-the-board skepticism about Cruzs chances as a potential national candidate is founded in recent opinion polls.
In three polls conducted since the beginning of February, Cruz fared among the worst possible options for Republicans. The surveys asked about hypothetical presidential contests between various GOP nominees and Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton
In the most recent poll, conducted earlier this month by Marist, Cruzs deficit against Clinton was a full 14 percentage points (39 percent to 53 percent). However, Clinton only led by 7 percentage points against Sen. Marco Rubio (Fla.) and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, and only 4 versus Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker.
Cruz loyalists will point out that such polls are meaningless at this stage, citing the precedent of his underdog victory in the 2012 Texas GOP Senate primary that launched him to conservative stardom. Allies argue he is smarter and far more appealing than his detractors suggest.
But Democratic glee over his candidacy wont erode anytime soon.
Go, Ted, go! exulted strategist Chris Lehane, who worked in Bill Clintons White House.
You will eat those words.
Mene Mene Tekel Upharsin
Ted is beating the bee hive.
Jerry Rivers...
Oh, Lord, let their laughter be turned into mourning and their confidence into shame.
He wants the country to be something its not and hasnt been for 20 or 30 years.
THAT is part of his appeal!
The Democrat and RINO attack dogs are after Cruz out of fear that independents will like the Cruz message. After 6+ years of Ozero, Cruz will look pretty good to those seeking a less intrusive and more responsible government.
It sounds like Dems know we’ve cracked their code.
Then they’ll be grinning like idiots if we can help him along until the end.....
Yeah right.
The probally actually beleive this as they have little understanding of what is really going on in America.
Cool graphics!
A whole lot of Freepers, so otherwise inebriated with their hatred of Hillary, were cheering for Obama against her.
Being somewhat in touch with the talk in DC, I knew the dangers of Obama, and warned in a couple of posts, but no one really listened.
Rush Limbaugh was the biggest obama supporter in an effort to poison the field for Hillary. He called it Operation Chaos and boy did it screw the pooch.
I couldn’t give a flying fig for what the Democrats think of Cruz. It’s not like helping Republicans is something they’d actually want to do, so anything they say is simply a lame attempt at some sort of mind game.
No, it’s the anti-Cruz reaction from the GOP establishment and even from some non-establishment types that’s more bothersome. The whole canard of “he can’t win” is the part that particularly sticks in my craw.
I mean, why not? Why can’t he? When you dig down further and eliminate the ones who are basically just carrying water for another preferred (potential) candidate, it basically boils down to: “he hasn’t shown me that he can”.
Well, duh. None of the potential candidates have. The only to prove you can win is to actually do it. And without an incumbent, there isn’t anyone out there who can claim they have.
This is what the primary season is for. It’s not a “beauty contest” to line up behind whoever serves up the most palatable set of policy positions. It’s to see who can put together the organization and message to win elections*. Find out who can handle the constant strain and scrutiny. Decide who can take a shot, survive it, and come out the stronger for it.
Will that person be Ted Cruz? I have no idea. No one does. And frankly, it’s far too early in the process to even project meaningful odds.
But CAN it be Ted Cruz? Of course it can.
* This goes back to my point from four years ago about tweaking the Buckley rule - vote for the candidate most likely to advance the conservative agenda. This means more than just having the right policies, but also about getting elected and being able to work with a potentially hostile legislature to make things happen.
To liberal activists, anyone to the right of Bernie Sanders is "much too far to the right."
“The launch of Sen. Ted Cruzs presidential bid Monday has prompted an outpouring of excitement and delight from Democrats.”
This is going to be the biggest case of unintended consequences ever. Bigger than the lefts obsessive promotion of Jeb Bush after destroying the Bush family name.
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