Posted on 09/30/2014 7:45:10 AM PDT by SoConPubbie
The following assertion may not seem immediately intuitive, but I believe it to be true: Ted Cruz is the current front-runner for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination.
First, I would implore all readers to watch a full Ted Cruz speech if he or she has not already. The man is simply a performative marvel. He manages to strike some sort of preternatural balance between fiery Southern Baptist sermon and stand-up comedy routine, invariably bringing crowds to their feet. In the era of the tweet-sized soundbite, Ted Cruzs mastery of the one-liner and the pun are not trivial; they are integral to his success.
The only other potential candidate who holds a candle to Cruz in this regard is Chris Christie, who I wrote earlier this year still stood a fighting chance to acquire the nomination. I no longer believe this to be the case. Christie established a national profile early in his gubernatorial tenure on the strength of his attractively brash personality, and was well-positioned to marshal that into an extremely credible bid for 2016. Now, however, it appears he may not even end up running. (Though I dont discount his chances completely.)
For all the partisan brouhaha associated with Bridge-gate, it looks increasingly like there was in fact serious malfeasance involved, and that malfeasance may directly implicate Christie. A report in the Bergen Record from September 4 revealed that low-level Port Authority Police officers, incensed the morning of the bridge lane closures about potentially catastrophic security problems, were ordered over police radio frequencies to shut up by high-level Police commanders. David Wildstein—Christies longtime ally, childhood associate, and formerly anonymous progenitor of the influential PolitickerNJ gossip website—was also observed surveying the scene that morning in a car driven by another childhood friend of both Christie and Wildstein, Police Lt. Thomas Chip Michaels. The idea that Christie had no knowledge of the plot now strains credulity such that he is virtually disqualified for the purposes of 2016.
The establishment Republican donor class seems to have acknowledged this. A clear subtext of Byron Yorks Washington Examiner article last week on the new flurry of chatter about a potential Mitt Romney 2016 candidacy shows that the establishment has all but abandoned Christie. (York also conducted an informal poll of his Twitter followers about their favored 2016 candidate, and found that zero—literally, zero—had a preference for Christie).
It would not be a total shock if Christie gets indicted in the near future. It also seems highly likely that his close ally Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Democrat of New York, possesses some kind of smoking gun evidence implicating Christie in Bridgegate, given their shared jurisdiction over the Port Authority bi-state agency. The Wall Street Journal reported in December 2013 that Christie personally phoned Cuomo for still-undisclosed reasons pertaining to the issue. What was the nature of that phone call? We still dont know. We do know, however, that at a press conference last week on the alleged terror threat facing the New Jersey-New York region, a reporter asked Christie whether any protocols had been put in place to prevent another dangerous security incident, like what occurred on September 11, 2013 as a result of the bridge lane closures. Comically, Cuomo himself intervened as a salve, rattling off a boilerplate non-answer; the two then walked off without saying anything further. Christie looked like a deer in the headlights.
So by my lights, Christie is basically finished.
Jeb Bush appears somewhat reluctant to run for family-related reasons, although he may well end up doing so, and Romney could feasibly run again if only out of sheer narcissism. In any event, there is currently no clear establishment favorite, and it seems unlikely that one will emerge any time soon.
Which brings us back to Ted Cruz.
In the post-Citizens United landscape, traditional donor class support is becoming less and less important. Multi-billionaire casino magnate Sheldon Adelson was able to bankroll Newt Gingrichs 2012 presidential bid as nothing more than a personal vanity project. Gingrich went onto win the South Carolina primary. That unpredictable dynamic will only have been heightened by 2016. Ted Cruz may be disliked by elements of the GOP elite, but he doesnt have to rely on their support to prevail, as likely would have been the case in years past.
Instead, Cruz can lean on what Ill term the para-establishment—a constellation of advocacy groups, media entities, individual mega-donors, and others who have long ago thrown their lot in with Cruz. The speech I linked to earlier in this piece was actually from the Americans for Prosperity annual conference in Dallas, where Cruz was a featured speaker. The crowd absolutely ate him up. He is admired by salt-of-the-earth Tea Party types, but also by powerful factions of the Republican vanguard.
Cruzs stunt earlier this month at the gathering of persecuted Middle East Christians doubtless solidified his support among the “pro-Israel” neoconservative cohort orbiting around Bill Kristol. Kristol’s new media outfit, the Washington Free Beacon, gave Cruz a mouthpiece in the form of reporter Alana Goodman. (Cruz met privately with Kristol and other donors in Texas just days before the shameful incident.)
The Americans for Prosperity relationship shows that Cruz has been in the good graces of the Charles and David Koch network for years now. This is almost certainly a more significant courtship than earning support from the Republican National Committee.
Cruz also has a potentially compelling personal story which could give his candidacy an air of historical significance. Hed be the first president of Hispanic ancestry, and would absolutely be able to tailor a powerful message to that effect. A Harvard Law graduate whom professor emeritus Alan Dershowitz once described as off-the-chart brilliant, Cruzs intelligence should never be underestimated.
For all his pretensions of down-home, aw-shucks conservatism, Ted Cruz is undeniably a member of the cultural elite. He counts his former Princeton classmate, Ramesh Ponnuru of National Review, as a personal friend. Meanwhile, Cruz is winning straw polls at major Evangelical events like the Values Voter Conference. Also, his wife is a managing director at Goldman Sachs.
The idea that Cruz could seize the nomination might seem far-fetched now, but the conditions of the American political system are changing radically, and it would be foolish to discount the idea. Whats the alternative? Jeb Bush? Really?
Rick Perry (also under felony indictment)?
Scott Walker (facing potential criminal charges of his own, as well as a fiercely-contested re-election this November)?
Lastly, does anyone seriously think that Rand Paul will be any match for Cruzs guile?
People assumed Barry Goldwater in 1964 was far-fetched, too. And Ted Cruz is a lot smarter than Barry Goldwater.
Michael Tracey is a journalist based in New York City.
And that is a problem.
I pray that he does win!! We need him so badly!
Give him the nomination and he will be destroyed by the MSM, if they don’t succeed before hand. You can bet that the Hillary forces do not want a debate to be held between him and their candidate. They will find an excuse to avoid it, or just agree to some light questions, i.e. what newspapers do you read, why do you oppose same sex marriages, why are you against abortion, but don’t go near anything that smells of Hillary, our economy or our national security. As far as the RNC is concerned, who is next in seniority to loose?
Yeah, I’ve seen a number of arguments for a field of RINO’s running and only 1 conservative.
The theory is the Repugs will all mutually destroy each other and the conservative rises as winner above the fray.
Ain’t buying it.
Me? I see the more conservatives the better. If only Walker, Cruz, Perry, Jindal, Palin, DeMint et al were running.
Yeah Buddy!
John McCain was born in Panama, George Romney was born in Mexico.
I refuse to accept fear of MSM machinations as an excuse to not put up the best candidate. The MSM portrayed Mitt F*****g Romney as being a more rabid right-winger than Ted Cruz actually is. Does it really matter, in that sense, who gets the nomination? They'll all get equally horrendous treatment.
All true of course. Won’t argue with any of it.
However, that won’t stop Cruz’s opponents-—especially BHO supporters-—from making hay out of it. It will be their way of getting back for our questioning BHO’s citizenship status.
And then....all of those clamoring for lax immigration enforcement will also pile in. Can see it now.
The only hope we have of getting a Conservative nominee is that Christie and Jeb and Romney all contest strongly the primaries and hold on to the end of them. That will, for once, split the Democrat and “moderate” vote in the ostensibly Republican primaries. For several cycles the conservatives have had a plethora of candidates and could not unite behind any one of them so the minority socialists who ran singly won the Nomination. If the Lefties sort themselves out and present a single candidate, at least after New Hampshire, the Next In Line will win, surely Bush or Romney. I am betting on Bush.
I love Cruz and hope that he runs and gets the nomination. I don’t think he’s all that great a speaker. I personally think he does better when he’s just talking vs “speaking” and he has a few mannerisms that Sat. Night Live could really run with but all that is nothing. He’s a smart, well educated and bold individual that has core values in tune with the Founders and God fearing Americans - exactly why he will be hated by the left. I don’t know what appeal he will have with the population at large. Perhaps if enough Americans are hurting badly enough by 2016, he might be given a chance to try and make a change for the better. I know we need more of a spiritual solution than a political one but Cruz looks more and more like a man for “such a time as this.” Go Ted and God speed!
After Obama, all citizenship questions become moot. That provision of the Constitution is now effectively blacked out in the FOIA releases.
Why?
In a free country a person should be free to work wherever they please. Right?
McCain was born in the Panama Canal Zone, which was
technically US territory at the time.
It would have been very interesting to see what the courts would have done over George Romney had he won.
Then you look at Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, whose personal lives and histories should have eliminated them from any thinking person's mind, and then it dawns on you.
Men voted them down handsomely. The female vote rescued them.
Good luck Ted. I sure hope the Left has run out of pretty boys.
OBAMA VOTE DEMOGRAPHICS 2012
OBAMA VOTE DEMOGRAPHICS 2008
OBAMA VOTE DEMOGRAPHICS 1996
OBAMA VOTE DEMOGRAPHICS 1992
Same way John McCain could!!!
Well, think what you will my friend, but, it’s hard to argue with the facts.
Some on our side......don’t remember it going very far.
Cruz to Victory!
This leftist is worried, and worried that his fellow leftists aren’t worried. Evidently Cruz is still off the RAT political chattering-class’ radar, and he’s trying to warn them.
If Jeb and Mitt run they could split the GOPE vote. I have always thought that an early Conservative wing convention could decide which conservative would face the Gope candidate so that there are not 8 or more conservatives dividing up the conservative vote like the last Presidential election.
Last time Romney only needed a third of the GOP vote to win because the conservative field had lots of candidates who wouldn’t drop out even though they had 15% of the votes.
If this is done again we get another McCain or Romney.
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