Ted Cruz for President
By Alan
Caruba
In 2008, a
young, first-term Senator ran for President. His mother was an American citizen
and his father was from Kenya. That did not deter him as he was designated a
natural-born citizen and thus eligible to hold the office. He won and we have
endured four years of his first term and now are watching as his second term is
demonstrating further his incompetence and loss of political power. Barack
Obama, however, is proof that a Senator with a similar background can run.
That is
why I am endorsing Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) to be the next nominee of the
Republican Party to run for President in 2016. He would be the best candidate
to oppose Hillary Clinton, widely believed to already have the Democratic Party
nomination. His debating skills are extraordinary, but it is his record in
public life that commends him to lead the nation out of the morass of general
decline into which it has fallen.
One Cruz
donor who has known him for decades summed it best. “He’s fearless.” Columnist
George Will has described him “as good as it gets” and the National Federation
of Independent Business said of his senatorial campaign that his election was
“critical to the small business owners in (Texas and) also to protecting free
enterprise across America.”
His
father, Rafael, was born in Cuba and fought with Fidel Castro until his
communist regime revealed itself and turned on him. He escaped Cuba, arriving
in Austin, Texas, speaking no English and with $100 he sewed into his
underwear. He washed dishes to help pay for his schooling at the University of
Texas. His father is currently a pastor in Dallas.
Cruz was
born in Canada to an American mother and, when his family moved back to Texas,
he attended high school in Houston and went on to receive a bachelor’s degree
from Princeton University and a law degree from Harvard University where he was
the primary editor of the Law Review and a founding editor of the Latino Law
Review.
He worked
on George W. Bush’s 2000 presidential campaign and, when Bush was elected, he
appointed Cruz an associate deputy attorney general. Prior to his election as
Senator, Cruz had served as the Solicitor General of Texas, the State’s chief
lawyer before the U.S. Supreme Court. He was the youngest and would be the longest
serving Solicitor General in Texas as well as the first Hispanic to hold the
office. His previous experience as a law clerk to former Supreme Court William
Renhquist has served him well.
As
Solicitor General, Cruz authored more than 80 U.S. Supreme Court briefs and
argued before it 43 times, securing a number of landmark national victories
defending U.S. sovereignty against the U.N. and the World Court, the Second
Amendment, the constitutionality of the Texas Ten Commandments monument, the
words ‘under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance, and other key decisions.
He was
named one of the best 50 litigators under 45 by American Lawyer magazine and
one of the 50 Most Influential Minority Lawyers in America by the National law
Journal. Texas Lawyer ranked him one of the 25 Greatest Texas Lawyers of the
Past Quarter Century.
A recent
National Review Online blog post by Robert Costa was titled “Cruz 2016” said he is
considering a presidential run according to his friends and confidants. A
Republican insider said “If you don’t think this is real, then you’re not
paying attention. Cruz already has grassroots on his side and in this climate
that’s all he may need.” Republicans fearful that Hispanics would automatically
vote for a Democratic candidate can put that fear aside if Cruz was the GOP
candidate. He would garner a significant margin of their votes, enough to get
him elected in a tight race. Chad Connelly, the chairman of the South Carolina
Republican Party said “Conservatives think he’s a rock star. I hear about him
from everybody.”
Indeed,
Cruz was in South Carolina this past week giving a rousing speech—without notes
or a Teleprompter—to a gathering of Republicans and also spoke at the National
Rifle Association. He is being received in a fashion that only a promising
candidate normally receives.
Critically,
the Costa article said, “Cruz isn’t worried that his birth
certificate will be a problem. Though he was born in Canada, he and his
advisors are confident that he could win any legal battle over his
eligibility.” Given the fact that Obama’s birth certificate is widely believed
to be a forgery and the path that was smoothed for him by the Democratic Party
that would appear to be a foregone conclusion.
A May 3rd Washington Times article cited Michael C. Dorf, a constitutional law professor at Cornell University who said that Cruz “likely does not have any constitutional barriers standing in front of him” and noting that the Congressional Research Service “also weighed in on the issue in 2011 with an opinion that sounds favorable to a Cruz candidacy.”
Even famed
Democratic Party strategist, James Carville, speaking on ABC’s “This Week”,
said, “I think he is the most talented and fearless
Republican politician I’ve seen in the last 30 years. I further think that he’s
going to run for president and he is going to create something. I’m not sitting
here saying he’s going to win, and I think Senator DeMint is right. I’ve
listened to excerpts of his speech in South Carolina. He touches every button,
and this guy has no fear. He just keeps plowing ahead. And he is going to be
something to watch.”
Proof that
Cruz is making an impact in Washington is the fire he is drawing. A recent
Heritage Action for America communique noted that he is “under attack by
Washington liberals” and is seen as “a threat to the big-government elites.”
The committee lauded Cruz because he “has no interest in playing by corrupt
Washington rules” and “even some of his so-called friends have resorted to ad
hominem attacks” that include calling him a jerk, a liar, immature,
narcissistic, and whiny.” That’s often a
sign that a politician is beginning to make a reputation by not going along to
get along.
Among the
early rivals for the GOP nomination are Marco Rubio of Florida, but his defense
of the proposed immigration law that is little more than amnesty for 11 million
illegal aliens will hurt him among Republican voters in the primaries. Sen.
Rand Paul of Kentucky is also expected to make a run for the nomination, along
with Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker and Louisiana’s Bobby Jindal.
At this
early point in time, I don’t see any of his rivals gaining sufficient support
to gain the nomination. And I can see him winning the 2016 election in a
landslide. Hillary is just old news.
I don’t
know what kind of president Cruz would be, but I do know he would not be as
boring, incompetent, ineffectual, or a constant liar and embarrassment that the
current one is.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
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