Ted Cruz announces candidacy |
By Alan
Caruba
Would you vote for a man who openly
says he would repeal ObamaCare?
Would you vote for a man who openly
says he favors a fair tax and wants to abolish the Internal Revenue
Service?
Would you vote for a man who opposes
Obama’s efforts to offer illegal aliens amnesty and promises to secure the
borders?
Would you vote for a man who decries a
federal government “that wages an assault on our religious liberty”?
Would you vote for a man who wants a
federal government that “works to defend the sanctity of human life” and would
“uphold the sacrament of marriage”?
Would you vote for a man who defends
our Second Amendment rights and condemns the effort ban
ammunition?
Would you vote for a man who condemns
a federal government that seeks to dictate school curriculums and wants to
repeal “every word of Common Core”?
Would you vote for a man who would
stand “unapologetically with the nation of Israel”?
Would you vote for a man who has
pledged that he would do everything he could to ensure that Iran does not
acquire a nuclear weapon?
Would you vote for a man who openly
says he would do everything he could to defeat radical Islamic
terrorism?
I said I would on May
6, 2013 when he was beginning to get attention. Columnist George Will said
he was “as good as it gets” when it comes to being a true conservative in
Congress.
I am of course speaking of Sen.
Ted Cruz (R-TX) who has announced his candidacy to be the presidential
candidate of the Republican Party.
I suspect that his announcement
probably terrifies the Republican “Establishment” who have managed to serve up
some good men, but poor candidates, to be President. When Republican voters
stayed home, we got Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012.
Now they want to get the Party
faithful to vote for Jeb Bush, but from my vantage point, the real base is ready
to vote for anybody else, Sen. Cruz, Wisconsin Gov. Walker, and Sen. Rubio come
to mind.
First of all, there is no Tea Party in
the sense of a political party with its own candidates. What there is are
Republicans who believe in the U.S. Constitution, small government, fiscal
prudence, strong national security, and all those other values outlined in Ted
Cruz’s speech at Liberty University in Lynchburg,
Virginia.
As Cruz said in an email about his
announcement “Washington, D.C. has become completely disconnected from the
values of real Americans. That’s why we are now more than $18 trillion in debt,
why wages have stagnated, and why our foreign policy is an absolute mess.” That
pretty much sums up what Obama has delivered.
Does it surprise anyone that Cruz’s
candidacy was instantly attacked, not just by Democrats, but by a number of
leading Republicans? Rep.
Peter King, appearing on CNN’s “Situation Room” with host Wolf Blitzer,
said, he’d “jump off that bridge” when he got to it if Cruz becomes the GOP
candidate. He also accused Cruz and Rand Paul of being “counterfeit
conservatives.” Nonsense!
The March 24 Wall Street Journal had a
lengthy editorial devoted to “The Cruz Candidacy” noting that on most issues
with the exception of immigration they found themselves in agreement with him
and offered an upbeat view that “The good news for GOP voters is that their
field of candidates in 2016 is going to be deep, offering many varieties of
conservative leadership” but ending with reservations about “his polarizing
style” which was another way of saying he is not a wishy-washy centrist.
We will hear more such accusations and
criticisms and, as often as not, they will come from the GOP
Establishment.
The GOP Establishment regards real
conservatives as unable to secure election, preferring RINOs, Republicans in
Name Only, and candidates who move as close to the center politically as
possible. It seems to have escaped their notice that the Republicans elected in
the last two midterm elections were sent to Washington, D.C. by Tea Party and
other serious conservative voters.
It has been a long time since a real
conservative Republican, Ronald Reagan, was elected President, but it can happen
again as serious voters, particularly those who are independents, join with
those who find Sen. Cruz a refreshing voice, Will he get the nomination? We are
a very long way from the 2016 election, but at least we know it won’t be a
boring one!
© Alan Caruba, 2015
4 comments:
I just got my semi-annual pitch for money from the Republican party. I sent it back intact with this message, "When the Republican party stops caving in to the demoncrat party....then you will get a donation"
Small gesture but it made me feel good. I think if everybody made a similar small gesture; it would become a tsunami of consensus. Sound off patriots!!
Steve
The problem with being Democrat Lite, is there is already a Democrat party and lefties will not switch to a Democrat party named Republican.
Someone missed the New Coke lesson.
The problem with being Democrat Lite, is there is already a Democrat party and lefties will not switch to a Democrat party named Republican.
Someone missed the New Coke lesson.
Ted Cruz's wife works for Goldman Sach's and you say he is a true conservative?!?!? Ha!
Post a Comment