The Peterborough Examiner

Cruz takes Mexican trip after storm slams Texas

Trump loyalist has eyes on run for president in 2024

- STEVE PEOPLES AND JAKE BLEIBERG

DALLAS — Texas Sen. Ted Cruz acknowledg­ed on Thursday that he had travelled to Mexico for a family vacation this week, leaving his home state as thousands of constituen­ts struggled without power or safe drinking water after a powerful winter storm.

The high-profile Republican, a potential White House candidate in 2024, said in a statement that he had accompanie­d his family after his daughters asked to go on a trip with friends, given that school was cancelled for the week.

“Wanting to be a good dad, I flew down with them last night and am flying back this afternoon,” Cruz said after The Associated Press and other media outlets had reported details of the trip.

“My staff and I are in constant communicat­ion with state and local leaders to get to the bottom of what happened in Texas,” Cruz said. “We want our power back, our water on, and our homes warm.”

The revelation drew immediate criticism from Democrats and Republican­s in Texas and beyond as Cruz, a key ally of former U.S. president Donald Trump, contemplat­es the possibilit­y of a second presidenti­al run. The two-term senator’s current term expires in early 2025.

“That’s something that he has to answer to his constituen­ts about,” state Republican Party chair Allen West said when asked whether Cruz’s travel was appropriat­e while Texans are without power and water.

Hundreds of thousands of people in Texas woke up Thursday to a fourth day without power, and a water crisis was unfolding after winter storms wreaked havoc on the state’s power grid and utilities.

Texas officials ordered 7 million people — one-quarter of the population of the nation’s second-largest state — to boil tap water before drinking the water, after days of record low temperatur­es that damaged infrastruc­ture and froze pipes.

In Austin, some hospitals faced a loss in water pressure and in some cases, heat.

Cruz’s office declined to answer specific questions about the family vacation, but his staff reached out to the Houston Police Department on Wednesday afternoon to say the senator would be arriving at the airport, according to department spokespers­on Jodi Silva. She said officers “monitored his movements” while Cruz was at the airport.

Cruz has been demonized by the left even before he ran for president in 2016. In more recent years, he has positioned himself as a Trump loyalist with an eye toward a potential second White House bid.

The Texas senator, who once described Trump as a “pathologic­al liar,” championed thethen president’s call to block the certificat­ion last month of Democrat Joe Biden’s election victory. That stand led to calls for Cruz’s resignatio­n after a violent mob stormed the Capitol as Congress was affirming Biden’s win.

“Ted Cruz had already proven to be an enemy to our democracy by inciting an insurrecti­on. Now, he is proving to be an enemy to our state by abandoning us in our greatest time of need,” Texas Democratic Party chair Gilberto Hinojosa said Thursday.

“For the 21st time, the Texas Democratic Party calls on Ted Cruz to resign or be expelled from office.”

Cruz’s office dismissed calls for his resignatio­n earlier in the month.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Juan Lopez, right, carries a cooler full of water after filling it with a hose from a park spigot Thursday in Houston. Houston and several surroundin­g cities are under a boil water notice as many residents are still without running water in their homes.
DAVID J. PHILLIP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Juan Lopez, right, carries a cooler full of water after filling it with a hose from a park spigot Thursday in Houston. Houston and several surroundin­g cities are under a boil water notice as many residents are still without running water in their homes.

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