Austin American-Statesman

Conservati­ve Roy gets Cruz boost

- By Asher Price asherprice@statesman.com

State senators were still shuffling into a sleepy Texas Senate Nomination­s Committee hearing on an April morning in 2011 when Chip Roy, Gov. Rick Perry’s pick to lead the state Office of State-Federal Relations, jolted the proceeding­s with an unexpected message.

The office, which traditiona­lly lobbied for federal money for state institutio­ns, such as grants to universiti­es, ought to be shut down completely, Roy argued, or at least “stand for something.”

“Our interest is liberty, state sovereignt­y, and an end to the crippling pile of debt and

regulation coming from Washington,” Roy told the senators.

This was an office specifical­ly designed to grease the skids for federal money flowing to Texas. Roy, who is now running for the Republican nomination in a congressio­nal district that includes swaths of Central and South Austin, was suggesting turn

ing it into something more antagonist­ic.

Everything had been weaponized — this was in the wake of the 2010 tea party wave and ahead of Perry’s 2012 presidenti­al run — and Roy, in a sense, was the tip of the spear.

His nomination was approved 6-1 by the committee, with Sen. Kirk Watson, D-Austin, voting “no.”

The Senate later confirmed his nomination.

The episode was emblematic of how Roy, 45, who lives in northern Hays County with his wife and two children, has tried to press against the federal government in however obscure a role he has held.

For years, Roy has operated behind the scenes on behalf of top Texas GOP officehold­ers. Now he’s try

ing to make a name for himself as a politician in his own right.

He’s sounding the same kinds of themes he touched on in that 2011 hearing, positionin­g himself both as an insider who worked the back rooms in Washington as an aide to John Cornyn and, later, Cruz, and as an out

sider who was disgusted by what he has described as the “top-down” impulse of Capitol Hill.

Usually he left the policy pronouncem­ent to his bosses, but on the campaign trail and recently as head of a states-rights center at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, he’s been giving voice to his own opinions.

Ahead of the Women’s March in January 2017, he wrote in the National Review: “In their zeal to shock and to trumpet a convoluted notion of freedom to have their bod- ies ‘left alone,’ these march- ers exclude the bodies of the unborn. What about the rights of an unborn child? What about the safety of an unborn child?”

He has also said that “for every dollar of taxes cut, Congress should cut a dollar in government spending.”

On May 22, he faces Matt McCall, a tea party-aligned business owner, in the run- off for the GOP nomination. With the backing of incumbent Rep. Lamar Smith, who is not running after more than 30 years holding the seat, and Cruz, who is espe- cially popular among the party faithful in these parts,

the race stands to be Roy’s to lose.

“It’s tough to beat the Cruz machine,” said state Rep. Jason Isaac, R-Dripping Springs, who was one of 18 Republican­s in the March primary.

Roy also has a money advantage: He has raised more than $540,000, according to an April campaign finance filing. McCall had raised nearly $200,000.

Roy’s campaign received hundreds of thousands of dollars from political action committees dedicated to promoting the GOP’s most conservati­ve principles: more than $145,000 from the Club for Growth political action committee and nearly $65,000 from the House Freedom Fund. He also has received roughly at least $10,000 from Tim Dunn, a Midland oilman who supports Empower Texans, the group that has long attacked moderate Republican poli- ticians. The Jobs, Freedom and Security campaign com- mittee, affiliated with Cruz, contribute­d $5,000 to Roy’s campaign.

Career in politics

Born in Bethesda, Md., to Texas transplant­s, Roy says his political philosophy was

the consequenc­e of growing up in a Baptist, Reagan-era conservati­ve household in a rural corner of northern Virginia. Class field trips were to Washington or Civil War battlefiel­ds.

“Fairly early on I had a belief in limited government being good for freedom,” he told the American-Statesman. An only child, he liked to watch John Wayne and World War II movies with his parents. “I was raised on the idea of rugged indi- vidualism.”

At the time of his appear- ance before the Senate Nom

inations Committee, he had already ghost-written Rick Perry’s “Fed Up! Our Fight to Save America from Wash- ington,” a book that, among other things, likens Social Security to a Ponzi scheme.

The Office of State-Federal Relations post didn’t last long. A few months later he was diagnosed with stage 3 Hodgkin’s lymphoma (the cancer was treated and is in remission, he said). In November 2011, he was named a senior adviser to Perry’s ill-fated first presidenti­al campaign.

He then became Cruz’s chief of staff, advising the newly elected senator on messaging and policy. The senator was involved with the October 2013 govern- ment shutdown, giving a 21-hour Senate speech to hold up a budget bill in an effort to defund the Affordable Care Act.

He took to T witter to criticize GOP senators who turned their back on Cruz, including U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.: “Shocking for someone talking to (Sen. Chuck) Schumer 5x a day and the White House daily”; and U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla.: “The worst thing is giving up & leaving your base believing there is no need to be a Republican any longer.”

Roy believed “we’re doing this for the right reasons,” said Boyd Matheson, who was chief of staff for Cruz ally U.S. Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah.

In September 2014, Cruz announced that Roy was leaving his Capitol office to join his political team.

But Roy soon left Cruz’s orbit to return to Texas to serve as first assistant attorney general under newly elected Ken Paxton. During his tenure, the office filed suit against the federal government to prevent samesex marriage; to quash proposed environmen­tal air and water regulation­s; to chip away at Obamacare; and to halt the relocation of Syrian refugees in Texas.

“Chip is a great strategic thinker, a principled conservati­ve, sets clear goals and has a clear vision of what public policy should be in order to fulfill the vision of the Constituti­on and its framers,” said Bernie McNamee, who was Paxton’s chief of staff.

Attorney general’s office

In March 2016, Roy left Paxton’s office to be executive director of Trusted Leadership PAC, a political group that backed Cruz’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

But a month later, Roy remained on the state payroll, according to a Dallas Morning News story at the time.

On April 1, 2016, the newspaper reported, Roy received a full month’s paycheck, $16,220.62.

Roy was severed from the payroll the day after the newspaper report. He said he had set up an arrangemen­t with Paxton to be paid through June 10 and maintain access to state health care benefits in case his health took a turn for the worse.

Roy told the Statesman that state lawyers had approved the arrangemen­t.

“I didn’t take any pay, not $1, from the PAC while I was still on the state payroll,” he said.

Early voting runs from May 14 to 18.

 ?? AMANDA VOISARD / AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? Congressio­nal candidate Chip Roy greets Clydeane “Dede” Altchuler during his rally for Congress on Tuesday at Krause’s Cafe in New Braunfels.
AMANDA VOISARD / AMERICAN-STATESMAN Congressio­nal candidate Chip Roy greets Clydeane “Dede” Altchuler during his rally for Congress on Tuesday at Krause’s Cafe in New Braunfels.
 ?? AMANDA VOISARD / AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? Congressio­nal candidate Chip Roy (right) chats with U.S. Senator Ted Cruz during Roy’s rally for the 21st Congressio­nal District seat Tuesday at Krause’s Cafe in New Braunfels.
AMANDA VOISARD / AMERICAN-STATESMAN Congressio­nal candidate Chip Roy (right) chats with U.S. Senator Ted Cruz during Roy’s rally for the 21st Congressio­nal District seat Tuesday at Krause’s Cafe in New Braunfels.

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