Chattanooga Times Free Press

TED CRUZ’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE

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We all know by now that Ted Cruz went on vacation while Texas froze.

Over the last week, millions of Texans have suffered in the cold as workers tried to restore power amid freezing temperatur­es and icy conditions. So far, the official local death toll from the snow, ice and power outages stands at 24.

Rather than stay behind and help coordinate aid and federal assistance, the state’s junior senator went to Cancún, if only for a day, before widespread outrage brought him back to the United States.

Of course, Cruz is not the governor. He has no formal power in the state government of Texas. His is more a failure of optics and political leadership than governance per se.

Greg Abbott, who is the governor of Texas, doesn’t have that excuse. As Texans froze, he went on Fox News to falsely blame renewable energy and the as-yet-realized Green New Deal for the crisis in Texas. “This shows how the Green New Deal would be a deadly deal for the United States of America,” he said. “Texas is blessed with multiple sources of energy, such as natural gas and oil and nuclear, as well as solar and wind. But … our wind and our solar got shut down and they were collective­ly more than 10% of our power grid, and that thrust Texas into a situation where it was lacking power on a statewide basis.”

Faced with one of the worst crises in the recent history of the state, Republican­s have turned their attention away from conditions on the ground and toward the objects of their ideologica­l ire. The issue isn’t energy policy, it is liberals and environmen­talists, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez — a New York congresswo­man who was a child when Texas built its first wind farms — and climate activists.

Amid awful suffering and deteriorat­ing conditions, Texas Republican­s decided to fight a culture war. In doing so, they are emblematic of the national party, which has abandoned even the pretense of governance in favor of the celebratio­n of endless grievance.

This is just what it means to be a Republican politician now. Accountabi­lity is out, distractio­n is in. You don’t deal with problems, you make them fodder for zero-sum partisan conflict. As president, Donald Trump refused to treat the coronaviru­s pandemic as a challenge to overcome with leadership and expertise. Instead, he made it another battle in the culture wars, from whether you wore a mask to whether you remained away from public places. He spent more time trying to racialize the virus for cheap points — calling it the “China virus” and the “Kung flu” — than he did giving guidance to the American public.

You’ll find the same dynamic at all levels of Republican politics. At no point during the Georgia Senate race, for example, did the Republican candidates, Kelly Loeffler and David Purdue, produce a platform to rival the detailed policy proposals of their Democratic opponents. Instead, they ran on fear, identity and fealty to Trump. “We are the firewall to stopping socialism, and we have to hold the line,” Loeffler said at one campaign stop.

In his Inaugural Address, President Joe Biden urged “unity.” This wasn’t a call for bipartisan­ship. It was a plea to “lower the temperatur­e” and to “see each other not as adversarie­s but as neighbors.” Politics, he said, “need not be a raging fire destroying everything in its path” and “every disagreeme­nt doesn’t have to be a cause for total war.”

Biden’s appeal stands in stark contrast with the reigning ethos of the Republican Party as it exists today. Nothing, not even a deadly crisis, will turn Republican­s away from a politics that rejects problem-solving in favor of grievance-mongering.

Our system has room for two major political parties. One of them, however imperfectl­y, at least attempts to govern. The other has devoted its energy to entertainm­ent. It is a tragedy for the people of Texas that at this moment of danger they have to deal with a government of showmen.

 ??  ?? Jamelle Bouie
Jamelle Bouie

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