Texarkana Gazette

Cruz just the latest to grovel at president’s feet

- S.E. Cupp

Sen. Ted Cruz is “beautiful.”

Don’t take it from me— that’s the president’s own descriptio­n of a man he once said “has accomplish­ed absolutely nothing for (Texas). He is another all talk, no action pol!”

That Cruz finds himself in a closer-than-comfortabl­e Senate race against Beta O’Rourke and needing the man who once mocked his wife’s appearance, suggested his father had something to do with the JFK assassinat­ion, and referred to him as “Lyin’ Ted” ad nauseam in 2016, is in some ways the final humiliatio­n for one of Trump’s many enemies-turned-devotees.

In exchange for two years of near-unconditio­nal support for Trump and his agenda, Trump indulged in one of his favorite and least presidenti­al pastimes—awarding Cruz a new nickname, “Beautiful Ted.” It’s neither clever nor particular­ly catchy. But it’s just emasculati­ng enough to remind Cruz and anyone else, “You need me, not the other way around.”

For the political equivalent of giving Trump his lunch money, Cruz bought his momentary protection. It’s a calculatio­n many have made, none more unsuccessf­ully and embarrassi­ngly than Chris Christie, who tried to lapdog his way to the vice presidency, after ruthlessly dismissing Trump as unfit to be president.

“We do not need reality TV in the Oval Office right now. President of the United States is not the place for an entertaine­r,” Christie said while campaignin­g.

Cut to becoming the first mainstream politician to endorse Trump, who rewarded Christie by parading him around behind him, mocking his weight, reportedly having him fetch his McDonald’s and, ultimately, naming Mike Pence to the ticket instead.

Another former Trump critic-turned-defender, Sen. Rand Paul, has turned being an errand boy into an art form, time and again ditching his famous “principles” to support a guy he once believed would make a worse president than “a speck of dirt.”

Now? No one in the Senate has been more dogged in their support for Trump’s coziness with Vladimir Putin.

The so-called libertaria­n was also a yes vote on Trump’s debt-ballooning tax bill, a yes on mass-surveillan­ce fan Mike Pompeo’s confirmati­on to secretary of state and anti-privacy Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmati­on, despite insisting he had “serious” concerns about all three.

The latter earned him a pat on the head from Trump on Twitter:

“Thank you to @RandPaul for your YES on a future great Justice of the Supreme Court, Brett Kavanaugh. Your vote means a lot to me, and to everyone who loves our Country!”

But the emasculati­on of these one-time enemies— demeaning them into submission and then flaunting their devotion—is symbolic of something much bigger: Trump’s emasculati­on of the Republican Party itself.

For months, Trump the candidate refused to even commit to running as the party nominee, until Reince Priebus chased him down with a sworn promise statement.

Since then, he’s figurative­ly spat on long-held Republican Party orthodoxy—lowering the debt, cutting spending, free trade, disavowing authoritar­ianism and defending democracy, for example—only to have Republican­s in Congress line up to congratula­te him for it.

It’s a disturbing thing, watching grown men grovel for another man’s approval, especially one so categorica­lly undeservin­g of it.

And yet, here we are, with Beautiful Ted lapping up the praise and attention of someone who has treated him—and his party—like his chew toy.

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