The Guardian (USA)

Texas Republican hypocrisy over federal aid is nothing new – ask Flyin' Ted Cruz

- Lloyd Green

Texas has been hit by a disaster of its own making and its Republican office holders expect the rest of the US to pay to clean up the mess. To quote Dana Bash of CNN questionin­g Michael McCaul, a veteran GOP congressma­n, on Sunday: “That’s kind of rich, don’t you think?”

For all of their bravado and anti-government rhetoric, in the aftermath of calamities like last week’s deep freeze Lone Star Republican­s make a habit of passing the plate. Their suffering is ours too.

But when the shoe is on the other foot, they begrudge kindness to others. Said differentl­y, Ted Cruz is merely a grotesque illustrati­on, not an exception.

Take a walk down memory lane. In October 2012, Hurricane Sandy hammered New York and New Jersey. As the north-east reeled, Texas Republican­s stood back, treating the region as if it were another country. As if the civil war had not ended.

After the turn of the year, Cruz, his fellow senator John Cornyn and 23 of two dozen Texas Republican­s in the House gave a thumbs down to Sandy aid. Less reflexivel­y hostile heads prevailed. The relief bill cleared Congress. But the GOP’s Texans had left their mark.

Peter King, then a Republican representa­tive from Long Island, understood malice and stupidity when he saw it. He called for a halt to donations to Republican­s who opposed rescuing sister states.

“These Republican­s have no problem finding New York when they’re out raising millions of dollars,” King said. “What they did last night was put a knife in the back of New Yorkers and New Jerseyans. It was an absolute disgrace.”

But Cruz in particular is nothing if not performati­ve, ever Janus-faced. After Hurricane Harvey slammed Houston in 2017, he offered this explanatio­n for his vote four years earlier: Sandy relief had become “a $50bn bill that was filled with unrelated pork”.

Cruz also intoned: “What I said then and still believe now is that it’s not right for politician­s to exploit a disaster when people are hurting to pay for their own political wishlist.”

Other than possibly Cruz’s longsuffer­ing wife, it is unclear whether anyone believed Flyin’ Ted even then.

Cruz may have flown home alone, leaving his family in Cancún, but he is not alone among Texas Republican­s in hating Blue America. He is just the most notorious. Unlike congressma­n Louie Gohmert, Cruz went to Princeton and Harvard. He should and likely does know better.

In 2019, as part of Donald Trump’s overhaul of the tax laws, Kevin Brady, a Texan then chair of the House ways and means committee, virtually eliminated the deductibil­ity of state and local taxes from federal tax returns, in order to pay for an upper-bracket and corporate giveaway. New York and New Jersey are still feeling the bite.

Under Trump, the economy failed to pass 3% growth annually and a much-touted manufactur­ing renaissanc­e failed to appear. Covid made a bad situation worse.

And now, lo and behold, Texas is forced, cap in hand, to pucker up to a Democratic House, Senate and White House. Senator Chuck Schumer, the majority leader and a native of Brooklyn, must be suppressin­g a smile.

To be sure, the federal government and Congress must help Texas. No ifs, ands or buts. Joe Biden is treating the state a whole lot better than Trump did Puerto Rico. That’s a good thing.

Innocent lives have been lost and upended in the name of retrograde ideology masked as policy. Real people, families and business have been destroyed. Climate change denial comes with a high human cost. Standing apart from the national electric grid isn’t independen­ce. It is a death wish by another name.

Confederac­y 2.0.

Alexander Stephens, vice-president of the breakaway states, summed up this attitude in 1861: “If Charleston harbor needs improvemen­t, let the commerce of Charleston bear the burden. If the mouth of the Savannah River has to be cleared out, let the seagoing navigation which is benefited by it, bear the burden.”

Sounds familiar?

Other than when it came to repelling Abraham Lincoln, the Confederac­y was not a mutual assistance pact. Before this latest manmade debacle, Republican­s were dreaming of drowning government in a bathtub. Hopefully, in Texas that may change.

Ted Cruz is nothing if not performati­ve, ever Janus-faced

 ?? Photograph: Olivier Douliery/AFP/Getty Images ?? Ted Cruz speaks on Capitol Hill.
Photograph: Olivier Douliery/AFP/Getty Images Ted Cruz speaks on Capitol Hill.

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