The Morning Call

Cruz shows why GOP isn’t going back to Reaganism

- Jonah Goldberg Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency LLC.

Throughout Donald Trump’s captivity of the GOP, many Republican­s have held fast to the hope that after he leaves office, the party can return to the sunny Reaganism of the Before Times.

Of course, Trump’s bitter-enders have made it clear that they’d be happy to tear down not just the party but the country itself to avoid having to live in a postTrump world.

It might have seemed as if we hit rock bottom earlier this month, when the Texas attorney general sued the swing states that decided the election for Joe Biden, demandingt­ohavetenso­fmillions of legal votes erased and the election effectivel­y handed to Trump. More than 100 Republican House members and 17 Republican state attorneys general lent their names in support.

The Supreme Court rejected that idiotic suit, but norebukeor­reasonseem­s to be able to divert this movement from where it’s headed. Allen West, the head of the Texas Republican Party, issued a statement after the ruling, suggesting that perhaps “law-abiding states should bond together and form a union of states that will abide by the Constituti­on.”

After it was pointed out to him that this smacked of secession talk, West made the bizarre claim that “the real perpetrato­rs of secession are the states, and others, named in the suit by Texas, whoenacted illegal and unconstitu­tional actions resulting in the violation of election laws.”

Now, Trump’s team appears to be moving past the election altogether since it has failed spectacula­rly to alter that reality. Instead, Michael Flynn, the recently pardoned former national security adviser, who met with the president Friday night, has been leading calls for martial law to save the Trump presidency.

Over the weekend, Kelli Ward, the head of Arizona’s Republican Party, tweeted to assure Trump that Arizona is “working every avenue to stop this coup,” using the hashtag “CrossTheRu­bicon.” The best defense of Ward is that she has a thumbless grasp of what that phrase actually means: Julius Caesar’s illegal crossing of the Rubicon river with his troops marked the end of the Roman Republic and the beginning of Caesarian tyranny.

As dangerous and ridiculous as such talk is, many Republican­s still think this is all a temporary fever, a last gasp of Trump’s cynical performati­ve nonsense aimed at venting anger and raising moneyoffhi­s supporters. They think the GOP can still go back to being the party of Reagan.

One reason for skepticism is the latest move by Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas.

Cruz has long been a reliable bellwether for the moodof the broader GOP base, which is whyheswitc­hed from one of Trump’s biggest critics to one of his biggest supporters — and whyheoffer­ed to argue the Texas lawsuit before the Supreme Court.

No politician in recent memory has wrapped himself morein Reagan’s legacy than Cruz. He’s read all the biographie­s, can quote all the big speeches and has said countless times that he models himself after the Gipper.

So it was revealing that on Friday, Cruz single-handedly scuttled an effort to protect Hong Kongers facing persecutio­n for supporting democracy. The legislatio­n would have offered Temporary Protected Status to Hong Kongers seeking asylum from Chinese authoritar­ianism and for Hong Kong residents fearful of returning to it. The measure, so uncontrove­rsial that it passed unanimousl­y by voice vote in the House, is vintage Reagan.

“We shall continue America’s tradition as a land that welcomes peoples from other countries,” Reagan declared in his 1981 speech on immigratio­n “We shall also, with other countries, continue to share in the responsibi­lity of welcoming and resettling those who flee oppression .”

Indeed, Cruz issued a statement in June commemorat­ing the 33rd anniversar­y of Reagan’s Berlin Wall speech, saying “America should remember” that “our principles can tear down walls.” While the Berlin Wall may be gone, he added, “the evils of tyranny still exist today, and nowhere is that more evident than in Hong Kong, where the Chinese Communist Party has moved to crush Hong Kong’s autonomy and strip away their freedoms.”

This Christmas season, Cruz says we cannot lend support to potential victims of tyranny because giving them temporary protection could be “used by the Chinese Communists to send even more Chinese spies into the United States.” He also suggested that the time-limited, HongKong-specific adjustment is really a Trojan horse for the Democrats’ radical approach to immigratio­n.

Noneof this withstands close scrutiny. But that’s not the point. If Cruz thinks fighting for Reaganite principles is a political loser, that should tell you something about howfar weare from a return to Reaganism.

 ?? EXAMINER GRAEMEJENN­INGS/WASHINGTON ?? Until recently, Sen. Ted Cruz had fought for principles put forth by President Ronald Reagan.
EXAMINER GRAEMEJENN­INGS/WASHINGTON Until recently, Sen. Ted Cruz had fought for principles put forth by President Ronald Reagan.
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