Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Cruz trip will test durability of scandal in voters’ minds

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WASHINGTON — Ted Cruz’s political career already featured many surprise twists before a jaunt to Mexico this week brought him a new level of notoriety.

The Texas senator was once the biggest threat to Donald Trump capturing the 2016 presidenti­al nomination. During a particular­ly bitter stretch of that year’s Republican primary, Mr. Cruz called Mr. Trump a “coward” and “pathologic­al liar.” But by last month, Mr. Cruz was one of Mr. Trump’s staunchest allies and a leader in the former president’s baseless attempt to overturn his November loss.

Such flip-flops are intended to keep Mr. Cruz in a strong position with the GOP base if he runs for the White House again in 2024. But they’ve also turned him into one of Washington’s most villainize­d figures, someone willing to take any politicall­y convenient position as long as it keeps his future ambitions alive.

Mr. Cruz is under further attack for traveling to Cancun while his constituen­ts suffered through a deadly winter storm that left millions without power and running water. His explanatio­n — that his daughters pushed for the getaway — was particular­ly panned.

The optics of the trip are hardly ideal. But the question is whether, three years before he faces voters again, the political fallout will last.

“Ted Cruz is feeling the first post-Trump controvers­y,” said New Hampshireb­ased Republican strategist Mike Biundo. “I don’t think anybody knows exactly what will happen in this new reality that we’re living in.”

Before Mr. Trump got to Washington, scandals, lies and even simple gaffes wrecked political careers.

Despite later winning a congressio­nal seat, former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford will forever be remembered for fabricatin­g a trek along the Appalachia­n Trail, just as former New York Rep. Anthony Weiner was undone by repeated sexting scandals and ex-Texas Gov. Rick Perry couldn’t live down the debate stage moment of forgetting the third of three federal agencies he’d promised to eliminate.

Once Mr. Trump was in the White House, his outlandish antics attracted so much attention that something that simply looked bad, like a senator’s leaving on vacation while his state was suffering, wouldn’t receive much notice.

Mr. Cruz is now navigating how much damage control is needed in a post-Trump political landscape.

He rushed home Thursday and told reporters the trip was “obviously a mistake.” But he made no public appearance­s Friday, and his office didn’t answer questions about his schedule or what he was doing to help Texans cope with the storm. His office simply released a statement backing Gov. Greg Abbott’s request for federal assistance.

Still, Mr. Cruz is still the best-known leader in the country’s largest red state, with a far higher national profile than Mr. Abbott, who has also been mentioned as a possible 2024 presidenti­al contender, and Sen. John Cornyn, who coasted to re-election last year by a more comfortabl­e margin than Mr. Cruz, who narrowly beat Democrat Beto O’Rourkein 2018.

Alice Stewart, a GOP strategist and veteran of Mr. Cruz’s presidenti­al campaign, noted that the senator has years before he’ll have to run for re-election or president — or both — in 2024.

That’s a lot of time to put the Cancun trip “in the rearview mirror,” even if Mr. Cruz’s political opponents will continue to trumpet it.

“People have come to tolerate a lot more during and after the era of Trump,” said Ms. Stewart, who noted that while social media often intensifie­s political scandals, it also tends to shorten their lifespans.

Rick Tyler also worked for Mr. Cruz’s 2016 campaign but has frequently criticized the senator for kowtowing to Mr. Trump since then. He said that “when Texas was down and out and embarrasse­d, frankly,” Mr. Cruz’s trip to the beach was unforgivab­le: “There’s no way this is going to be forgotten.”

“Cruz is very beatable,” Mr. Tyler said of the senator’s re-election prospects, especially if he tries again for the White House the same year. “He’s got to decide. By doing one or the other, you risk losing both.”

Of course, Mr. Cruz has effectivel­y used being one of Washington’s most detested figures to his advantage in the past. He came to Congress as a conservati­ve insurgent who infuriated both parties — even prompting fellow Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina to once joke that no senator would convict one of their own for murdering Mr. Cruz in the chamber.

In 2016, Mr. Cruz won the Iowa caucuses and proved to have a solid national base of support, setting up a tense primary fight that would last for months. At one point, Mr. Trump attacked the looks of Mr. Cruz’s wife and baselessly suggested that his father had a hand in the assassinat­ion of John F. Kennedy. Mr. Cruz lashed out at Mr. Trump in response and was later booed off the stage at that year’s Republican National Convention for failing to endorse the New Yorker.

But in the four years since, Mr. Cruz transforme­d into one of Mr. Trump’s biggest champions.

Among those close to Mr. Cruz, there is a sense that the senator hurt himself politicall­y this week but remains well-positioned for another White House bid should he opt to run again. His team believes Mr. Cruz is the most popular prospectiv­e 2024 candidate not named Trump among likely Republican primary voters.

Mr. Cruz was a fundraisin­g force for his GOP colleagues in the House and Senate leading up to November’s election. And his own fundraisin­g has surged in the months since — including after he stood against the certificat­ion of President Joe Biden’s victory in January. His small-dollar donor base, in particular — which was large to begin with — has grown dramatical­ly, aid essay.

Even amid calls for Mr. Cruz to resign for his role in helping encourage the Trump supporters who staged a deadly insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, Republican­s in San Antonio organized a rally celebratin­g him as “courageous.”

Mr. Cruz is also planning to attend next week’s influentia­l Conservati­ve Political Action Conference, where he can further ingratiate himself with the GOP’s most fervent activists, who aren’t likely to hold Cancun against him.

Cruz allies note that the second-place finisher in the previous Republican primary often becomes the nominee in the next election. But moving forward, there is a sense internally that Mr. Cruz’s political strength is directly linked to his relationsh­ip with Mr. Trump, whose feelings are difficult to gauge.

Regina Thomson, a former Cruz loyalist who fought Mr. Trump’s nomination at the 2016 GOP convention, has since warmed to Mr. Trump. She said Mr. Cruz’s Cancun trip didn’t bother her, but that ultimately, she and other conservati­ves would likely follow Mr. Trump’s lead.

“If you would ask a lot of [Mr. Cruz’s former] grassroots supporters today, they’d say Trump did such a good job they’d like him to run again,” Ms. Thomson said. “And if Trump doesn’t run, I think a lot of people will look to him to see who he’s supporting.”

“Ted Cruz is feeling the first post-Trump controvers­y. I don’t think anybody knows exactly what will happen in this new reality that we’re living in.”

— Mike Biundo, Republican strategist

 ?? Marie D. De Jesas/Houston Chronicle via AP ?? Demonstrat­ors stand in front of Texas Sen. Ted Cruz’s home in Houston to call for his resignatio­n Thursday. The Republican senator said his family vacation to Mexico was “obviously a mistake” after he cut it short and returned home early. But with Mr. Cruz not set to face voters for another three years, the question remains: Will the scandal truly haunt him?
Marie D. De Jesas/Houston Chronicle via AP Demonstrat­ors stand in front of Texas Sen. Ted Cruz’s home in Houston to call for his resignatio­n Thursday. The Republican senator said his family vacation to Mexico was “obviously a mistake” after he cut it short and returned home early. But with Mr. Cruz not set to face voters for another three years, the question remains: Will the scandal truly haunt him?

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