​Ted Cruz appeals to Christian conservatives in 2016 kickoff

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G4JC

Senior Member
Feb 9, 2011
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#1
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz began his 2016 presidential bid with an impassioned appeal to the religious right on Monday, exhorting a cheering crowd at the world's largest Christian college to "join a grassroots army across this nation coming together and standing for liberty."

"God's blessing has been on America from the very beginning of this nation, and I believe God isn't done with America yet," he said. "I believe in you. I believe in the power of millions of courageous conservatives rising up to reignite the promise of America, and that is why today, I'm announcing that I'm running for president of the United States."

Cruz said the American dream "has enabled millions of people from all over the world to come to America with nothing and to achieve anything," but he warned that the dream is "slipping away."


He suggested America's political salvation rests, in part, on the political engagement of conservative Christians. "Today, roughly half of born-again Christians aren't voting," he said. "They're staying home. Imagine instead millions of people of faith all across America coming out to the polls and voting our values."


Cruz was joined onstage by his wife Heidi and daughters Caroline, 6, and Catherine, 4. He made his candidacy official early on Sunday morning, and he broke the news himself via Twitter, writing just after midnight, "I'm running for president and I hope to earn your support!"


The move made Cruz, a 44-year-old freshman firebrand who's popular among the conservative grassroots but viewed warily by the GOP establishment, the first major candidate in either party to launch a 2016 presidential bid.
In an announcement video accompanying the tweet, Cruz called for a new round of "courageous conservatives" to rise up and take the country back.


"I believe in America and her people, and I believe we can stand up and restore our promise," he said. "It's going to take a new generation of courageous conservatives to help make America great again, and I'm ready to stand with you to lead the fight."


Cruz has been a popular figure among right-wing activists since he rode a tea party wave to dispatch an establishment-backed Republican in the 2012 Texas Senate primary. Since arriving on Capitol Hill in 2013, he's feuded with Democrats and Republicans alike, frequently frustrating his own leadership with an uncompromising, starkly conservative approach to governance.


Cruz is perhaps best remembered for a 21-hour speech on the Senate floor in 2013 urging lawmakers to defund President Obama's health care law. In September of that year, Cruz successfully urged conservatives in both chambers to defy GOP leadership by refusing to back any government spending bill that funded the law. His intervention was blamed, in part, for the 16-day government shutdown that resulted after the dispute over Obamacare temporarily blocked a spending agreement.


He's taken a similarly defiant tack on issues like gun laws, education, and immigration reform, exhorting his party to stand tall instead of moving to the middle to accommodate their opponents.


Cruz showcased his aggressively conservative agenda on Monday. He reiterated his commitment to repealing "every word" of Obamacare and called for a "flat tax" that allows "every American to fill out his or her taxes on a post card." He called for "abolishing the IRS," and asked his audience to "imagine a president that finally, finally, finally secures the border." He condemned the federal government for waging an "assault" on religious liberty, and stressed the need to "defend the sanctity of life" and "uphold the sacrament of marriage." He called school choice "the civil rights issue of the next generation," and said he'd like to see the "common core" state education standards abolished.


It's an ambitious platform, but Cruz projected confidence that it's all within grasp. "Over and over again when we faced impossible odds, the American people have rose to the challenge," he said. "Compared to that, repealing Obamacare and abolishing the IRS ain't all that tough."


Cruz was born December 22, 1970 in Calgary, Canada. Though some have raised questions about whether his foreign birth would preclude him from running for president, most analysts believe he's eligible -- he was a U.S. citizen at the time of his birth because his mom was born in the U.S. In a curious twist, his birthplace also made him a natural-born Canadian citizen, but Cruz renounced his Canadian citizenship last year.
His family moved in 1974 to Texas, where Cruz spent the rest of his childhood. He graduated valedictorian of his high school in 1988, received his undergraduate degree from Princeton University, and received his law degree from Harvard University. He clerked for a federal judge and then-Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist, advised the 2000 presidential campaign of George W. Bush, worked for Bush's Justice Department and was appointed Texas Solicitor General before eventually running for Senate.


It was likely no accident Cruz chose Liberty University to announce his run. He's has spoken at the university before, most recently in 2014 about the need to protect "religious liberty" in the face of a secularizing culture. The school was founded in 1971 by Jerry Falwell, an icon of the religious right, and Cruz has already signaled that he plans to tailor his message to the most conservative wing of his party.

"He hasn't really moved to the middle on any major issues," Texas-based Republican strategist Matt Mackowiak told CBS News last week. "He probably is the favorite among the grassroots, because he is a really solid conservative on all three legs of the stool - social, fiscal, and national security. No one speaks to the concerns of the grassroots with greater effect than Ted Cruz. He's the whole package."

He dwelt at length on the importance of his Christian faith in his speech at Liberty, recalling a point in his childhood when his father left him and his mother but returned after becoming a born-again Christian.

"There are people who wonder if faith is real," he said. "Were it not for the transformative love of Jesus Christ, I would not have been saved and I would have been raised by a single mom without my father in the household."
While his conservative appeals have made him a favorite among the activist set, there are questions about whether Cruz will be handicapped by his poor relationship with the establishment.

"There are questions about how much money he can raise, and about the breadth of his appeal, since he also has no shortage of opponents inside the party," Ramesh Ponnuru, a conservative analyst and friend of Cruz's since college, told CBS News.
To win the nomination, Cruz will have to navigate what looks to become a crowded GOP field, outflanking his rivals on the right while keeping an eye on establishment favorites like former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush.

He's warned Republicans against trusting the establishment to pick winners. Pointing to losses by 2008 nominee Sen. John McCain and 2012 nominee Mitt Romney, Cruz has urged the GOP to nominate a strong conservative or risk defeat for the third consecutive time.

"If we nominate a candidate in that mold, the same people who stayed home in 2008 and 2012 will stay home in 2016 and the Democrats will win again," Cruz told a South Carolina tea party convention in January.

But there are no shortage of potential candidates who could seek the conservative mantle. Cruz's Senate colleagues like Florida's Marco Rubio and Kentucky's Rand Paul are expected to launch their own bids in the coming weeks, and they've signaled they plan to aggressively court conservative voters themselves. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker has also emerged as an early favorite among some parts of the base, and more familiar names like former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum are also likely to enter the fray.

Perhaps mindful of the hurdles ahead, Cruz was already making attempts to expand his mailing list before his speech was over on Monday,. "I'm gonna ask you to break a rule today and take out your cell phones and text the word 'constitution' to the number 33733," he told the audience at Liberty. "You can also text 'imagine' - we're versatile."

© 2015 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
 
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p_rehbein

Senior Member
Sep 4, 2013
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#2
Yahoo News is FULL of Articles where the Liberals are ALREADY crucifying him. They are even now coming out with the Ted Cruz "Birther" conspiracy. The liberals love to hate Cruz.......
 

G4JC

Senior Member
Feb 9, 2011
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...The liberals love to hate Cruz.......
To me just means they're actually worried for some reason. Yet the guy takes it all in stride. I just find it a miracle main stream media just allowed this guy to mention God on national television.

"If you are really a conservative, you will have been in the trenches, you will bear the scars, you will have been fighting the fights." - Ted Cruz
 
S

Sirk

Guest
#4
I like Ted Cruz. I'm afraid that he won't appeal to a large enough segment to win the presidency. Especially in light of what p_rehbein has already stated about the media and their disdain for him.
 
Dec 18, 2013
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Cruz will be fun to watch in the primary. I wonder if he'll read The Cat in the Hat during one of the debates.
 

Nautilus

Senior Member
Jun 29, 2012
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I think Cruz appeals to everyone. MOst likely that little crazy place in the psyche that most people ignore.
 

JonahLynx

Senior Member
Dec 28, 2014
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#7
Cruz will be fun to watch in the primary. I wonder if he'll read The Cat in the Hat during one of the debates.
LOL, Ted Cruz is almost as entertaining as Herman Cain was with his "Uzbeki-beki-bekibeki-stan-stan." Really hoping for a Donald Trump campaign so there's actually something worth watching on TV.
 
S

Sirk

Guest
#8
LOL, Ted Cruz is almost as entertaining as Herman Cain was with his "Uzbeki-beki-bekibeki-stan-stan." Really hoping for a Donald Trump campaign so there's actually something worth watching on TV.

I don't think he'll be able to visit all 57 states so that will be a problem for him "getting out the vote".
 
B

BibleReader

Guest
#9
I actually like Ted Cruz as well, just for entertainment factor, and the senate needs a forceful conservative voice as well. But I don't think he'll be president.
 
J

jahsoul

Guest
#10
*sitting back waiting on Rand*
 

p_rehbein

Senior Member
Sep 4, 2013
30,181
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#11
Cruz will be fun to watch in the primary. I wonder if he'll read The Cat in the Hat during one of the debates.
I would certainly prefer that to the Fairy Tales Obama is famous for in his speeches.
 

p_rehbein

Senior Member
Sep 4, 2013
30,181
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#12
I don't think he'll be able to visit all 57 states so that will be a problem for him "getting out the vote".
And I'm pretty sure the "Deceased Vote" that the liberals seem to always win, especially in places like Chicago, Detroit and such won't go for him either.
 

p_rehbein

Senior Member
Sep 4, 2013
30,181
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#13
I actually like Ted Cruz as well, just for entertainment factor, and the senate needs a forceful conservative voice as well. But I don't think he'll be president.
A Cruz vs. Clinton contest would be much more like "Hunger Games" than entertainment.
 
Dec 18, 2013
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#14
LOL, Ted Cruz is almost as entertaining as Herman Cain was with his "Uzbeki-beki-bekibeki-stan-stan." Really hoping for a Donald Trump campaign so there's actually something worth watching on TV.
Herman Cain was okay in my opinion, he was just not experienced enough. Thought the same on him as I think on Ben Carson; he should go get him a House or Senate seat first.

As for Donald Trump, not a fan of him to be polite about it. Frankly I don't think he should continue his tradition of faux-campaigning.

I would certainly prefer that to the Fairy Tales Obama is famous for in his speeches.
Hmm, only fairy tale I remember Obama referencing is Superman. Don't worry though, Obama isn't running in 2016. So you won't forced to choose between Lex Luthor and The Grinch.
 

AngelFrog

Senior Member
Feb 16, 2015
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#15
Unlike the Obama conspiracy theories, Ted Cruz is without question unqualified to run as President. However, this is going to be a great lesson for Americans, imo. And I think he knows that and that's what he's exploiting.

He wants to see if Republican loyalists are so sick of Obama and the Liberal machine that they'll rally round a vocal Christian GOP Conservative who makes impassioned speeches like all politicians from both sides of the aisle, and those electorate are then so fired up that they'll rally for his candidacy and all the while it escapes them; Ted Cruz was born in Canada. And that makes him ineligible to even begin to stir the rally in his name.

And if we thought Bill slick Willie Clinton was slick in trash talking the truth out of both sides of his mouth, Teddy is demonstrated he's of that ilk already and as early as 2013 when he claimed he was going to 'renounce' the Canadian citizenship he never knew he had!

He went through law school but he's not smart enough to know where he was born? smileys-confused-140297.gif I call Bullfrog!
Politifact:
[h=1]Is Ted Cruz, born in Canada, eligible to run for president?By Angie Drobnic Holan Aug.20,2013[/h]Can Ted Cruz run for president if he was born in Canada?


The Republican senator from Texas says he can. And just to be sure, he’s taking the extra step of renouncing the Canadian citizenship he says he didn’t even know he had.
Cruz -- full name: Rafael Edward Cruz --was born in Canada in 1970 because his father was working for the oil industry there. The senator’s recently released birth certificate shows his mother was born in Delaware and his father was born in Cuba. The Cruz family left Canada a few years later. Cruz grew up in Texas and graduated from high school there, later attending Princeton University and Harvard Law School.
 
Dec 18, 2013
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#16
On the birther fact of Ted Cruz:

Being born in Canada only means Ted Cruz cannot be president. However he is still able to run and campaign even if he is ineligible to win.

This could work out in the GOPs favor in that he can be an expendable attack dog against the Dems. This could also backfire on the GOP though since Cruz is known for going after fellow GOPers. Either way, now that Cruz is in the ring the campaign is officially underway and it looks like it's going to be interesting.
 

AngelFrog

Senior Member
Feb 16, 2015
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#17
Think about that and the character of the man that would do that. He knows he can't be President but he runs and campaigns anyway. And what does that accomplish? Not a thing come the first primary because he's not eligible to even win that when he can't take it to the polls and be in the GOP ticket.

So what does it afford him instead? A shoe-in that he's reelected to his Senate seat for having "tried" to run for President. When he knew he legally could not win the seat that speaks to his character and not well at all. And, and this is big, he makes huge money while running for the office he knows he cannot win.

Let's see if Ted Cruz follows this formula while running.

RedState:
[h=1]73 Rules For Running For President As A Republican[/h] [h=2]Run To Win in 2016[/h]


As an FYI= Federal Election Commission:
[h=1]Quick Answers to Candidate Questions[/h]
 
V

Viligant_Warrior

Guest
#19
Think about that and the character of the man that would do that. He knows he can't be President but he runs and campaigns anyway. And what does that accomplish? Not a thing come the first primary because he's not eligible to even win that when he can't take it to the polls and be in the GOP ticket.
I would have thought the nonsense about Obama not being "an American" would have settled this issue a long, long time ago. Cruz was born of American parents outside the country. That means he's a "native-born" American and is eligible to run for president. Just like George Romney, just like John McCain.

Claiming "he's not eligible to run" is just pure nonsense.
 

AngelFrog

Senior Member
Feb 16, 2015
648
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#20
I would have thought the nonsense about Obama not being "an American" would have settled this issue a long, long time ago. Cruz was born of American parents outside the country. That means he's a "native-born" American and is eligible to run for president. Just like George Romney, just like John McCain.

Claiming "he's not eligible to run" is just pure nonsense.
Wow, by that bit of math that means my bloodline guarantees me citizenship in a lot of countries. Woohoo! lol

Ted Cruz was born in Canada and to a Cuban father and an American mother who hails from Delaware. That means he's a Canadian citizen and the Constitution guarantees he's ineligible.
The nonsense about Obama was just that. Unfortunately the Birther movement will keep that stinking dead horse on the ground as long as it serves their purposes. Which is for less than another 20 months.

Poor horse.
I love horses. :(