Jennifer Rubin is calling Senator Ted Cruz "a jerk" because he attacked fellow Republicans for being "squishes" in a recent speech at a FreedomWorks conference in Texas. Cruz is portraying himself and fellow hard-liners Rand Paul and Mike Lee as the guys who won the gun control fight for the GOP, at a time when fellow Republicans were going wobbly; in fact, as Dave Weigel has pointed out, Cruz's chronology is completely inaccurate and the Republicans were already winning the fight. But Cruz has no time for such facts. He's pleased with himself, and he doesn't seem to care who's pissed off at him.
But isn't that a bad career move for a rookie senator? Steve Benen think so:
All of this dishonest grandstanding may make right-wing activists swoon, but it should also cause Cruz some trouble on Capitol Hill. Senators have traditionally forged relationships with their colleagues in order to build coalitions and be more effective in passing legislation. Cruz is going out of his way to do the opposite -- scolding his veteran colleagues, lecturing them on his wisdom, and creating conditions in which just about everyone who knows him dislikes him.But isn't that the direction the congressional GOP has been heading in for years now? Only silly, old-fashioned Republican members of Congress -- mostly retired ones -- think it's worthwhile to "play a constructive role in the chamber" and "be more effective in passing legislation." Cruz is just openly embracing the new style in a bolder, more avant-garde way than his fellow Republicans in D.C. He's not even pretending that he's willing to work with people who aren't hardcore. There's an honesty to this, at least.
This should make it all but impossible for Cruz to play a constructive role in the chamber, though that may not matter to him, since he doesn't seem especially interested in governing anyway.
Cruz is the future of GOP politics. He doesn't even bother trying to seem cooperative. He defines everyone to the left of him, even the likes of Jennifer Rubin, as sellouts and RINOs. (By the way, a lot of the right agrees with him on that.) His goal is noncooperation until the wingnut revolution happens, and then merciless application of right-wing Correct Thinking afterward. He's the counterrevolutionary New Man.
Politics, as Performance Art.
ReplyDeleteIt's like a reverse Dada movement - which was trying to make artistic statements in reaction to the horrors of WWI.
Cruz is like some artist who's trying to see what boundries he can cross - and it sure looks like there are no boundries he won't be willing to cross.
He doesn't give a sh*t about the Senate, because he's only looking at his Senate seat as a stepping-stone to higher office.
He thinks he'll make a terrific President, and I'm sure that 27% of "the bigger the@$$hole' loving base would agree with him.
I'm hoping that at least 50.1% of Americans realize that he'd be a terrible President.
Last week she was blowing him.
ReplyDeleteCredible? I don't think so.
No fear.
Victor
ReplyDeleteSadly that is the way of American culture... everything has to be OTT.