A quick biographical recap: Ted was born in 1970 and grew up in Houston. His father is a Cuban immigrant. Ted went to Princeton, where he was a debate champion. Not just any ol’ debate champion, but champion of all of America — North America, actually. He went on to Harvard Law School, where he did the expected glittering things. Then he clerked for Judge Mike Luttig on the Fourth Circuit. (Marvelous man, Luttig. Should be on the Supreme Court.) Then he clerked for Chief Justice Rehnquist.Norlinger wrote a previous column on Cruz in 2009 which you can read here. He sounds like just the kind of guy we'd want in the Senate.
On the Bush 2000 campaign, Ted was a domestic-policy adviser. He later served in the Justice Department and at the Federal Trade Commission. He returned to Texas to be solicitor general, a post he held from 2003 to 2008. He wrote over 70 U.S. Supreme Court briefs, and presented eight oral arguments in that court. He was basically a whirlwind of principle, creativity, and skill.
For my money, Ted is a dream candidate, and would make no less splendid a senator. He is all-purpose, by which I mean, he’s versed in economics, the law (obviously), domestic policy, and, not least — very much not least — foreign policy. He stands for all the things we Reaganites prize: a free economy; constitutionalism; “traditional values” (a mockable phrase, but useful); national defense; a foreign policy that does not forget American ideals (e.g., freedom) — you get the picture.
Moreover, he can articulate what we feel, believe, and know. The ability to articulate is no small thing, in politics and government.
Also, for those who care, Ted is “Hispanic,” whatever that means. I always just thought of him as a swell guy — and an American, and a Texan — not a “Hispanic.” But I know that such things mean a great deal to a great many.
I hope he goes to the Senate, and I hope he goes further than that. A nightmare scenario for people like us — I’m talking about Reaganites, again — is that Senator Cruz and Senator Rubio compete in a presidential primary. But then, you could call that an embarrassment of riches.
Speaking of Rubio: Ted should be a national conservative cause, the way Rubio was in Florida. Indeed, the Texas race could look much like the Florida race: with Cruz playing the part of Rubio, and the Republican lieutenant governor, David Dewhurst, playing the part of Charlie Crist.
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Ted Cruz, The Texas Version of Marco Rubio?
Jay Nordlinger of National Review has a candidate in mind for the open Texas Senate seat, somebody who might be able to do in Texas what Marco Rubio did in Florida...and for many of the same reasons. His candidate is Ted Cruz:
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2 comments:
Ted Cruz ia a jerk. This site cuts him down to size:
www.canadacruz.blogspot.com
I think that Cruz was born in Canada because his father was working for an oil company. I'm American born dual citizen of the US and Canada and some of my family is from Alberta, where Cruz was born. Alberta is Canada's Texas. This does make it impossible for Cruz to run for president, but I don't see any problem with him being Canadian born.
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