At last night’s GOP debate in South Carolina, Texas senator Ted Cruz painted himself into a corner.
Praised by many in the conservative press for beginning to shed his image as Donald Trump’s best friend, the Ivy League debate champion got, well, “schlonged” by Donald Trump.
A few days earlier, Cruz began to unleash the timid beginnings of a Trump offensive when he said that the brash New Yorker “embodies New York values.”
Plain and simple, this was a clumsy attempt at dog-whistle politics that, one assumes Team Cruz hoped, would generate lots of press. (It did!) Heck, saying controversial things has worked for Trump, so why not? Better put, this was Cruz turning a dog whistle into one of those lifeguard whistles that leave your ears bloody. It was loud and clear: New Yorkers are not like “us.” (John Podhoretz, writing at Commentary has a great piece on this.)
As one might predict, during the debate, Fox Business’s Maria Bartiromo brought up Cruz’s comment:
What you just read was a transcript of Ted Cruz, perhaps unknowingly, further digging the hole he is in.
Donald Trump’s response?
It was perhaps one of Trump’s best exchanges in what was, for him, not exactly a bombastic night. Even more befuddling, it was a response Trump tested in public just before the debate!
Whether Cruz was aloof to the clearly visible beat-down looming on the horizon, or that his staff failed to warn him not to double down is anybody’s guess. Regardless, it was a black eye for Cruz, and probably the worst part of his night. Trump stole the paint brush and used Cruz’s own paint to depict Ted Cruz as a jerk — a masterful turning of the tables.
This was a doomed attack from the start. Rather than attack Trump’s past directly, Cruz chose the “guilt by association” route. (Everybody hates New Yorkers! What could go wrong?!) Cruz appears sensitive to being seen as violating Reagan’s 11th Commandment when it comes to his 2016 opponents, despite having called Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell a “liar” in a floor speech. Chastising McConnell, to Cruz defenders, is no such violation because “telling the truth about McConnell” is not the same as speaking ill of a fellow Republican. (Besides, McConnell is a “RINO” anyway, right?)
Accepting that line of thinking, Cruz would be justified in “telling the truth” about Trump, but that’s not the route he chose. Is it because he’s afraid to attack Trump directly? Perhaps, since he’s counting on courting Trump supporters should Trump implode. Even then, lots of those supporters the like Donald precisely because he’s from New York: It’s a huge part of his strength as a candidate.
The only city in America you can get away with insulting without fear of serious repercussion is Washington, D.C., and Ted Cruz already occupies that space. Probably best to stick to that one.