Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) didn’t defund Obamacare. He drove a government shutdown. His party is tanking in the polls.
But he couldn’t be happier.
At a press conference on Wednesday, Cruz called the House’s actions a “remarkable victory” and a “profile in courage.”
Cruz has emerged as the latest celebrity politician who doesn’t need big policy achievements to build his cred, but a following on the far right of his party.
He proved he can make the Republican House bend to his will, pushing them to demand Obamacare be tied to any deal to fund the government, despite no clear path to victory, and now he’s reaping the spoils.
Cruz pulled in nearly $800,000 in the last quarter – nearly twice his last haul. He dominates cable news; he even preempted Mitch McConnell Wednesday when the minority leader was laying out a deal to reopen the government. And he has the unofficial title of Tea Party leader.
“He’s definitely positioned himself as the indisputable leader of the conservative wing of the conservative party,” said Walter Wilson, a political science professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio.
So even though he won nothing in the fight, he’s coming out a winner.
Cruz, who just last month delivered a marathon, 21-hour speech against Obamacare, and had spearheaded an effort to defund or delay the act in exchange for a Congressional spending deal, said on Wednesday that he won’t stand in the way of a Senate deal to end the shutdown and raise the debt ceiling.
The initial battle began when House GOPers tried several times to attach measures to a funding bill to delay or defund Obama’s healthcare bill. Those efforts were axed by the White House and Senate Dems. GOPers then tried to include the shutdown fight into the next deadline to raise the debt ceiling.
Cruz’s retreat comes 16 days into the government shutdown and just a day before the debt ceiling deadline. In some sense, the GOPer’s action makes sense. If the country did default, Cruz certainly wouldn’t want that on his conscious or political record.
“I have no objections to the timing and the reason is simple. There’s nothing to be gained from delaying this vote one day or two days. The outcome will be the same. Every senator, every member of the House is going to have to make a decision where he or she stands. But there’s no benefit. I have never had any intention of delaying” the vote, he said.









