After a month of bruising attacks and sliding poll numbers, Ted Cruz is back on track.
The Texas senator pulled off a major victory in Iowa Monday night, winning the Republican caucuses with 28 percent support, four points ahead of billionaire real-estate mogul Donald Trump, who had been needling Cruz for weeks over his Canadian birthplace and Wall Street loans, and five points ahead of Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, whom no Iowa poll nor frontrunner perceived as a real threat in the Hawkeye State.
Cruz’s win was owed in large part to evangelical voters, who consistently play an outsize role in the first-in-the-nation nominating contest. More than 60 percent of Republican caucus-goers identified as evangelical Christians, according to entrance poll data, and Cruz won over about a third of them.
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The feat was well-deserved. For months, Cruz courted evangelical voters aggressively, creating a “national prayer team,” hosting a “religious liberty” rally, and deploying his pastor father to countless church gatherings. At the same time, he had to contend with numerous rivals who boast similarly strong ties to the evangelical community — including retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum (the last two of which were winners of the 2008 and 2012 Iowa caucuses, respectively).
There were “a lot of people competing in the evangelical lane,” said Cruz’s communications director Rick Tyler, using a favorite primary season metaphor, on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” Tuesday. “It was not an open lane for us.”
Indeed, Monday’s caucuses validated Cruz’s appeal among evangelical voters within a highly competitive field. But they were also a testament to the primacy of his ground game, as well as his ability to withstand a full-fledged assault from Donald Trump — a quality few candidates possess. Though Cruz always had the money and organization to survive a loss in Iowa, his path to the nomination would have been far more difficult to see without a win there. Simply put: Cruz passed a crucial test on Monday and probably won’t be going away anytime soon as a result.
“I think it’s too soon to talk about whether he has a chance for the nomination or not,” said David Caputo, president emeritus and a political science professor at Pace University. “But I think Ted Cruz will be in the race for some time, even in states without a significant evangelical base.”
Winning over Iowa’s evangelical voters was always a major portion of Cruz’s carefully designed and executed strategy. But he was never, as radio host and Cruz supporter Steve Deace put it, an “Iowa only candidate,” like some others in his party who’ve won the caucuses in recent years, but went on to lose the nomination.
“I think for the first time since George W. Bush in 2000, we have launched a candidate in Iowa who is capable of finishing the task,” Deace said. “Ted Cruz leaves Iowa with more cash on hand than the national committee… About 90 percent of the most prominent evangelical leaders in politics are backing him, he already received the endorsement of the most prestigious Tea Party group in the country (the Tea Party Patriots Citizens Fund). He is well positioned to be the nominee. He is not a hail mary pass; he is a well-oiled machine.”
Later this month, Cruz stands to perform very well in South Carolina, where, as in Iowa, evangelical voters account for a similarly large percentage of Republican primary voters. He’s then hoping to run the table in the March 1 “SEC primary,” when several Southern states will vote. Cruz already has two major swings through the region under his belt — the first being in August, well before any other candidate would seriously campaign in the area.
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Beyond Southern evangelicals, Cruz is confident his message is resonating with libertarians and “Reagan Democrats,” or working-class moderate voters. He’s polling surprisingly well in New Hampshire, where the RealClearPolitics’ average of the latest polls has him tied for second with Ohio Gov. John Kasich at 11.5 percent. He probably won’t win there, but he could exceed expectations and cut into Trump, who’s up by 20 percentage points according to RealClearPolitics’ average, as a candidate.
“The most encouraging thing we’re seeing here in Iowa, but also nationwide, is the old Reagan coalition coming back together,” Cruz told NBC News’ Hallie Jackson after his victory speech Monday. “We’re seeing conservatives and evangelicals and libertarians and ‘Reagan Democrats’ all uniting. And we need a nominee who can unify those philosophical divisions.”









