MECHANICSVILLE, Virginia – Before his speech on Friday, Sen. Ted Cruz greeted the press at the Life Church by bringing along America’s favorite undocumented foreign worker for a photo-op: Santa Claus.
The biggest gift of the day for Cruz didn’t come from Santa, though, but from a senator: Marco Rubio, who awkwardly fended off a question as to why he missed a vote Friday morning on the $1.1 trillion dollar budget deal after pledging to use every tool in his arsenal to defeat it. “In essence, not voting for it, is a vote against it,” Rubio told CBS, explaining his absence.
“I’m going to let Marco defend his own voting record,” Cruz told reporters after being asked about the quote. “I can tell you I flew into Washington, D.C. today to vote against this omnibus. I think this omnibus was a betrayal of the men and women who elected us.”
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Rubio’s campaign shot back that Cruz had made a similar remark after missing the final vote to confirm Attorney General Loretta Lynch because “absence is the equivalent to a ‘no’ vote.”
The event was part of a week-long swing through the March 1 primary states, which includes several southern states that Cruz sees as major opportunities for securing the delegates needed to seal his path to the nomination.
After talking to the press, Cruz addressed a packed room of several hundred supporters after being introduced by the state’s former attorney general, Ken Cuccinelli, who announced his endorsement from the stage.
“When I was a kid, my dad used to say to me over and over again, ‘When we faced oppression in Cuba, I had a place to flee to,’” Cruz recounted in his speech’s conclusion. “If we lose our freedom here, where do we go? That is why all of us are here today.”
It was a nice relief after a rough 48 hours in which an array of conservative commentators sharply criticized Cruz for his evolving rhetoric on immigration, a topic that he’s made a centerpiece of his case against Rubio.
Rubio has stoked the fight throughout, pointing to Cruz’s introduction of an amendment in 2013 that would have removed the path to citizenship from Rubio’s own Gang of Eight immigration bill, but left in place a path to legal status and work permits.
Cruz repeated to the press on Friday that the amendment was a ploy to show that Democrats only wanted citizenship in order to add new voters and pointed to support for the measure from conservatives like Sen. Jeff Sessions and radio host Rush Limbaugh at the time. But in multiple speeches and interviews from the time, Cruz described his amendment as an earnest effort to craft an acceptable compromise bill that could attract conservative votes, undercutting his claim that he never entertained allowing undocumented immigrants to remain in the country. And he’s yet to explain why he took so long to clarify his current position on legalization until just this week, when he finally appeared to rule the idea out.
Nonetheless, Cruz’s explanation was good enough for some in the audience, who made clear in interviews they were watching the debate closely.








