Ted Cruz is still playing the Trump card, but it might be time for a new hand.
The Texas senator was virtually the only Republican presidential contender this weekend to hold his fire against fellow White House hopeful Donald Trump for belittling the military record of Arizona Sen. John McCain — a former prisoner of war who now chairs the Senate Armed Services Committee (which Cruz also sits on). But while it’s not the first time Cruz has stood by Trump through controversy — presumably in hopes of securing the same segment of Republican base voters now cheering the real estate mogul’s anti-establishment streak — this particular display of loyalty has some wondering if the 44-year-old rising GOP star has more to lose than gain with this strategy.
“Trump is hurting Cruz,” Republican consultant Matt Mackowiak, a former Capitol Hill and Bush administration aide, told msnbc. “It’s not simply a matter of is he really going to resist ever criticizing Trump. The question is, when does it reach a political cost [Cruz] is not willing to pay?”
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Speaking at the Family Leadership Summit Saturday in Ames, Iowa, Trump questioned whether McCain was a war hero and said he “like[d] people that weren’t captured.” He has since tried to clarify those remarks, accusing the media of misquoting him.
“The next sentence was, ‘he is a war hero,’” Trump said Monday in a phone interview on “TODAY.” “I said that, but they never want to play it and you don’t want to play it.”
The comments, however, had already drawn widespread condemnation from both veterans groups, and Republican presidential candidates — including Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, and former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who said in a statement that Trump was “unfit to be Commander-in-Chief” and that he should “withdraw from the race.”
But notably absent from the pile-on was Cruz, who championed McCain as an “American hero,” while simultaneously refusing to speak ill of Trump.
“You know I recognize that folks in the press love to see Republican-on-Republican violence, and so you want me to say something bad about Donald Trump, or bad about John McCain or bad about anyone else,” Trump told reporters Saturday. “I’m not going to do it.”
Cruz has avoided ganging up on Trump before. Earlier this summer, Cruz stood out from the crowded presidential pack by refusing to condemn Trump’s incendiary remarks on immigration — specifically that “when Mexico sends its people,” it sends rapists, drugs, and crime. The two candidates met privately in New York last week, and Cruz told reporters beforehand that he was “a big fan of Donald Trump’s” because he was “bringing a bold, brash voice to this presidential race.”
Undoubtedly, it’s not just a political bromance that Cruz is after; it’s votes.
“That’s why you see [Cruz] being very quiet. He’s swimming in the same pool of water that Mr. Trump is,” Bill Whalen, research fellow at the Hoover Institution, a conservative think tank, told msnbc. “There are a lot of voters who are frustrated with politicians, frustrated with Washington, and frustrated with Republican candidates.”








