Ted Turns the Tables on Trump. Hard.

ChrryBlstr

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The weasel upstages the asshat. lulz

Peace! :)

As you know, I believe in my heart that Ted Cruz is an odious weasel. I base this on observing him for years now and on the accounts and traumas of many close friends who've known him for far longer. But that was a singular moment. Convention managers don't let unexpected things happen. If Ted Cruz had simply not mentioned Trump, it would have been a mild deal but not a huge thing. He did much more than that. He affirmatively not only refused to endorse Trump but exhorted fellow Republicans not to vote for Trump. Yes, he used the coded phrasing "vote your conscience." But in context that meant with with crystal clarity: Your Republican identity in no way obligates you to vote for Donald Trump. Rather 'vote your conscience' and do not vote for Donald Trump. Because a conservative true to his conscience cannot do so.

The first thing to say about this is that there is simply no way Trump's and Priebus's convention managers okayed that speech. No way. The fact that they allowed him on stage to give that speech will go down as one of the greatest organizational pratfalls in convention history. Whether Cruz got them to agree not to review the speech or whether he substituted another speech, I don't know. But something very wrong went down there.

The second goes to the heart of Trump's campaign. As I've noted on so many fronts over recent months, Trump's brand is dominance. Trump acts; others comply. Whether that's true or not doesn't matter. That's the story he's sold his supporters. It's the essence of his political message. Trump dominates; his enemies are humiliated. Even 'friends' like Christie and Pence are relegated to a golden cage of perpetual dignity loss.

In this interaction, Cruz came into Trump's house, Trump's party and humiliated him. There's no other way to put it. The crowd booed; Trump literally came out into the hall to pull the cameras off Cruz and according to reporters on the scene security escorted Cruz's wife out of the hall for her own safety.

Cruz just made himself dead to the institutional Republican party for the next four months. But he imbued himself with an image of courage, valor and general badassery for basically every Republican opposing Trump from the ideological right.

Cruz somehow managed to get on that stage without giving a promise or simply broke his promise. But the upshot is that he came into Trump's house and stomped him hard. That is not how it's supposed to work on Trump's turf. But Cruz just turned the tables on him.

http://talkingpointsmemo.com/edblog/ted-turns-the-tables-on-trump-hard
 

Duff Miver

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But Cruz just turned the tables on him.

Trump said some nasty stuff about Cruz' wife, and even suggested Cruz' father was implicated in the Kennedy assassination.

Cruz didn't forget that. He waited for an opportunity.

And gave Trump a well-deserved kick in the balls.

There's very little I like about Cruz, but that was classic.


Trump apparently thinks he's a tough guy because he has spent his life fucking people in business deals. He's now finding out that politics is tougher and dirtier than anything he's done before.
 

Skulnik

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Mar 30, 2007
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Krauthammer: Cruz's Speech 'Was the Longest Suicide Note in US Political History'


Jul 21, 2016 // 10:10am

As seen on America's Newsroom


<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/9jRAv33VFq8" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>



Charles Krauthammer said that Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) "blew it" at the Republican National Convention with his address in which he did not endorse Donald Trump.

"What Cruz delivered was the longest suicide note in American political history and this morning he added an addendum," said Krauthammer.

Krauthammer weighed in on America's Newsroom this morning after Cruz spoke to Texas delegates (some of them angry), doubling down on his message from last night and going even further.





Cruz explained that he is "not in the habit of supporting people who attack my wife and attack my father."

Krauthammer said Cruz "undid the great political, philosophical reasons he offered last night" for not endorsing Trump by making it personal.

"As of this morning, I think he's destroyed his political career right there," said Krauthammer.

A.B. Stoddard said Trump needs to make a forward-looking, optimistic speech tonight and should "really" not talk about Cruz in his big address.

Steve Hayes disagreed with Krauthammer, saying this is a political "gamble" for Cruz in the short-term but he could benefit in the long-term.

Hayes said Cruz is trying to emphasize that not all Republicans are with Trump, bringing up the nominee's past attacks on John McCain's military record, Carly Fiorina's appearance and Trump's mockery of a disabled reporter.

"They're embracing him after that and I think it's important to say, 'not everyone's along for the ride,'" said Hayes.
 
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