Tuesday, July 21, 2015

A Time for Truth: Reigniting the Miracle of America — a Review [Ted Cruz's Book]

Ricochet ^ | July 20, 2015 

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I don’t read a lot of political autobiographies. Indeed, this may have been the first one. And I’m not sure why I decided to do so. Perhaps because Cruz has seemed something of an enigma: a hyper-ambitious, self-promoting appellate lawyer with all the right enemies; an ideologue from his teens who went through the Ivies and the Bush campaign but seems to say the right things; a sophisticated and subtle questioner prone to simplistic statements; a far-right, wacko-bird, bomb-thrower who writes bipartisan legislation that gets signed into law. What does Ted Cruz really believe in – apart from Ted Cruz?

Stylistically, the book suffers from its predominantly undramatic subject matter. There is only so much “show, don’t tell” you can squeeze from men in suits writing things down or reading things out, so there is a fair sprinkling of “Bob Smith, a gruff mid-westerner with sandy-brown hair and the combativeness of his Scots-Irish grandfather” did something with a piece of paper. And in a couple of places it seemed almost as if Cruz was checking things off a list: best friend is from the Caribbean; reaches across the aisle to co-sponsor women’s issue bill; acknowledges hubris.
In the end I came away thinking Ted Cruz would be a much better president than I had thought I would going in. You would hope so: Here is a world class advocate making his case in long form with no opposing counsel to disrupt the narrative. And Cruz wields the narrative well. It is hard not to be outraged by the attitude of his fellow Republicans in the opening, and it is hard to disagree with his statement of principles at the end — for all that they are largely devoid of crunchy policy detail.
But by the time you have reached the end, you have almost been persuaded of Cruz’s thesis that concrete policy proposals don’t matter if there is no real intention to put them into practice. What really matters, he says, is a record of acting in accordance with principles. And the bulk of the book is his attempt to demonstrate how he has — usually — acted in accordance with his principles: the American Constitution (inalienable rights, limited government); the American Dream (free market capitalism, “opportunity conservatism”) and American Exceptionalism (leader of the free world, model to all).
The key to the book — perhaps the key to Ted Cruz, politician — is Question 10. This was a question from his first benchmark poll (perhaps from early 2011) when lining up against David Dewhurst for the Republican nomination for Senate. It asked voters if they were more or less likely to support Cruz if they knew:
Ted Cruz understands that politicians from both parties have let us down. Cruz is a proven conservative we can trust to provide new leadership in the Senate to reduce the size of government and defend the Constitution.
This message polled well among Republicans and Independents, and even did well among (Texas) Democrats. Cruz seems to have stuck to it ever since.
Does Ted Cruz believe the Constitution assures inalienable rights and strictly limits the role and scope of the federal government? Undoubtedly. Does he believe that free markets create opportunity and prosperity? Absolutely. Does he have an appreciation for the realities of government? I think so. Will he sell everyone out for the greater glory of Ted Cruz? Not right away. And not knowingly. But Cruz is something of an idealist, and Washington can be pretty hard on idealists. What a Senator Cruz would do in 2030 is hard to say.
But a President Cruz in 2016 would be a good bet. So, a final, and for some, the most important, question: Can Ted Cruz mount a national challenge in the grass-roots style that served him so well in his Texas election?
We’ll see.

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