Thursday, July 21, 2016

Sister Souljah, Brother Judas?

Last March, I wrote a post about Republican presidential candidates’ Sister Souljah opportunities and how they had flunked them: Mitt Romney failing to take a budget deal that would give him 90% of what he wanted, the 2016 candidates failing to push back against Donald Trump’s insults.

Well, Ted Cruz was given a second chance yesterday and he grabbed it.  Except that he was immediately cast as a Judas.

The original Sister Souljah moment was Bill Clinton speaking as a candidate to Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow Coalition and rejecting a well known black activist’s call for black on white violence.  In the immediate aftermath, he suffered a drop in support from some quarters, but eventually more than made up for that with moderate Americans.

Yesterday, Ted Cruz refused to endorse Donald Trump, calling instead for Republicans to stick to principles and vote their conscience.  Today, at a breakfast of Texas delegates, he added that he couldn’t endorse a candidate who insulted his family.  What took him so long?

The party reaction was telling and frankly shocking:  the New York delegation screamed and booed; on CNN, a Trump official could barely control himself calling for Cruz’ party exclusion, Governor Christie was likewise furious and the general audience didn’t fare much better.

Ted Cruz took major risks with that speech and the fallout was immediate. Most political commentators accused him of careerism.  The party was exposed as more divided than it wanted to appear.  Party grandees who had fallen in line behind Donald Trump realized that they could be dangerously exposed in case the Trump candidacy failed come November.

Accusing Cruz of weighing in career considerations in such a major decision seems disingenuous to me.  Likewise, denying that he may have principles seems unfair.  What is undeniable is that he showed great courage and that he will be, with Donald Trump, the most memorable Republican figure of 2016. 

Whether this will have been his Sister Souljah moment, time will tell.  I believe that it will eventually strengthen his influence within the Republican Party: he will have warned about the Republican nominee’s shortcomings, he will have name recognition, and he clearly showed more courage than his peers.  But unless he moderates his views I don’t see him in the White House in 2020.


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