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Ted Cruz Wins the Night

bigbadjohn45

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Jul 9, 2010
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Ted Cruz Wins the Night
by Rich Lowry November 11, 2015 12:10 AM @richlowry

Ted Cruz had a terrific night. He had a stand-out answer on immigration and wages, and made his own fortune by getting into an argument with John Kasich on bank bailouts, enunciating the anti-bailout position forcefully and repeatedly (although I don’t really believe he wouldn’t bail out a major financial institution in the midst of a financial panic if he were president). He was pointed, eloquent, and, of course, very conservative. Marco Rubio was very good, as well. But I thought Rubio was slightly better than Cruz last time, and that Cruz was slightly better this time. Rubio just felt a little off. Journalists were complaining on Twitter about how canned Rubio is, and truth be told, he is during these events (as are Cruz and Carly Fiorina). The trick is hiding it and tonight Rubio seemed to be more obviously downloading speech fragments than in other debates. That said, he won the exchange with Rand Paul on foreign policy, ably defended his child tax credit, and didn’t have an affirmatively bad moment. Both Cruz and Rubio are highly capable of defending themselves. You really never have to worry about them in an exchange, and that quality will stand them in good stead going forward. Ben Carson was pleasant. He predictably hit the question about his bio out of the park and brought up politically correctness at the end. He, once again, wasn’t commanding on the substance, but it hasn’t mattered to this point. Donald Trump was largely subdued, although he perked up to slap down Kasich and broadcast how he has let Fiorina get under his skin with his complaint about her interrupting that got boos. He obviously knows nothing about the TPP that he so passionately opposes, and Rand Paul showed him up on that. He’s also at sea on foreign policy. Overall, a more respectable, but still poor showing. Jeb Bush was definitely better, but just OK. He seemed to lose momentum as the night went on. But it should be enough to stem a potential donor panic. Carly Fiorina had several nice riffs, and a cutting line at Trump’s expense (she met Vladimir Putin and not in a green room). Rand Paul allowed himself to be Rand Paul. It was his best debate, even if it’s hard to see it helping him much. John Kasich, irritable and out of step with the party, may end up buying himself a ticket to the undercard. Speaking of that, Chris Christie was the best performer in the early debate, even if he didn’t attempt to defend his New Jersey record from Bobby Jindal’s repeated jibes. Christie effectively brushed Jindal off, but the Louisiana governor certainly got across the message that he wanted to–that he disdains big government Republicans.
 
Cruz: GOP Will Lose If It’s ‘Party of Amnesty,’ Politics Would Be Different If Journalists Were Entering US

by Ian Hanchett10 Nov 20151318

Republican presidential candidate Texas Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) argued, “if Republicans join Democrats as the party of amnesty, we will lose” and “the politics of it would be very, very different if a bunch of lawyers or bankers were crossing the Rio Grande, or if a bunch of people with journalism degrees were coming over and driving down the wages in the press” during Tuesday’s GOP presidential debate on the Fox Business Network.

Cruz “the Democrats are laughing, because if Republicans join Democrats as the party of amnesty, we will lose. And you know, I understand that when the mainstream media covers immigration, it doesn’t often see it as an economic issue. But I can tell you, for millions of Americans at home, watching this, it is a very personal economic issue, and I will say the politics of it would be very, very different if a bunch of lawyers or bankers were crossing the Rio Grande, or if a bunch of people with journalism degrees were coming over and driving down the wages in the press, then we would see stories about the economic calamity that is befalling our nation.”

He continued, “I will say for those of us who believe people ought to come to this country legally and we should enforce the law, we’re tired of being told, it’s anti-immigrant. It’s offensive. I am the son of an immigrant who came legally from Cuba, to seek the american dream, and we can embrace legal immigration while believing in the rule of law. And I would note, try going illegally to another country, try going to china or japan. try and go into mexico, see what they do. Every sovereign nation secures its borders, and it is not compassionate to say we’re not going to enforce the laws, and we’re going to drive down the wages for millions of hard-working men and women.”

Follow Ian Hanchett on Twitter @IanHanchett
 
Per Ted Cruz.org:

While I agree with those words about Ted Cruz’s performance at the Fox News Debate, they’re not mine. They belong to National Review’s Rich Lowry. And it was a common sentiment amongst many political pundits after last night’s debate.

By almost all accounts, Ted was one of – if not the– big winner. But don’t just take it from me. Here’s just a sampling of what was said:

“Ted Cruz wins the night… Ted Cruz had a terrific night. He had a stand-out answer on immigration and wages and made his own fortune by getting into an argument with John Kasich on bank bailouts, enunciating the anti-bailout position forcefully and repeatedly…He was pointed, eloquent, and, of course, very conservative.” – Rich Lowry

“Cruz really won tonight. He had just a stellar performance. Every word was memorable. Every line was precisely delivered. His defense of his tax plan was solid.” – Erick Erickson

“I thought Ted Cruz was very strong. I thought he had substantive answers that were well delivered…I thought he was just impressive.” – Bill Kristol

“Ted Cruz, fabulous night. He followed up on a great night in the previous debate. He had more time than he had in other debates. I think you got to see the knowledge and substance and passion. I would say by far Ted Cruz probably had the best night of everybody.” – Sean Hannity

“.@TedCruz just hit 94 by saying all the rules that apply to America will apply to Congress.” – Frank Luntz

“I think it goes Cruz, Rubio, Fiorina.” – Bret Baier

“Cruz is showing why so many insiders think he’ll eventually be in the final two or three when the field winnows” – Chuck Todd

“I think that is the best moment Ted Cruz had in the debate last night was talking about immigration in the way he did.” – John McCormack

“[Cruz] had a very good night.” – Jonah Goldberg

“.@TedCruz scores big (hits 98) with ‘I’m tired of being told I’m anti-immigrant. It’s offensive.’ Actually outscores Trump on immigration.” – Frank Luntz

“Ted Cruz proved that he didn’t need to assault the media to turn in an impressive performance… it was the strong answer to the bailout question that put him over the top in my view. The contrast was obvious… none of [the other candidates] gave a clear answer on what they would do differently in the same situation. Then Cruz absolutely dominated it.” – Ben Domenech
 
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