Author Topic: Rick Perry endorses Ted Cruz  (Read 489 times)

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HAPPY2BME

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Rick Perry endorses Ted Cruz
« on: January 26, 2016, 10:41:29 pm »
 Ted Cruz courted Rick Perry's endorsement after the former governor dropped out of the race last year. | AP Photo

Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry is endorsing Ted Cruz in the Republican presidential primary, Perry told POLITICO in an interview Sunday night.

Perry, who also sought the GOP nomination before dropping out in September, said he now sees the race as one that is between Cruz, a fellow Texan, and Donald Trump. Through phone calls and during a December day spent driving around his Round Top, Texas, home in his truck with Cruz, Perry said he found the senator to be a good listener who respects the Tenth Amendment, “knows what he does not know” and is more conservative than Trump.

“Of those individuals who have a chance to win the Republican primary, at this juncture, from my perspective, Ted Cruz is by far the most consistent conservative in that crowd,” Perry said. “And that appears to be down to two people."

Perry, who is famously skilled at retail politics, will campaign with Cruz Tuesday across Iowa, and will join Iowa GOP Rep. Steve King to stump for Cruz again Wednesday. Perry and King will both join Cruz at a Des Moines rally Wednesday night.

The endorsement gives Cruz the blessing of the longest-serving governor in Texas history, just as the senator faces intensifying heat from other veteran politicians, including from his colleagues in Washington, Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad and former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole.

Perry, recalling his own experience vetoing a long list of bills early in his gubernatorial tenure, said his actions resulted in others viewing him as a “man of principle,” and insisted that Cruz would similarly be able to get things done as president, despite his current reputation among fellow senators for being a bomb-thrower.

“You’ll have with Ted Cruz that same result of, senators and others in the Washington establishment that are mad at him, find him to be hard to work with, they will find a way to work with him because they know he means what he says he means,” he said.

Perry has been dismissive in the past of the experience of first-term senators compared to governors. But he said Sunday that he has come to realize the GOP electorate doesn’t value executive experience this cycle in the same way he does.

“Gov. Scott Walker, Bobby Jindal, Rick Perry, Jeb’s barely making an impact out there — those are very skilled, very successful, very experienced governors,” Perry said. “But the electorate doesn’t want that. That’s why we have elections, why we democratically select leaders.”

And he is confident, he said, that Cruz would be prepared.

“He knows he’s going to surround himself with people who do have that experience, and I’m very satisfied that on Day 1, he will be ready to be commander-in-chief,” Perry said, “Partly because of the time he’s going to spend in learning what he doesn’t know, but he’s also surrounding himself with people who are extraordinarily capable and wise.”

Perry’s endorsement was hardly a sure bet. The two were on opposite sides of the 2012 Senate primary race, when Cruz ran successfully against Perry’s then-lieutenant governor, David Dewhurst, in a contest that launched Cruz on the national stage. In his farewell address before the Republican-dominated state legislature last year, Perry warned against those who would place “purity ahead of unity” — a frequent criticism of Cruz's style. And Perry was somewhat critical of Cruz’s role in shutting down the government in 2013 over a health care battle.

“I’d rather see folks come together, work together to find solutions, but from time to time, you’ve got to lay the marker down,” Perry said, when asked whether Cruz could work with Washington. “There’s that old adage, ‘You gotta hit the mule upside the head to get its attention from time to time.’ I’d suggest that’s exactly what the senator was doing.”

Perry, an Air Force veteran and champion of veterans’ issues, is expected to be particularly helpful in courting veterans, especially in South Carolina, which is home to prominent military bases and an electorate with a strongly pro-military bent — and where Perry had a well-respected team.

Shortly before he exited the race in the fall, Perry had emerged as one of the field’s most pointed critics of Trump, a mantle Cruz now holds as he and Trump battle for first place in Iowa. The former Texas governor noted that a number of other prominent conservatives, including media personality Glenn Beck, have come out against Donald Trump, something Trump’s “going to have to explain.”

After Perry dropped out of the primary, Cruz's campaign immediately began courting his donors and supporters in Texas, while Cruz reached out to the former governor and asked to get together -- a gesture Perry says he appreciated given how little down time candidates get off the trail. When they met, Perry said, Cruz struck him as someone who deep down is likely “shy,” and “one of the best listeners I’ve ever dealt with in the political realm.” It was in stark contrast to more negative perceptions he had held about Cruz, driven by "media narrative" and "through the optics of a campaign."

“I really didn’t want to talk about policy, I didn’t want to talk politics, I didn’t want to talk philosophy,” he said of their meeting last month. “I wanted to talk about him, who he was, see if I could get a handle on Ted Cruz the man, not Cruz the caricature I’d seen through the political lens. What I found was a very different person than what I had been led to believe.”

http://www.politico.com/story/2016/01/rick-perry-endorses-ted-cruz-218170
« Last Edit: January 26, 2016, 10:41:56 pm by HAPPY2BME »

HAPPY2BME

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Re: Rick Perry endorses Ted Cruz
« Reply #1 on: January 26, 2016, 10:42:20 pm »
Nobody saw this coming.

Offline truth_seeker

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Re: Rick Perry endorses Ted Cruz
« Reply #2 on: January 26, 2016, 10:46:08 pm »
Twas one-two days ago--and previously noted, posted and discussed here.
"God must love the common man, he made so many of them.�  Abe Lincoln

Offline aligncare

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Re: Rick Perry endorses Ted Cruz
« Reply #3 on: January 26, 2016, 10:48:07 pm »
Nobody saw this coming.

 :silly:

Give this some thought. Trump is not walking away from Texas. Yes, Trump plans on putting a lot of blue states in play. But, he's also planning on taking Texas away from Cruz. What chutzpah!
« Last Edit: January 26, 2016, 11:24:20 pm by aligncare »

HAPPY2BME

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Re: Rick Perry endorses Ted Cruz
« Reply #4 on: January 26, 2016, 10:50:02 pm »
:silly:

Give this some thought. Trump is not walking away from Texas. Yes, Trump plans on putting a lot of blue states in play. But, he's also planning on take Texas away from Cruz. What chutzpah!

=============================

Ted Cruz has done more right than he has done wrong, and is a darling hero in Texas, which will defend him until the cows come home - or Donald Trump wins the GOP nomination, whichever comes first.

Offline alicewonders

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Re: Rick Perry endorses Ted Cruz
« Reply #5 on: January 26, 2016, 11:52:31 pm »
When is the Texas primary?

Don't tread on me.   8888madkitty

We told you Trump would win - bigly!

Offline flowers

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Re: Rick Perry endorses Ted Cruz
« Reply #6 on: January 27, 2016, 12:01:38 am »
When is the Texas primary?
State    Presidential Primary    State Primary    State Primary Runoff    General Election
U.S. Senate    U.S. Representative    Governor
Alabama    March 1
   March 1    April 12    Yes    7    No
Alaska       August 16    -    Yes    1    Yes
American Samoa       -    -    -    1 delegate    No
Arizona    March 22
   August 30    -    Yes    9    No
Arkansas    March 1
   March 1    March 22    Yes    4    No
California    June 7
   -    -    Yes    53    No
Colorado       June 28    -    Yes    7    No
Connecticut    April 26
   August 9    -    Yes    5    No
Delaware    April 26
   September 13    -    No    1    Yes
District of Columbia    June 14
   June 14    -    -    1 delegate    No
Florida    March 15
   August 30    -    Yes    27    No
Georgia    March 1
   May 24    July 26    Yes    14    No
Guam       August 27    -    -    1 delegate    No
Hawaii       August 13    -    Yes    2    No
Idaho    Republican: March 8
   May 17    -    Yes    2    No
Illinois    March 15
   March 15    -    Yes    18    No
Indiana    May 3
   May 3    -    Yes    9    Yes
Iowa       June 7    -    Yes    4    No
Kansas       August 2    -    Yes    4    No
Kentucky    Democratic: May 17    May 17    -    Yes    6    No
Louisiana    March 5
   November 8    December 10    Yes    6    No
Maine       June 14    -    No    2    No
Maryland    April 26
   April 26    -    Yes    8    No
Massachusetts    March 1
   September 8    -    No    9    No
Michigan    March 8
   August 2    -    No    14    No
Minnesota       August 9    -    No    8    No
Mississippi    March 8
   March 8    March 29    No    4    No
Missouri    March 15
   August 2    -    Yes    8    Yes
Montana    June 7
   June 7    -    Yes    1    Yes
Nebraska    May 10
   May 10    -    Yes    3    No
Nevada       June 14    -    Yes    4    No
New Hampshire       September 13    -    Yes    2    No
New Jersey    June 7
   June 7    -    No    12    No
New Mexico    June 7
   June 7    -    No    3    No
New York    April 19
   June 28    -    Yes    27    No
North Carolina    March 15
   March 15    May 24    Yes    13    Yes
North Dakota       June 14    -    Yes    1    Yes
Ohio    March 15
   March 15    -    Yes    16    No
Oklahoma    March 1
   June 28    August 23    Yes    5    No
Oregon    May 17
   May 17    -    Yes    5    Yes
Pennsylvania    April 26
   April 26    -    Yes    18    No
Puerto Rico    Republican: March 6
   June 5    -    -    1 resident    Yes
Rhode Island    April 26
   September 13    -    No    2    No
South Carolina    Republican: February 20
Democratic: February 27    June 14    June 28    Yes    7    No
South Dakota    June 7
   June 7    August 16    Yes    1    No
Tennessee    March 1
   August 4    -    No    9    No
Texas    March 1
   March 1    May 24    No    36    No
Utah       June 28    -    Yes    4    Yes
Vermont    March 1
   August 9    -    Yes    1    Yes
Virgin Islands       August 6    -    -    1 delegate    No
Virginia    March 1
   June 14    -    No    11    No
Washington    May 24
   August 2    -    Yes    10    Yes
West Virginia    May 10
   May 10    -    No    3    Yes
Wisconsin    April 5
   August 9    -    Yes    8    No
Wyoming       August 16    -    No    1    No


Offline alicewonders

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Re: Rick Perry endorses Ted Cruz
« Reply #7 on: January 27, 2016, 12:10:52 am »
Thank you flowers!  I'm saving that for reference.

I see Texas has an early primary (not like my state - middle of May) - Cruz will definitely get his state then. 

Lately, when we get to vote in Kentucky, we're down to two choices - Ron Paul and John McCain, or Ron Paul and Mitt Romney.   :thud:

At least Ron Paul won't be one of the choices this time.   :laugh:

Don't tread on me.   8888madkitty

We told you Trump would win - bigly!

Offline flowers

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Re: Rick Perry endorses Ted Cruz
« Reply #8 on: January 27, 2016, 01:28:18 am »
Thank you flowers!  I'm saving that for reference.

I see Texas has an early primary (not like my state - middle of May) - Cruz will definitely get his state then. 

Lately, when we get to vote in Kentucky, we're down to two choices - Ron Paul and John McCain, or Ron Paul and Mitt Romney.   :thud:

At least Ron Paul won't be one of the choices this time.   :laugh:
:king: