Friday, February 6, 2026
ADVT 
International

He Insulted His Dad, Wife, Religion, Birthplace; Trump Now Gets Cruz Endorsement

IANS, 24 Sep, 2016 03:26 PM
    WASHINGTON — After Donald Trump insulted his wife's appearance, linked his dad to the JFK assassination, questioned his religion and repeatedly mocked his Canadian birthplace, Sen. Ted Cruz is suddenly endorsing his tormentor for U.S. president.
     
    The whiplash-inducing announcement came from the conservative senator in a Facebook post Friday, two months after his initial refusal to endorse Trump triggered a chorus of boos at the Republican convention.
     
    Cruz offered six reasons for his unanticipated about-face: control of Supreme Court nominations, supporting fossil fuels, reversing Obamacare, fighting illegal immigration, opposition to Syrian refugees and domestic control over Internet regulations. 
     
    He said he agreed with Trump in these areas, adding that he was also honouring his earlier pledge to support the eventual Republican nominee.
     
    "If (Hillary) Clinton wins, we know — with 100 per cent certainty — that she would deliver on her left-wing promises, with devastating results for our country," Cruz wrote. 
     
    "My conscience tells me I must do whatever I can to stop that.... Our country is in crisis. Hillary Clinton is manifestly unfit to be president, and her policies would harm millions of Americans. And Donald Trump is the only thing standing in her way."
     
     
    He also said he noticed recent campaign moves from Trump that he agreed with ideologically. However, it could be argued that in recent weeks Trump has actually moved away from Cruz toward the left —a new government-supported maternal-leave plan, for instance.
     
    The move left some Cruz supporters dumbfounded.
     
    "Well, you are officially dead to me," one poster said on Cruz's Facebook page.
     
    "I thought you had principles, but you clearly do not. I'll never support you again. I hope you're defeated in your next election and if you run again in 2020 I will shout from the rooftops that you're a party-line-holding sellout."
     
    Another wrote: "My support for you ends with this announcement. The Cruz stickers are coming off the car. Good day, sir."
     
    But many others supported the move: "Man of honour and integrity," one wrote. "I wish it was you that I was voting for but we need to win this election. There is a lot at stake which is bigger than us all. For God and country."
     
    The arc of the Cruz-Trump relationship followed the unusual trajectory of this election year.
     
     
     
    In the early stages, the Texas firebrand played footsie with Trump. He even invited him to share a stage at a Capitol Hill rally. Cruz was captured on tape describing his strategy at a donors' meeting: Attach himself to Trump, and pick up his anti-establishment voters once he dropped out of the race.
     
    It nearly worked.
     
    Cruz finished second in the Republican nomination, surviving while all the more mainstream candidates flamed out. However, as the field winnowed, the amity between the erstwhile rivals evaporated.
     
    Cruz began critiquing him as a closet liberal. Trump, meanwhile, went a more personal route, nicknaming him "Canadian Ted" for his Calgary birthplace and wondering aloud whether that disqualified him from running. He also questioned his religion, wondering how a Cuban-American could be an evangelical.
     
    Trump retweeted an unflattering picture of Cruz's wife. And he promoted supermarket tabloid claims of sexual affairs with campaign staffers and a link between Cruz's Cuban-born father and Kennedy-killer Lee Harvey Oswald.
     
    At the convention, Cruz dramatically declined to endorse the nominee. He simply urged conservatives to vote their conscience, and was mostly booed. Trump ranted about Cruz at a news conference and replied that he didn't want his endorsement anyway.
     
     
    Now the vast majority of Republicans tell pollsters they're backing Trump. There are also whispers about a primary challenge to Cruz in 2018. The name of former Texas governor Rick Perry is suddenly popping up in primary talk, with some polling suggesting he would enter a race with a lead over Cruz.
     
    Late Friday, Trump issued a statement: "I am greatly honoured by the endorsement of Senator Cruz... He was a tough and brilliant opponent. I look forward to working with him for many years to come in order to make America great again."
     
    There is still a rump of Republicans resistant to Trump — mostly suburban, college-educated moderates. That lingering pocket of resistance is illustrated by the famous holdouts who have refused to endorse him: the Bush family, some congresspeople, 2012 nominee Mitt Romney and Ohio Gov. John Kasich.
     
     
    TRUMP THANKS TED CRUZ FOR 'WONDERFUL SURPRISE' OF HIS SUPPORT
     
    US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump on Saturday thanked Senator Ted Cruz, his main rival in his party's primaries, for the "wonderful surprise" of his support.
     
    "The @SenTedCruz endorsement was a wonderful surprise. I greatly appreciate his support! We will have a tremendous victory on November 8th," the New York magnate posted on his Twitter account.
     
     
    Cruz made the surprise announcement on Friday that he intends to cast his vote for Donald Trump after refusing to lend him his support until now, not even when he spoke from the podium at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland in July after the multimillionaire had landed the Republican candidacy, EFE news reported.
     
    "After many months of careful consideration, of prayer and searching my own conscience, I have decided that on election day, I will vote for the Republican nominee, Donald Trump," the Texas senator announced on Facebook on Friday.
     
    Cruz's support is important for the magnate because the senator has a solid base of ultra-conservatives who instinctively distrust a presidential candidate in his third marriage and who in the past has been fairly ambiguous about where he stands on abortion.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    No More 'Pokemon Go' At Hiroshima Atomic Bomb Memorial

    No More 'Pokemon Go' At Hiroshima Atomic Bomb Memorial
    TOKYO — It was a bit touch and go for Hiroshima officials, but the atomic bomb memorial park in the western Japanese city is now Pokemon No.

    No More 'Pokemon Go' At Hiroshima Atomic Bomb Memorial

    Indian-Origin Lawyer Shami Chakrabarti Among Controversial UK Peerages

    Indian-Origin Lawyer Shami Chakrabarti Among Controversial UK Peerages
    Shami Chakrabarti, a former director of UK-based human rights pressure group Liberty, oversaw Opposition Labour party's recent anti-semitism inquiry and was nominated by party leader Jeremy Corbyn for a peerage soon after.

    Indian-Origin Lawyer Shami Chakrabarti Among Controversial UK Peerages

    Newly-wed UK Muslim Woman Detained Under Terror Laws For Reading Syria Art Book On Plane

    Newly-wed UK Muslim Woman Detained Under Terror Laws For Reading Syria Art Book On Plane
    Faizah Shaheen was quizzed by officers at Doncaster Airport in South Yorkshire region of England last month after being reported by Thomson Holidays cabin crew.

    Newly-wed UK Muslim Woman Detained Under Terror Laws For Reading Syria Art Book On Plane

    Japanese Will 'Watch Sony TV' If US Is Attacked: Donald Trump

    White House hopeful Donald Trump savaged US ally Japan on Friday, expressing frustration that Washington must defend the Asian nation 

    Japanese Will 'Watch Sony TV' If US Is Attacked: Donald Trump

    Monks, Bollywood And Gleaming Infrastructure In Tibet

    Monks, Bollywood And Gleaming Infrastructure In Tibet
    When they see tourists from India, Tibetan monks reverentially greet them with a "Namaste". But beyond that, they don't say much.

    Monks, Bollywood And Gleaming Infrastructure In Tibet

    Report on 9/11 attack reveals indirect link to Saudi Prince

    Report on 9/11 attack reveals indirect link to Saudi Prince
    The report now reveals a link between the alleged al-Qaeda operative and a company associated with a key member of the Saudi royal family

    Report on 9/11 attack reveals indirect link to Saudi Prince