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How Ted Cruz Could Deliver the Coup de Grace to Donald Trump
Intellectual Conservative ^ | February 7, 2015 | Ralph Benko

Posted on 02/07/2016 1:49:19 PM PST by Cincinatus' Wife

Presidential elections are about, above all, just two things: our security and our prosperity. Promises of prosperity have all but faded into the background... except by Donald Trump. In the last debate in which he participated Donald Trump hit the voters' target bull's eye in stating "I want to use that same up here, whatever it may be, to make America rich again."

None of the other candidates came close to featuring The Message we voters wish to hear. Prosperity. If the other candidates - most notably #2 Ted Cruz - wished to gain the voters' hearts, or at least votes, they would stop hassling Trump about his already very well-known foibles and flaws.

The blowback from Cruz's slam on "New York values" - when he could have said "Upper East Side New York Values" and hammered it home by pointing out that Trump brags that Hillary Clinton was a guest as his 2005 wedding - shows the folly of picking on Donald Trump's foibles.

Most of the voters are not looking to elect someone for their personal virtue. The voters are looking for someone who will get the job done.

What job? Job One: Restoring jobs and opportunity.

Shrewd candidates would make prosperity the keynote of every speech and every comment and every commercial between now and the end of the primaries. And, then, in the general election.

What is unfathomable about Cruz is that he has dealt himself a royal flush while Donald Trump is holding, at best, a pair of deuces. Cruz has presented the most impressive proposal in the field for creating a roaring Reaganesque recovery. Yet Cruz is not materially campaigning on it.

The charismatic Mr. Trump's economic platform is pure Jabberwocky. As Megan McCardle pointed out:

Trump's economic policy isn't really a policy; it consists of claiming magical abilities to reclaim the jobs that foreigners have stolen from us, and a ritual genuflection toward lower taxes. All politics contains some element of this, of course: Just listen to the Democratic debaters on stage claiming that bankers nearly singlehandedly destroyed the American economy, and that ambitious programs can be financed largely by raising taxes on a tiny group of ultrawealthy people. But this is combined with some vision of what the economy should look like, resting on moral and empirical premises about fairness, justice, opportunity and equality. Trump's argument is pretty much entirely "strangers stole your stuff, and I'm going to make them give it back, or at least keep them from stealing any more."

Hey. We voters are a lot smarter than the candidates seem to think! At least Trump is campaigning on prosperity. That said, as I pointed out here Trump's proposed tax "reform" has been neutrally scored by the Tax Foundation as a $10T deficit bomb (and skewed toward the wealthy). Hello Tea Party?

As to his monetary policy, as I pointed out here, Mr. Trump criticized Fed Chair Janet Yellen before she raised the discount rate for failing to raise interest rates while, in the next breath, claiming that raising interest rates was a recipe for "a recession-slash-depression." Come in, Houston: Whiskey Tango Foxtrot?

Meanwhile, Cruz's proposal to replace the tax code with a 10% flat tax (with ample exemptions for working families), coupled with a Business Transfer Tax, has been scored by the neutral Tax Foundation as close to deficit neutral and beneficial to every level of worker, from us Gilligans to the Thurston Howell IIIs (and Loveys), across-the-board. Very Reaganesque and unsurprisingly so, having been architected by Arthur Laffer, one of the premier minds behind the Reagan tax rate cuts.

On monetary policy, Cruz has called for the gold standard, which I have called a very good idea and the best idea - for restoring prosperity - in the presidential debate. Cruz would be insulated from attacks by Trump because Trump has spoken sympathetically, albeit ignorantly, about the gold standard. Trump, on WMUR last year:

WE USED TO HAVE A VERY SOLID COUNTRY BECAUSE IT WAS BASED ON A GOLD STANDARD FOR IT WE DO NOT HAVE THAT ANYMORE. THERE IS SOMETHING VERY NICE ABOUT THE CONCEPT OF THAT. IT WOULD BE VERY HARD TO DO AT THIS POINT AND ONE OF THE PROBLEMS IS WE DO NOT HAVE THE GOLD. OTHER PLACES HAVE THE GOLD.

To indulge in the unseemly expedient of facts for a moment, America has, and by far, the largest stock of monetary gold in the world. Moreover, the gold standard does not even require particularly large stocks of gold. Prof. Lawrence White, of George Mason University, definitively has put the "not enough gold" myth about the gold standard, among many other such myths, to rest.

Trump's promise of a worldwide-depression-inducing tariff would be another albatross around his neck if only he were forcefully held to account. Such a Depression would not merely be Great. It would be The Greatest Depression Ever!

On taxes, money, and trade Cruz's proposals are sensible and defensible. Trump's ideas do not hold up even to casual scrutiny. Trump has a brutally exposed flank right in the heart of what we voters most yearn for (according to all the polls): Prosperity.

Apparently the problem of getting candidates to campaign on job creation and economic growth is a real classic. As Bob Shrum wrote in his unforgettable political memoir No Excuses (which I have quoted before yet bears repeating):

Carville was obsessed with keeping the Clinton Campaign on message. That was easier with the ads than the candidate. A pledge to "end welfare as we know it" reassured voters in the middle. The point of the lance was economic: Clinton had an economic plan, a health care plan; Bush didn't and you couldn't trust what he said anyway. But it was hard to channel a candidate who was a policy prodigy. Clinton's broad reading and interests sometimes led him to break out of the message box of his own campaign. I was on the phone with Carville one day when he said he had to hang up; the road was calling in. He was agitated when we talked a little while later. Somewhere in the Midwest, he said, Clinton had suddenly launched into a soliloquy on nuclear nonproliferation. There wasn't one goddamn vote in it, Carville shouted at me-a warning he had delivered, a little more respectfully, to his contrite candidate. When James put up his famous sign in the war room -"It's the economy, stupid!" - it was not just an admonition to the strategists and to the staff, but to one very smart former Rhodes Scholar named Bill Clinton. He'd never won one of those fancy scholarships, Carville told me on vacation after the campaign, but it didn't take a genius to know what this election was about.

To his credit Donald Trump is keeping his eye on the electoral ball - Prosperity! - whatever his wild swings. The other candidates are focusing on far less compelling issues.

To reiterate, presidential elections largely hinge on two issues: national security and prosperity.

National security has been well handled and the candidates' positions well established. I roughly divided the GOP field into three "tough doves" - Trump, Cruz, and Paul - two "moderate hawks" - Bush and Rubio - three "wild hawks" - Kasich, Christie and Fiorina - and one confusing effort to straddle hawk and dove - Carson. The polling strongly indicates that the GOP voters prefer the Reaganite "tough doves" over hawks. So let's move on.

Nobody can trump Donald Trump on "shock jock/Reality TV" style politics. It's pointless even to try.

Presenting a credible recipe for real prosperity is another matter.

Security handled, in the world of the American voters prosperity trumps. Will Cruz, Kasich, Bush, Paul, or another candidate come out of the weeds and relentlessly focus on what this election now mainly is about: prosperity... and who has the most credible recipe?

If so, will they do so in time? If not... here comes nominee, and maybe even president, Trump. If the contenders will focus on prosperity the nomination remains up for grabs.

Prosperity trumps.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 1stcanadiansenator; 2016election; 2016gopprimary; canadian; cruz; dividedloyalty; dualcitizenship; economy; everyonedoesitexcuse; goldstandard; ineligible; jobs; opportunity; propagandadujour; prosperity; taxes; tedspacificpartners; trump
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To: annieokie

Won the debate? Maybe, maybe not. It’s subjective.

Won me over? No.


101 posted on 02/07/2016 4:38:57 PM PST by Luircin (The difference between lesser evil and greater good is who gets schlonged in the end.)
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To: annieokie
Since Cruz is not over your head, perhaps you could tell us a couple of key Cruz proposals for our security and prosperity and why those are so much better than anything Trump has proposed.

Just a couple of for instances.

102 posted on 02/07/2016 4:47:52 PM PST by AndyJackson
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To: Luircin

TED CRUZ the indisputable winner of the Feb 6th debate. Christi 2nd.


103 posted on 02/07/2016 4:58:10 PM PST by annieokie
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To: bigbob
a few hours explaining the nuanced details of his wonky tax plan, it would devastate Trump? Right....

Magna cum Laude Rafael cannot even add. Here is what he says Under the Cruz Simple Flat Tax, all income groups will see a double-digit increase in after-tax income. Let us repeat. ALL And the generally accepted meaning of all is all, assuming you are not operating on the Clinton definition of "is."

You cannot cut the tax rate on ALL Americans to 10% above 36,000 without collecting a vastly reduced amount of revenue, meaning that the deficit goes up even more.

Oh but he will cut spending you say. yes, he has a plan for that too. the Cruz plan re-institutes President Reagan’s Grace Commission to assess federal spending levels and evaluate areas of waste and fraud. Ted Cruz would appoint private-sector leaders to serve on a commission that, as President Reagan put it, would “work like blood hounds” to improve government efficiency. .

All good stuff, I am sure. Anyone ever try to count all the commissions already existing in Washington DC with private sector leaders telling the government what to do. Commissions aren't an answer. They are a cop-out. They are how guys who don't want to take the political heat kick the can down the road. See - I am doing something. I have appointed a blue ribbon commission. Top men! All of them!

And two years from now they publish a report and everyone yawns and it sits on a shelf collecting dust like the reports of all the other commissions ever appointed.

And lyin' head-inside-the-beltway Rafael knows that.

Ever hear Trump talk about a commission. No. He knows what leadership and accountability and getting something done means.

104 posted on 02/07/2016 5:06:59 PM PST by AndyJackson
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To: AndyJackson
I listened intently, but do have a short memory (age), however that does not keep me from understanding at the time he spoke on the issues that he articulated them better than any one on that podium.
105 posted on 02/07/2016 5:09:17 PM PST by annieokie
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To: altura

“Trump people here have their marching orders. They are pinged to show up like the deadly roach or mosquito on any thread favorable to Cruz.”

Do you actually believe that what you wrote is fact? Genuinely curious.


106 posted on 02/07/2016 5:09:42 PM PST by Psalm 144 (Vote Tom Sawyer, because Sid is a sissy snitch and Tom gets the fences whitewashed.)
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To: altura

“What he’s done to his cult of supporters scares me.

I don’t know whether to compare them to Hitler’s followers or those of David Koresh.”

________________________

You show so little ambition. Why not go full Lucifer in your accusations?


107 posted on 02/07/2016 5:11:26 PM PST by Psalm 144 (Vote Tom Sawyer, because Sid is a sissy snitch and Tom gets the fences whitewashed.)
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To: VanDeKoik
Trump supporters are thinking Trump will make them rich

Well, the problem I have is that I while I have this feelin running down my leg that I will get rich if Trump is president, Cruz her has promised this rock-solid take it to the bank tax cut to 10% on everything over $36,000. How can I pass up a sure fire deal like that! Cars, yachts, girls .... can't pass that stuff up.

108 posted on 02/07/2016 5:17:29 PM PST by AndyJackson
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To: annieokie

If you cannot remember them then the world’s master debater was not in fact very articulate.


109 posted on 02/07/2016 5:19:01 PM PST by AndyJackson
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To: AuntB
I thought Cruz started the campaign with a promise to depend on small donors and run a different kind of campaign, open and honest, small donors. Anyone who strays this far from that original persona is likely to succeed.

Now what do I see? Clones of the Clintons, only Cruz's charm wears thin faster than Bill's did. heidi and Hillary, so many similarities.

110 posted on 02/07/2016 5:19:19 PM PST by grania
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To: altura
I don’t believe I can vote for Trump. What he’s done to his cult of supporters scares me. I don’t know whether to compare them to Hitler’s followers or those of David Koresh. It’s not normal.

I don’t believe I can vote for Cruz. What he’s done to his cult of supporters scares me. I don’t know whether to compare them to Hitler’s followers or those of David Koresh. It’s not normal.

111 posted on 02/07/2016 5:20:18 PM PST by AndyJackson
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To: AndyJackson

Lame but that ends the pissing match you want.


112 posted on 02/07/2016 5:30:08 PM PST by annieokie
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To: Dead Corpse

Cruz want’s a flat income tax plus a 16% VAT. He calls it a flat business tax, but in reality it is a VAT, not an income tax.


113 posted on 02/07/2016 6:18:05 PM PST by Hugin ("First thing--get yourself a firearm!" Sheriff Ed Galt, Last Man St anding.)
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To: annieokie
pissing match

Don't ever ever try to tell me again that Cruzers just want to debate the issues.

114 posted on 02/07/2016 6:29:11 PM PST by AndyJackson
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To: The Ghost of FReepers Past
It is fascinating what the imagination can do with wishful thinkers dedicated to ignoring facts.

Projectile projection alert.

115 posted on 02/07/2016 6:44:28 PM PST by Albion Wilde (Who can actually defeat the Democrats in 2016? -- the most important thing about all candidates.)
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To: annieokie

“TED CRUZ answered every question he was asked and expanded in depth, which may have been over your head.”

I must have been out “getting rid of my iced tea,” when that happened! Way to go Annie, you’re like Yebbie Boosh, you’re going to insult your way into all the hearts and minds here on FR! (s)


116 posted on 02/07/2016 6:46:28 PM PST by vette6387
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To: St_Thomas_Aquinas

I think perhaps those tariffs in the early part of the 20th Century were a lot different than they would be today.

Now, other countries are imposing all sorts of tariffs on us, but we do not try to balance with our own. To balance is wisdom. To just try to make more money for a bankrupt country on the backs of other countries is destructive.


117 posted on 02/07/2016 6:48:36 PM PST by amihow (l)
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To: annieokie

I dispute it. So you’re wrong. Nyah nyah.


118 posted on 02/07/2016 6:54:45 PM PST by Luircin (The difference between lesser evil and greater good is who gets schlonged in the end.)
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To: AndyJackson

“All good stuff, I am sure. Anyone ever try to count all the commissions already existing in Washington DC with private sector leaders telling the government what to do. Commissions aren’t an answer. They are a cop-out. They are how guys who don’t want to take the political heat kick the can down the road. See - I am doing something. I have appointed a blue ribbon commission. Top men! All of them!”

All very true, and very well said. It is political gamesmanship in the extreme to set up these “blue ribbon commissions,” instead of doing the hard work necessary to run the country.


119 posted on 02/07/2016 6:59:06 PM PST by vette6387
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To: Hugin

A flat tax is not a VAT. You can keep saying it is, but it only makes you look silly.


120 posted on 02/07/2016 7:44:40 PM PST by Dead Corpse (A Psalm in napalm...)
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