Report: Mike Lee to endorse Ted Cruz this afternoon

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Allah:

It’s Cruz’s first endorsement from a Senate colleague, but it’s much more than that. It’s a blaring siren to Rubio that it’s time to go.

Lee, a Tea Party stalwart and former Constitutional lawyer, was Cruz’s top Senate ally in the 2013 effort to defund Obamacare, which resulted in a 16-day government shutdown. The episode turned Cruz into a right-wing rock star, but it also earned him many Republican enemies on Capitol Hill, and until now he hasn’t received the endorsement of a single Senate colleague. Lee will be the first sitting senator to formally back Cruz’s candidacy.

Lee opted to stay on the sidelines for most of the 2016 primary race, which has featured three candidates whom he considers to be his closest friends in the Senate: Cruz, Rand Paul, and Marco Rubio.

Rubio is polling well in Lee’s home state of Utah, and his campaign had hoped to score the senator’s endorsement.

I bet it’ll come as a surprise to lots of conservatives who follow politics casually that Lee hadn’t already endorsed Cruz. They’re linked in the public imagination, I think, by their prominence in the effort to defund ObamaCare before and during the 2013 shutdown. Lee is certainly Cruz’s most reliable ally in the Senate. And yet, and yet, he held out on endorsing all last year and through nearly six weeks of primaries this year. That’s because he and Rubio are also frequent allies: They co-wrote a tax bill, for starters, and collaborated on education and transportation reform. They do disagree sharply on the USA Freedom Act, which Lee co-sponsored and which the ultra-hawkish Rubio believes dangerously undermines the NSA’s capabilities, but Lee’s had his differences with Cruz too. And Cruz hasn’t always been tactful in airing them:

When Lee brought up his [criminal justice reform] bill in the committee hearing, he wasn’t sure if he’d have Cruz’s support. But he certainly didn’t anticipate what came next.

Cruz attacked the bill as dangerous and politically poisonous. He said it would lead to more than 7,000 federal prisoners let out on the street. “I for one, at a time when police officers across this country are under assault right now, being vilified right now, when we’re seeing violent crime spiking in our cities across the country, I think it would be a serious mistake for the Senate to pass legislation providing for 7,082 criminals to be released early,” he said. The bill, he claimed, “could result in more violent criminals being let out on the streets, and potentially more lives being lost.”

Cruz went on to warn his fellow senators that if they voted for the bill, they would imperil their careers…

Lee, who was sitting right next to Cruz, could not believe what he was hearing. The bill, he responded, wouldn’t actually release any violent criminals from prison, and its sentence reduction for gun crimes was to reduce the minimum for felons caught with guns or ammunition from 15 years to 10 years—a provision that had once sent a man to prison for 15 years when he picked up a stray bullet in order to clean a carpet.

And yet here we are, five days removed from Rubio’s moment of truth in Florida, and Lee’s throwing in with Cruz. Why couldn’t he have waited another week when he’s already waited this long? Read Sean Davis’s post yesterday at The Federalist and you’ll see. It’s time for anti-Trumpers to give up on Florida and embrace a triage strategy. In all likelihood, Florida’s a lost cause; Rubio won’t win, but enough early votes have been banked for him that even if he dropped today and endorsed Cruz, Cruz probably won’t win either. That being so, the best available option is for Rubio to get out ASAP, effectively conceding Florida to Trump, and clear the conservative and establishment lanes for Cruz and Kasich, respectively, in all of the other states that are voting on Tuesday — Missouri, Illinois, North Carolina, and of course Ohio. Trump will get his 99 delegates in Florida but those four other states will award 259 delegates combined. Without Rubio competing there, Cruz and Kasich will each pick up votes and vacuum up more of those delegates. Remember, Rubio’s presence has already helped Trump inadvertently in several states by holding down Cruz’s numbers while producing little or nothing for Rubio. Cruz likely would have reached 50 percent in Texas, enough to win all of the state’s 155 delegates, had Rubio not been there. By Davis’s count, between Texas, Maine, and Idaho — three states which produced a combined five delegates for Rubio — Trump has won 71 delegates that might have gone to Cruz if Rubio hadn’t been there, enough to make Cruz the overall delegate leader at this point. Now here comes Lee, formally abandoning Rubio to state as loudly as he can that Marco ending his campaign can’t come a minute too soon for the anti-Trump effort.

I’d go as far as to ask this: Given the great risk that Rubio’s campaign would slog on if he wins Florida, continuing to pull votes from Cruz but without enough momentum to actually win many states, should anti-Trumpers actually prefer to see Rubio lose on Tuesday? It’s painful to watch those 99 delegates go to Trump, but if Davis’s math is right then Rubio has already cost Cruz nearly that same amount of delegates across various other states.

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I was half expecting the Mormon, Mike Lee to endorse the Ex-Mormon Marco Rubio because so many of the old Mormon men I know had his signs up on their lawns.
But, surprise, he endorsed Ted Cruz.
Actually, it is not as much of a surprise.
Mike had been sitting on the fence so long you had to know something was up.
And, frankly, Cruz and Lee are closer politically anyway.
Add to that Rubio is an EX-Mormon at a time when Mormons just decided (their old men) that even family members of gays must be excommunicated unless they openly denounce their own gay family members.
This has caused Utah no end of demonstrations and attempted suicides, even protesters trying to get into the holy places in SLC’s main temple after acknowledging their gay kin.
All of a sudden it is very common for Mormons to be thrown out of their church all up and down this state.
Gee, there must be a whole lot of closeted gays in Utah.
So, re: Marco, all of a sudden Mormons don’t want anything to do with EX-Mormons.
I’m going to have to re-check all those lawn signs.
I wonder if word went out and the followers will be taking them all down.

Mike Lee?

Never heard of him…

@Nathan Blue: Republican Senator from Utah, has a higher conservative voting record than even Cruz with CR and Heritage. One of the few that honor their commitment to those that placed them in office.