Something struck me as I looked at U.S. Sen. Ted Cruzās planned series of town hall meetings across Texas.
Heās going to be speaking to groups friendly to his point of view.
http://www.texastribune.org/2013/08/15/ted-cruz-staging-events-across-texas/
Local Republican womenās groups are hosting him; same for local tea party organizations; an event in Dallas will be put on by the Heritage Foundation; heāll be talking to a chamber of commerce audience too.
Thatās all fine and good. Iām curious, though, as to whether the Republican junior senator from Texas is going to engage individuals in actual debate and discussion over differences they might have in public policy.
Iām going on out a limb here, but Iām quite sure liberal Democratic senators in, say, California or New York donāt spend much time talking to conservative audiences. So the query is posed to them as well.
Cruz was elected by a majority of Texans in 2012 to represent the entire state. I get that Texas leans hard right in its political view. All its statewide elected officials are Republicans; thereās not a Democrat to be found ā¦ or none on the horizon with a prayer of winning a statewide election. But not every Texan adheres to that world view. A few of us out here lean the other way and do not like the notion, for example, of shutting down the government in order to defund the Affordable Care Act ā which Cruz is pushing.
Sen. Cruz also is thought to be considering a run for the presidency in 2016, a notion that was noticed by Tanene Allison, spokeswoman for the Texas Democratic Party. āHeās not talking about the issues that matter most to Texans,ā Allison told the Texas Tribune. āA movement to try to shut down the government is not on the top of the list of what most Texans want at the moment.ā
A more productive town hall series would be to include constituents who arenāt particularly friendly to the fiery conservative. Maybe someone with a different point of view will sneak into one or more of these meetings and actually challenge him. Letās hope so.