Fact-check: Does Goldman Sachs oversee the Texas grid?
Chelsey Cox
Austin American-Statesman
A Facebook post: "DO YOU KNOW Heidi Cruz, Ted's wife, is managing director of Goldman Sachs. They oversee the Texas utilities."
Ruling: Partly False
Here's why: The state of Texas is still reeling from a historic mid-February snowstorm that overtaxed its power grid. More than 4 million people waited several days in frigid temperatures for power to be restored, USA TODAY reported.
Heidi Cruz, a high-ranking executive at investment banking company Goldman Sachs and wife of Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, shares part of the blame for the outages, claims a Feb. 21 Facebook post.
"DO YOU KNOW Heidi Cruz, Ted's wife, is managing director of Goldman Sachs. They over see the Texas utilities," the post states.
USA TODAY reached out to the poster for comment.
Back from Cancun:Ted Cruz returned home from Mexico to a surprise mariachi band and more #CanCruz-inspired TikToks
Ruling: Partly False
Here's why: The state of Texas is still reeling from a historic mid-February snowstorm that overtaxed its power grid. More than 4 million people waited several days in frigid temperatures for power to be restored, USA TODAY reported.
Heidi Cruz, a high-ranking executive at investment banking company Goldman Sachs and wife of Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, shares part of the blame for the outages, claims a Feb. 21 Facebook post.
"DO YOU KNOW Heidi Cruz, Ted's wife, is managing director of Goldman Sachs. They over see the Texas utilities," the post states.
USA TODAY reached out to the poster for comment.
Back from Cancun:Ted Cruz returned home from Mexico to a surprise mariachi band and more #CanCruz-inspired TikToks
The Cruz family made headlines in the aftermath of the Texas snowstorm for traveling to Mexico on Feb. 17, according to USA TODAY. Millions of Texans were still without power on the day of their departure.
Cruz faced criticism from his Democratic counterparts and the media and returned to Texas a day after landing in Cancun. The senator called the trip "a mistake," USA TODAY reported.
Heidi Cruz works for Goldman Sachs
Heidi Cruz began working as a vice president at the global investment conglomerate Goldman, Sachs & Co. in 2005, according to her LinkedIn page. She was promoted to managing director in 2012, according to a profile in Greater Houston Partnership.
Cruz was described as the "family breadwinner" in a 2018 profile in The Atlantic. She took unpaid leave from her job in 2015 to campaign for Ted Cruz when he ran for the 2016 Republican nomination for president, according to the story.
Does Goldman Sachs oversee Texas utilities?
Suspected ties between the investment banking firm and Texas energy surfaced on Twitter this month. A Feb. 20 tweet claimed Goldman Sachs, and by extension Heidi Cruz, has a "controlling interest in several Texas energy utilities."
TXU Corp., a Dallas-based energy company, was acquired for $45 billion in 2007 by Goldman Sachs and private equity firms Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. and Texas Pacific Group, according to a company press release published on wsj.com.
The energy company was renamed Energy Future Holdings after the acquisition. The falling price of natural gas, as well as the cost of taking the company private, soon took a toll on EFC. The company collapsed seven years later after subsidiary Texas Competitive Electric Holdings filed for bankruptcy, The Motley Fool reported in 2015
.
The EFH website provides no further updates.
A representative from Goldman Sachs told Newsweek that the investment bank does not have a controlling stake in any U.S. energy company.
USA TODAY reached out to Goldman Sachs for comment.
About 90% of the state's power is managed by the nonprofit Electric Reliability Council of Texas, or ERCOT, according to the Austin American-Statesman.
Your stories live here.
The claim that Goldman Sachs executive Heidi Cruz, wife of Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, works for a company that oversees Texas' utilities is Partly False. It is true that Cruz is a managing director at Goldman Sachs, but the company has no present ties to Texas utility companies. Goldman Sachs was one of three investors that acquired a Texas energy company in 2007, but the company went bankrupt seven years later.
The EFH website provides no further updates.
A representative from Goldman Sachs told Newsweek that the investment bank does not have a controlling stake in any U.S. energy company.
USA TODAY reached out to Goldman Sachs for comment.
About 90% of the state's power is managed by the nonprofit Electric Reliability Council of Texas, or ERCOT, according to the Austin American-Statesman.
Your stories live here.
The claim that Goldman Sachs executive Heidi Cruz, wife of Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, works for a company that oversees Texas' utilities is Partly False. It is true that Cruz is a managing director at Goldman Sachs, but the company has no present ties to Texas utility companies. Goldman Sachs was one of three investors that acquired a Texas energy company in 2007, but the company went bankrupt seven years later.
Sources
Austin American-Statesman, Feb. 17, "'An electrical island': Texas has dodged federal regulation for years by having its own power grid"
USA TODAY, Feb. 19, "Ted Cruz's trip to Mexico earned him widespread criticism. Will it matter for his political future?"
USA TODAY, Feb. 19, "Another winter storm slams Northeast, Mid-Atlantic; 224K still without power in Texas; Little Rock, Arkansas, ties 1918 snow record"
USA TODAY, Feb. 19, "Ted Cruz escaped to Cancun during a crippling Texas storm in a pandemic, and travelers have so many questions"
Energy Future Holdings, accessed Feb. 23, "Energy Future Holdings"
The Motley Fool, May 23, 2015, "Energy Future Holdings: How the Biggest Leveraged Buyout In History Became a Disaster"
The Wall Street Journal, Feb. 26, 2007, "Full Text of TXU Press Release On Firm Being Taken Private"
Greater Houston Partnership, accessed Feb. 23, "Heidi Cruz, Managing Director, Goldman Sachs & Co."
LinkedIn, accessed Feb. 23, "Heidi Cruz"
The Atlantic, Oct. 18, 2018, "Heidi Cruz Didn’t Plan for This"
Newsweek, Feb. 23: "Fact Check: Does Heidi Cruz's Employer, Goldman Sachs, Control Texas Energy Utilities?"