Tuesday, February 23, 2021

Alberta-Born Ted Cruz Embarrasses Canada With Mexico Trip

Calgary-born Ted Cruz is the latest to come under fire for taking a vacation while his constituents are in a crisis.

Another Canadian-born politician is under fire for taking a vacation to a sunny destination while his constituents suffer through a crisis.

No, we’re not talking about Alberta cabinet ministers or Ontario’s former finance minister

This time, it’s Calgary-born Texas senator Ted Cruz who was spotted boarding a plane to Cancun, Mexico Wednesday, while his state remains locked in a disastrous deep freeze with accompanying power outages. 

Cruz was born in Calgary and spent the first four years of his life in the true North strong and free before his family moved to Texas. He was a Canadian citizen until formally renouncing in 2014 ahead of his presidential campaign. Cruz’s biggest memories of Canada are reportedly that it was “cold” — ironic considering the current weather in his state. 

With the ill-advised Mexico trip, Cruz does have something in common with his homeland — he joins a wave of Canadian politicians and staffers who were caught vacationing internationally over the winter holidays in late December despite explicit Canadian public health guidance not to do so and the onset of the dangerous second wave of COVID-19. 

Then-Ontario finance minister Rod Phillips travelled to St. Barts while then-Alberta municipal affairs minister Tracy Allard vacationed in Hawaii. Alberta Premier Jason Kenney’s chief of staff also travelled to the U.K., and actually had to come back via the U.S. because the Canadian government had halted all flights to and from the U.K. in the wake of the new coronavirus variant. All in all, dozens of public officials were caught suitcase-handed over the winter. 

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Senator Ted Cruz speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington on Feb. 13, 2021, 
on the fifth day of the second impeachment trial of former President Donald Trump.

Cruz’s state is still locked in the same global pandemic we’ve all been facing, but is also facing the compounding crisis of frigid temperatures paired with infrastructure failures that have led to widespread power outages. 

So, maybe it’s not the time to go to Mexico. 

But go Cruz did, as many politicians before him north of the border did, too. Like many of the Canadian politicians caught abroad while their constituents suffered, Cruz appears to have quickly realized his miscalculation. The Associated Press reports that the senator will be returning to Houston “imminently.” 

As for his Canadian homeland, don’t expect any imminent return here. 

The border between Canada and the U.S. remains closed to non-essential travel for the foreseeable future.


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