Today: Friday, 19 April 2024 year

Cruz gets another evangelical endorsement

Cruz gets another evangelical endorsement

Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, has endorsed Senator Ted Cruz for President on the Megyn Kelly show Tuesday night.“I have many friends in this race, but I believe the one who is best positioned, best prepared to lead this nation forward, pulling it out of the tailspin this President has put us in, I believe it is Ted Cruz,” Perkins told Kelly, clarifying that he made the endorsement in his personal capacity. “He is smart, he is bold, much like you, he is not afraid to upset people to do the right thing.”

Perkin’s endorsement was aimed at hurting Trump

Perkins’ endorsement of Cruz does not come as a surprise, but its timing is a clear move to offset the tide of Trump lead, going up to the Iowa Caucuses on Monday. Perkins’ announcement on Kelly’s show is also pointed, as it comes just hours after Trump announced that he will skip the upcoming Fox News/Google debate, in protest of the network and Megyn Kelly. “This is about his standing on conservative principles, it is about his standing on the Constitution, not his standing in the polls or his standing with his colleagues,” Perkins said.

Trump gets endorsement, still in the lead

Trump gained the endorsement of another prominent evangelical leader, Jerry Falwell Jr., president of the Liberty University, earlier on Tuesday. The Republican front runner has been leading with the values voters constituency, even though he does not always share their policy objectives. Trump was unhappy with another endorsement given to Cruz by President of the Family Leader, Vander Plaats.

Evangelicals see Cruz as the solution

Perkins told TIME last week: “We are not looking for a man to solve all our nation’s problems, we are looking for a man who knows the source of the solutions, and be wiling to stand and speak those solutions and advocate them.” Asked last week what he makes of that dynamic, Perkins told TIME he believed that many evangelicals feel “beaten down” by political correctness, especially on issues such as gay marriage. “Now they see Donald Trump, who is taking on that same elitist politically correct mindset and not backing down,” he said. “They find common cause in this guy, even though he comes from a completely different world.”