Introduction

In 2002, John Cornyn, a former Texas Supreme Court justice and Attorney General, replaced the retiring Phil Gramm and became the junior senator from Texas. In a costly campaign, he defeated his Democrat challenger, joining Kay Bailey Hutchison in Texas’s delegation to the US Senate. Next to Hutchison, a liberal Republican, Cornyn was a rock of conservatism. Texans weren’t particularly thrilled with him - generally speaking, very little about John Cornyn is thrilling - but Hutchison presented a more pressing target for conservatives who were dissatisfied with one of the Texas senators. In 2012, however, Hutchison retired, and, after a heated primary, a new senator, Ted Cruz, took office. While Cornyn seemed quite adequate next to Hutchison, next to Cruz, who quickly garnered a 92/2 favorability/unfavorability rating among conservative Texans, Cornyn hardly seemed impressive. The final straw came when Cruz, together with Mike Lee, Rand Paul, and a handful of Senate conservatives, devised a plan to force the defunding of Obamacare, and Cornyn opposed them. Several primary challenges materialized shortly thereafter, but the most serious didn’t come until the last day to file in the election, when Steve Stockman, a US representative from the Houston area, announced his candidacy. He attacked Cornyn for being a liberal, and for trying to make the Senate more liberal - puzzling, since Cornyn’s voting record is, according to one measure, the second most conservative in the Senate, and according to others the eighteenth or twentieth. What could Stockman be referring to? Is he simply fabricating his claims? Sadly, no - he’s right. Rankings systems can’t tell the whole story, and the whole story when it comes to John Cornyn is far from pretty.

TARP

Cornyn’s campaign pitch hinges on his claim to be a solid conservative. Is he, though? The toughest recent test of conservatives came during Bush’s presidency, when the pull to go along with a president who was a moderate at best, despite his rhetoric, led many Republicans - even conservatives - to go along with programs they would otherwise have shunned. Cornyn was no exception. In 2008, just before Bush left office, Cornyn voted for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), which appropriated $700 billion in taxpayer funds to bail out the big banks on Wall Street whose reckless lending policies had provoked a recession. Many other Republican senators voted for the bill, but most of those now recognize that they were wrong to do so. Cornyn stands out because he stubbornly refuses to admit that forcing private citizens to pay for the idiocy of a handful of rich bankers was foolish. In fact, he even claims to be “proud” of his vote, a statement which raises serious questions about his claimed conservative credentials (Withrow 2013).

Medicare Part D

In 2003, again under Bush, the Medicare Modernization Act passed, under somewhat dubious circumstances (at least one Republican congressman reported that the Republican leadership had offered campaign funds for his sons congressional campaign in return for a “yea” vote). The primary purpose of the bill was to introduce an entitlement program for prescription drugs, Medicare Part D, at that time the largest expansion of the welfare state since Medicare was first introduced. The original projected net cost was $400 billion, although the Bush administration deliberately suppressed estimates that it might cost more than $500 billion in a rather transparent attempt to buy votes from the elderly. In 2013 alone Medicare Part D cost close to $60 billion dollars; by 2021 spending for Medicare Part D is expected to rise to just under $120 billion dollars. Then-freshman senator John Cornyn voted for the program, called by former Comptroller General David Walker “the most fiscally irresponsible piece of legislation since the 1960s.” His support could be written off as a freshman senator succumbing to pressure, but in 2007, after five years in the Senate, he reaffirmed his support for the failed program, calling the program “widely successful” despite the $40 billion price tag that year alone (Bartlett 2013; Gillespie 2010; Klein 2013).

Amnesty

One could easily allow a certain amount of leeway on TARP and Medicare Part D. As destructive and wrong-headed as the programs were, Republican senators were faced with an unbelievably difficult situation when voters elected a Republican president who was not dedicated to conservatism and who was willing to apply pressure to fellow Republicans in support of liberal programs. Even if we write off Cornyn’s votes on TARP and Medicare Part D, however, his “conservative” record is far from stellar. In 2013, Cornyn expressed support for a proposal by the “Gang of Eight,” a group of eight Republican and Democrat senators pushing for amnesty, which would provide a preferential path to citizenship for illegal immigrants. Cornyn indicated his willingness to vote for the bill if his amendment, a vaguely-worded voluminous piece of legalese that required nothing the DHS couldn’t weasel out of, was attached to it. The heart of the Gang of Eight’s proposal, as Marco Rubio, a member of the Gang of Eight, has stated, is that “first comes the legalization. Then comes the measure to secure the border.” Granting amnesty, then securing the borders, the approach Cornyn and the Gang of Eight would like us to take, has been tried before, in 1986. That proposal, intended to provide amnesty only when strict conditions had been met - like the Gang of Eight’s proposal - only accelerated the influx of illegal immigrants across the border and effectively turned California blue. Rather than learning from history, Cornyn and the Gang of Eight insist on attempting to implement the same liberal policies that have failed every time they’ve been tried.

Minimum Wage Increase

Cornyn’s record of collapsing in important votes has not been a few isolated incidents, either. In 2005, and again in 2007, Cornyn voted with the Democrat majority to increase the minimum wage. The proposed increase would increase the minimum wage gradually, eventually reaching $7.25 in 2009. Conservatives, who opposed the legislation, argued that it would result in economic stagnation and increased unemployment, as it did, although other factors obscured the decline - 2009, the year the minimum wage reached $7.25, was also the year the housing bubble collapsed, making attributing the subsequent rapid decline in employment and economic growth difficult. Nonetheless, Cornyn once again stood in opposition to conservatives and sound economic principles by voting with the Democrats.

Debt

Nor did Cornyn limit himself to hamstringing the current economy. Eight times since taking office he has voted to continue our reckless deficit spending by raising the debt ceiling. Since Cornyn took office in 2002, the national debt has increased by $10 trillion dollars (TreasuryDirect 2013a) and the interest on the debt has increased by $83 billion dollars (TreasuryDirect 2013b). Further, the increase in interest in the debt would be much higher, except the Fed has artificially depressed interest rates, a situation that is untenable in the long term. Eventually, interest rates must rise again, or the economy will begin to stagnate. When that happens, the rise in interest payments will begin to parallel the increase in the debt. Since 2002, revenue has increased by only $63 billion - in other words, revenue has increased by $6.3 billion per year, while interest on the debt is set to increase by $50 billion per year. If both debt and revenue continue increasing at current rates - certainly not a precise prediction, but a reasonable approximation nonetheless - in forty years, annual interest payments on the debt will exceed annual revenue. Granted, that is only an estimate, and whether it will happen in precisely forty years or not is certainly debatable, but what is certain is that it will happen, and when it does the US will be forced to erase the debt - somehow - within the next few years. Whether by defaulting or inflating the currency, any such action would be catastrophic economically. Continuing to accumulate debt at current rates is simply untenable, yet John Cornyn wants to continue building the debt, keeping the country on a trajectory for disaster.

Budgets

He could still resort to the standard argument given by those in favor of raising the debt limit, though: he was simply funding the programs already agreed on. How could he be blamed for simply setting aside funds for programs Congress had already decided? Unfortunately, Cornyn voted for and supported those programs, too. Mike Lee proposed a budget for FY 2013 which would have balanced the budget - theoretically, but probably not in reality - in five years. Cornyn voted against it. Rand Paul proposed budgets for FY 2012 and FY 2013 which would also balance the budget in five years. Cornyn voted against them. Cornyn instead chose budget plans that either did nothing to balance the budget, in most cases, or remained perfectly vague on how, exactly, the budget as to be balanced. He has shown himself willing not only to allow any amount of borrowing to facilitate reckless spending, but also to actively advance reckless spending.

Warrantless Data Collection

In 2007, and again in 2012, Cornyn voted for the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Amendments Act - first to authorize it, then to reauthorize it when it was set to expire. The act provided immunity from prosecution for telecommunications that had assisted in warrantless - illegal - wiretapping. FISA provided the lynchpin for the NSA’s extensive illegal data collection program - by voting to authorize and reauthorize FISA, Cornyn helped provide the NSA with the ability to collect data on millions of US citizens.

Head of the NRSC

As head of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC), Cornyn consistently backed liberals over conservatives. Cornyn was head of the NRSC from 2007 to 2012, and during that time oversaw elections in 2008, 2010, and 2012, seeing significant losses in all three of those years. In the past, the NRSC had not supported candidates in primaries, choosing to wait and support the Republican nominee. That precedent was rarely broken, but when Cornyn did choose to break it, it was for liberal incumbents over more conservative challengers. In the 2010 election, when outrage over government overreach was in the process of sweeping Republicans to nearly unprecedented gains, Cornyn repeatedly acted to hamstring the conservative surge.
Cornyn began benignly enough. He appeared to pledge to continue the NRSC tradition of staying out of primaries, with the caveat that the NRSC would be used to support incumbents. Just days after that pledge, however, Cornyn hosted a fundraiser for Gilbert Baker, a candidate for Senate in Arkansas who faced six Republican challengers, including Tom Cox, the leader of the Arkansas Tea Party. In response to criticism that he had broken his word, Cornyn pointed out that he had said that the NRSC wouldn’t spend money, not that they wouldn’t endorse candidates or help candidates raise money. Far from being a continuation of the NRSC tradition, Cornyn’s pledge was a bit of Cornyn-esque doublespeak all-too-familiar to those who know him.

He didn’t stop there, either. In Pennsylvania, Arlen Specter, a former and future Democrat who even during his time as a Republican was virulently pro-abortion and pro-spending, was in a tough primary battle against his more conservative opponent from 2004, Pat Toomey. Cornyn sent funds to Specter through the NRSC and personally endorsed him, claiming that he was the “best bet to keep this Senate seat in the GOP column.” He was wrong, as it turns out, since Specter switched his affiliation to Democrat when it became apparent that, despite the best efforts of Cornyn and Mitch McConnell, Pat Toomey was on track to win handily. Cornyn quickly reversed his position - evidently the same positions next to a (D) were unacceptable - and backed Toomey in the general election, where Toomey defeated Democrat Pat Sestak after Specter failed to win the Democrat primary.

In Alaska, incumbent Senator Lisa Murkowski faced a challenge from Joe Miller, a Tea Party-backed conservative. Murkowski first entered the Senate after being appointed by her father, Frank Murkowski, to his unexpired term when he was elected governor. She handily won a challenge in 2004 by promising Alaskans that she would bring home more pork for them, and went into 2010 the heavy favorite. However, conservatives in Alaska had begun to grow tired of her consistently liberal voting record, and Miller, an unknown candidate, quickly began to gather steam. Despite NRSC endorsement of Murkowski, the primary results were originally too close to call, and a recount effort commenced. Cornyn promptly sent funds and experts to Alaska to attempt to swing the recount in Murkowski’s favor. Cornyn’s efforts failed, and Miller received the Republican nomination, but, like Specter, Murkowski had far less allegiance to the Republican Party than Cornyn, and ran - and won - as an independent.

Both Pennsylvania and Alaska could be dismissed as an attempt to maintain Republican incumbents. That would be understandable, if still a bit unprincipled. In Florida, though, Cornyn went beyond simple party loyalty. In May 2009 Marco Rubio, the conservative speaker of the Florida House, and Charlie Crist, the liberal governor of Florida, both announced their campaigns for governor. As governor, Crist had been pro-abortion, repeatedly vetoing pro-life bills, (although he was briefly “pro-life” while running for Senate as a Republican), anti-offshore drilling, pro-expanded government subsidies, and generally took every opportunity to spit in the face of the Republican base. As in Alaska and Pennsylvania, a conservative faced off against a confirmed liberal. In this case, though, no incumbent’s seat was in danger, yet Cornyn still jumped into the race, endorsing - and funding - Crist. The people of Florida had had more than enough of Crist as governor, however, and a year after entering the race Crist, realizing that he had no chance of defeating Rubio, dropped out to run as an independent. Rubio soundly defeated Crist and the Democrat nominee, Kendrick Meek, in the general election. Since then, Crist has gone on to change his party affiliation to Democrat and announce a run for governor against Republican Rick Scott.

While his most visible perfidy came in 2010, Cornyn was never exactly a bastion of conservatism as head of the NRSC. As liberal as Cornyn had been with NRSC funds in 2010, showing himself more than willing to hamstring conservatives by supporting moderates in primaries, in 2012 he became much stingier, at least when it came to conservative nominees. When the otherwise solid Missouri Republican Senate candidate Todd Akin planted his foot squarely in his mouth by claiming that women do not become pregnant from “legitimate rape,” Cornyn first tried to force Akin from the still-winnable race (even immediately after the comment, McCaskill only led by ten points, and that lead declined steadily until McCaskill’s funding advantage began to wear Akin down), then, when Akin continued running, cut off all NRSC funds to Akin, allowing McCaskill to outspend Akin by almost six-to-one and virtually guaranteeing a Democrat victory in the race.

Throughout his time as head of the NRSC, Cornyn seemed to have a knack for finding the Republican candidates and senators most likely to switch their affiliation to Democrat and funding them. In Alaska Murkowski might as well have; in Pennsylvania Specter did; and in Florida Crist also did. While much of Cornyn’s actions as head of the NRSC can be attributed to an attempt to position himself for a run for Senate Minority Whip, some of his decisions cast serious doubt on his commitment to conservatism.

Alamo PAC Donations

Cornyn didn’t limit himself to acting through the NRSC when making endorsements and passing out funds, though. Through his leadership PAC, Alamo PAC, Cornyn sent funds to eight Republican senators who were up for reelection, including Olympia Snowe, the third most liberal of the forty-six Republican senators, Dick Lugar, the ninth most liberal Republican senator, Scott Brown, the second most liberal Republican senator, and, perhaps surprisingly given Cornyn’s record, Orrin Hatch, the twenty-fourth most liberal Republican senator. In addition, Cornyn sent funds to several Republican senators who were not up for reelection - Kelly Ayotte, the twentieth most liberal Republican senator, Susan Collins, the most liberal Republican senator, Lisa Murkowski, the fifth most liberal Republican senator, and Lamar Alexander, the sixth most liberal Republican senator (Wagner 2012; FreedomWorks 2013).

For context, Cornyn donated to all but four of the ten most liberal Republican senators. Of the four who did not see funds from Cornyn, John Hoeven won his last election with 76% of the vote and won’t face another until 2016, Thad Cochran was a senior senator from a solidly red state who wouldn’t be up for election for two years, Kay Bailey Hutchison intended to retire, and Roy Blunt had won handily in 2010 and wouldn’t see another election until 2016. All of the most liberal Republican senators who had any use for funds got them from John Cornyn, and, with the exception of Ayotte and Hatch, who have amassed a decent voting record but tend to collapse on important points, all of the senators Cornyn sent funds to in 2012 were among the most liberal Republicans in the Senate.

As in the case of the NRSC, Cornyn’s decisions may have been driven by a desire to drum up support for his run for Senate Minority Whip, rather than a desire to make the Senate more liberal. Still, his selections must at the very least raise questions about his ideology, not to mention the viability of a senator who uses Senate seats as bargaining chips to gain power. Senate politics seems to be a game John Cornyn plays a bit too well.

2013 Funding Fight

That brings us to the issue that finally prompted a primary challenge (for a more detailed version of this account, see this post). Cornyn had shown himself unfaithful before, but it wasn’t until the stakes were much higher and the stage much larger that the full extent of his treachery became apparent. It all began when Texas Senator Ted Cruz, the latest addition to the Texas delegation to the Senate, devised a clever - nearly diabolical, actually, from a Democrat's perspective - plan to force Democrats to vote to defund their president's most visible program. It hinged on the fact that the Senate cannot originate a spending bill, and therefore must rely on amending House bills, combined with the fact that Senate Democrats did not have the votes they needed - sixty - to amend the bill. Democrats would be forced to choose between voting to defund Obamacare and voting to defund all of government. In the first case, they would be hamstringing their president's legacy; in the second, they would take all the blame for shutting down the government (the blame Republicans actually wound up taking). Ideally - and it's not far-fetched - a few Democrats from red states would choose not to face waves of negative public opinion over an extremely unpopular program, and would vote to defund. Had Cruz's plan worked, there would have been no shutdown, and Obamacare would not have been funded.

It didn't work, though, partially because of Harry Reid's skill, but partially because Senate Republicans betrayed their base. By filing for cloture on the bill, Reid could effectively lower the number of votes needed to amend the House bill to fund Obamacare from sixty to fifty-one, allowing the bill to be amended. Of course, cloture still requires sixty votes, but Reid banked on betrayal from enough Republican senators to win the cloture vote. By allowing Republican senators to vote for cloture, ensuring that they would lose the vote to amend the bill to fund Obamacare, but then technically vote against funding Obamacare, he gave them the cover they needed to sell out their constituents. Cruz responded with his now-famous pseudo-filibuster, calling attention to the fact that Republican senators were considering voting for cloture on the bill, thus guaranteeing that Obamacare would be funded. Ultimately, enough Republican senators decided that their constituents either didn't care or would forget how they voted, and chose to derail Cruz's plan to defund Obamacare, leaving Republicans fighting without their best weapon, set up to fail and to take the blame for the shutdown.

That's where Cornyn comes in. He talked a good enough fight, claiming that he only differed with Cruz on tactics, not strategy. He wanted to defund Obamacare, so that's why he was going to vote to advance the House bill. "Big John" was standing up for Texas, and voting to pass the House bill defunding Obamacare. Texans should be proud! The trouble is, it was all a lie. Cornyn claimed that voting for cloture as voting to advance the House bill: it wasn't. Cloture is only needed to advance a bill if someone threatens to halt that bill through extended debate, and no one had threatened to do that (even Cruz's pseudo-filibuster had been carefully timed to avoid delaying the bill). In this case, all cloture on the bill did was allow Democrats to amend the bill, removing the House's provision that Obamacare not be funded. Despite his rhetoric, Cornyn's vote when he voted for cloture on the bill was a vote for funding Obamacare, and a vote to scrap the most important elements of the House bill.

Cornyn didn't just vote to fund Obamacare and hand Republicans a loss in the shutdown fight, he wasn't even man enough to own up to it. He continued spouting the same drivel about advancing the House bill, even after the nonsensical nature of his reasoning was thoroughly explained. He took the cover Harry Reid handed him to betray Texas and conservatives across the nation (if he at least had the decency to admit to what he did he still wouldn't deserve to be a senator, but at least he could have made Texans proud of his courage). When it really mattered, when Republicans had a chance to accomplish something significant against the odds, he folded.

Conclusion

And that’s John Cornyn. That’s always been John Cornyn. He is the epitome of the slick lawyer, carefully crafting his public image to appear to be something he is not, more than willing to take a stand whenever the fight’s somewhere else.

Already, we’ve seen that his record as a fiscal conservative is questionable, and that his record on other issues that matter to conservatives is second-rate. In addition, we’ve seen that he’s happy to do whatever it takes to pack the Senate with liberals, without fail choosing to endorse the liberal in every primary battle and happy to send financial support to the most liberal Republicans in the Senate, while carefully excluding conservatives from his largess. Although it may have been less obvious, we’ve also seen why the ratings systems have failed to identify Cornyn for what he is: he cheats. On unimportant votes he runs up the score, voting a hard conservative line when it doesn’t matter, and reserving his perfidy for important votes, where he could make a difference. At the same time, he lies about what he’s voting for - think about it: if Ted Cruz hadn’t called attention to it, Cornyn’s vote for cloture, ensuring funding for Obamcare, would have been ignored, and his vote against the amendment funding Obamacare would have gone down as a valiant last stand against overwhelming odds. Once we know, though, we know that when it mattered Cornyn caved; when it didn’t, he talked tough.

Cornyn can talk a good game, no one denies that. The trouble is, when it comes right down to it, he’s not a conservative. He’s been “hired,” if you will, by conservatives, so he has to pay his dues every once in a while, but he’s nothing more than a hireling. When he has a chance to make a difference, he doesn’t. That might be enough for other states, and even for Texas in the past, but that isn’t good enough for Texas today. If we can’t get a solid pair of senators, who will? The country needs Texas to be Texas; they’re relying on us. It’s time for Texas to step up, and send John Cornyn home.






References:
Not all references are cited here. Many facts which are readily available and fairly widely known are not referenced; this partial list exists only to provide support for the more salient and disputable facts.

Bartlett, Bruce. 2013. “Medicare Part D: Republican Budget-Busting.” New York Times, November.
     19, 2013. http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/11/19/medicare-part-d-republican-budget-busting/
Carafano, James. 2013. “Senator Cornyn’s Border Security Amendment Doesn’t Cut It.” June 17,
     2013. http://blog.heritage.org/2013/06/17/senator-cornyns-border-security-amendment-doesnt-cut-it/
Erickson, Erik. 2013. “The Sad Joke from John Cornyn’s Office.” RedState.com. Accessed
     12/12/2013. http://www.redstate.com/2013/07/28/the-sad-joke-from-john-cornyns-office/
FreedomWorks. 2013. “Scorecards.” Accessed 12/12/2013 from http://congress.freedomworks.org/
     Gillespie, Nick. 2010. “Happy Birthday, Medicare Part D! Now Die! Die! Die!” Reason.com.
     Accessed 12/12/2013. http://reason.com/blog/2010/11/19/happy-birthday-medicare-part-d
Klein, Phillip. 2013. “Bush’s Costly Medicare Legacy.” Washington Examiner, April 24, 2013.
     http://washingtonexaminer.com/bushs-costly-medicare-legacy/article/2528070
TreasuryDirect. 2013a. “Historical Debt Outstanding - Annual 2000 - 2012.” Accessed 12/13/13.
     http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reports/pd/histdebt/histdebt_histo5.htm
TreasuryDirect. 2013b. “Interest Expense on the Debt Outstanding.” Accessed 12/13/13.
     http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reports/ir/ir_expense.htm
Wagner, Samantha. 2012. “John Cornyn Shells out Cash to aid his GOP Colleagues.” Houston
     Chronicle.
Withrow, Joshua. 2013. “John Cornyn’s Top Ten Worst Votes.” FreedomWorks. Accessed 12/12/2013.
     http://www.freedomworks.org/blog/jwithrow/senator-john-cornyns-top-ten-bad-votes

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