Facebook post about Rubio and the Bible Ted Cruz fires spokesman over
LAS
VEGAS — At a press conference immediately before his rally here in the
gymnasium of the Durango Hills YMCA, Ted Cruz announced that he had
fired his longtime campaign spokesman Rick Tyler for posting on his
Facebook page a false news story that purported to show rival Marco
Rubio making a disparaging remark about the Bible. Cruz called Tyler’s
action a “grave error of judgment.”
“I’ve
spent this morning investigating what happened, and this morning I
asked for Rick Tyler’s resignation,” Cruz said. “We are not a campaign
that is going to question the faith of another candidate. Even if [the
story] was true, our campaign should not have sent it.”
The
erroneous story was originally published by student publication the
Daily Pennsylvanian along with a video in which Rubio said, “Got a good
book there,” to a Cruz staffer he spotted reading the Bible. At this
point the audio in the video becomes hard to understand, and the video
used subtitles to allege that Rubio continued, “Not many answers in it.”
In reality, what Rubio said was, “Got a good book there. All the answers are in there.”
Rick
Tyler, former communications director for Sen. Ted Cruz’s presidential
campaign, in Storm Lake, Iowa, in January. (Photo: Scott Bauer/AP) Cruz’s
decision to fire Tyler, who was one of his earliest hires, was widely
seen by the media as an effort to turn the page on the narrative that
his campaign has been engaging in dirty tricks. In the wake of Iowa,
where Cruz staffers misleadingly suggested that Ben Carson was about to
drop out of the race, the Rubio campaign has repeatedly claimed that
Cruz is “willing to do or say anything to get elected,” and GOP
frontrunner Donald Trump has been even more direct, calling Cruz a
“liar” at nearly every campaign stop. The charges seem to have resonated
with evangelicals in South Carolina, where Cruz delivered a
disappointing third-place finish despite the state’s conservative
reputation and favorable demographics.Trump
immediately took to Twitter to crow that the Tyler incident reinforced
what he’s been saying about Cruz all along. “Ted Cruz has now apologized
to Marco Rubio and Ben Carson for fraud and dirty tricks,” Trump
tweeted. “No wonder he has lost Evangelical support!”The
Rubio campaign soon piled on, with spokesman Alex Conant insisting that
it was actually Cruz, not Tyler, who was at fault and using the fracas
as an opportunity to repeat his team’s favorite line about Cruz.“Rick
is a really good spokesman who had the unenviable task of working for a
candidate who is willing to do or say anything to get elected,” Conant
said in a statement, adding that “there is a culture in the Cruz
campaign, from top to bottom, that no lie is too big and no trick too
dirty.”The
Cruz campaign disputed Conant’s accusation. “Marco Rubio’s attacks have
been misleading from the beginning, and we’ll continue talking about
that,” said Cruz spokeswoman Catherine Frazier. “We believe voters are
smart enough to recognize the difference.”What
isn’t clear is whether Tyler’s firing will change anyone’s impression
of Cruz — or whether, in fact, Nevadans will care at all. In the Durango
YMCA gymnasium, television reporters from NBC and Fox News rushed in
front of their cameras to do standup reports about Cruz’s decision,
speculating on the air about how it will impact the race. But most
voters interviewed by Yahoo News had no idea who Tyler was.
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