Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

Ted Cruz, mascot of the 2013 shutdown, says he has “consistently opposed shutdowns”

Reporters tried to push back on the Texas senator’s interpretation of history.

Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen Testifies To Joint Economic Committee On Economy
Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen Testifies To Joint Economic Committee On Economy
Photo by Zach Gibson/Getty Images
Jen Kirby
Jen Kirby is a senior foreign and national security reporter at Vox, where she covers global instability.

Ted Cruz (R-TX), the senator who had a leading role in the government shutdown in 2013, told reporters Monday he has “consistently opposed shutdowns. In 2013, I said we shouldn’t shut the government.”

Cruz delivered his alternative history during a media scrum Monday afternoon, as senators reached a deal to reopen the government.

“They’re angry,” Cruz said. “They hate the president, and they’re demanding of Senate Democrats: oppose everything, resist everything, shut everything down.”

MSNBC’s Kasie Hunt quickly pointed out that this sounded a little ironic coming from Cruz. Antics such as reading Dr. Seuss’s “Green Eggs and Ham” during a marathon filibuster quickly made him the mascot of the 2013 shutdown.

“This sounds pretty familiar,” Hunt asked him. “Didn’t you say all this back when it happened to you?”

“Now, I recognize this is a media narrative that you love to tell,” Cruz said, “but it’s worth noting in 2013—”

“Green Eggs and Ham?” Hunt interjected.

“In 2013,” Cruz continued, ignoring the question. “I voted repeatedly to fund the government, and in 2013 it was Harry Reid and the Democrats who voted to ‘no’, who vote to shut the government down just like this week.”

Hunt and other reporters continued to challenge Cruz. But the Texas senator did not relent. “We should not be shutting the government down. I have consistently opposed shutdowns, in 2013, I said we shouldn’t shut the government down. Indeed, I went to the Senate floor repeatedly asking unanimous consent to re-open the government.”

“You stood in the way of that,” Hunt pointed out, again.

“That’s factually incorrect,” Cruz said, insisting again that this was just “a wonderful media narrative.”

Ted Cruz’s repeated insistence that he never shut down the government doesn’t change reality. In 2013, Cruz, along with conservatives in the House, demanded that any spending bill also delay the implementation of the Affordable Care Act.

President Barack Obama and Senate Democrats, who still had control of the chamber in 2013, were never going to support such a move. But enough House Republicans wouldn’t go for a funding bill that didn’t defund Obamacare, setting up a showdown that shut down government for more than two weeks. (In the end, Cruz and the conservative House faction did not win policy concessions.)

Republicans were largely blamed for the shutdown. Cruz’s theatrics inspired the ire not just of Democrats, but of his Republican colleagues in the Senate, who felt Cruz knew his self-righteous gambit was doomed to fail, but went ahead with it anyway to raise his own political profile at his party’s expense. And it really, really did not win him any pals.

On Monday, another reporter brought up this issue with Cruz, asking why were his GOP colleagues angry with him if he didn’t help prompt the shutdown. Cruz responded that “Republicans were divided.”

But it wasn’t just reporters who were slightly wide-eyed at Cruz’s amnesia. Senator Susan Collins told reporters she was “rendered speechless.”

Still, this isn’t the first time Cruz has used this line of reasoning. The senator has basically argued before that he never wanted a shutdown, he was just trying to defund Obamacare, and it was everyone else’s fault for not going along.

“The reason it didn’t work is because Ted Cruz was the only candidate, the only senator, who campaigned on defunding Obamacare and followed through on his campaign promise. Nobody else did,” Rick Tyler, a spokesman for Cruz’s presidential campaign told the Washington Post in 2016.

Tyler added others seemed to give in too easily: “‘Oh, we don’t have the votes. We’ll just give up.’ That’s not leadership; that’s capitulation and appeasement and surrender.”

The 2013 shutdown ended after 17 days, when House Republican voted to reopen the government, without accomplishing any Obamacare defunding or delay. That bill passed the Senate, 81-18. Cruz voted against it.

See More:

More in archives

archives
Ethics and Guidelines at Vox.comEthics and Guidelines at Vox.com
archives
By Vox Staff
Supreme Court
The Supreme Court will decide if the government can ban transgender health careThe Supreme Court will decide if the government can ban transgender health care
Supreme Court

Given the Court’s Republican supermajority, this case is unlikely to end well for trans people.

By Ian Millhiser
archives
On the MoneyOn the Money
archives

Learn about saving, spending, investing, and more in a monthly personal finance advice column written by Nicole Dieker.

By Vox Staff
archives
Total solar eclipse passes over USTotal solar eclipse passes over US
archives
By Vox Staff
archives
The 2024 Iowa caucusesThe 2024 Iowa caucuses
archives

The latest news, analysis, and explainers coming out of the GOP Iowa caucuses.

By Vox Staff
archives
The Big SqueezeThe Big Squeeze
archives

The economy’s stacked against us.

By Vox Staff