US election: Cruz booed for failing to back Trump

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BBC Online :
Texas Senator Ted Cruz was booed as he failed to endorse Donald Trump as the US Republican nominee, during a speech at the party convention in Cleveland.
Mr Cruz only went as far as congratulating the man who had been his bitter rival in the primary contests.
Angry chants of “We want Trump!” and “Endorse Trump!” grew louder as the senator came to the end of his speech. Indiana Governor Mike Pence then took centre stage to give his vice-presidential acceptance speech.
Mr Pence praised Mr Trump’s record as a businessman and said the country had “but one choice” in November.
“It’s change versus the status quo, and when Donald Trump is president, the change will be huge,” he said.
But Mr Cruz is likely to steal the headlines after stoking the rage of the convention, to such an extent that his wife Heidi had to be escorted from the floor. A former colleague of Ted Cruz’s once told
me that the one unforgivable sin in the Texas senator’s mind is to insult or demean Rafael Cruz, Ted Cruz’s father. Donald Trump did that toward the end of the presidential primary campaign, questioning whether the elder Cruz had ties to John Kennedy’s assassination. And on Wednesday night, before a national audience on the Republican Party’s biggest stage, the Texas senator got his revenge.
As Mr Cruz left the stage after his non-endorsement speech, showered in boos, he gave a brief thumbs-up, apparently satisfied that the deed was done. And what he did was turn the Republican convention on its head once again. Now, everyone will be talking about his speech – overshadowing what should have been vice-presidential nominee Mike Pence’s coming-out party. Mr Pence is the stable, trusted conservative politician who was supposed to rally unsure Republicans behind their new standard-bearer. Instead, Mr Cruz revealed a party still sharply divided. While those inside the arena seemed united in booing the senator, some conservatives outside the Trump-friendly confines praised his actions. Politically, Mr Cruz has made a risky move, however. He has staked his future presidential hopes on the chance that Republicans will view him as a principled conservative and not a right-wing Judas. Given that Donald Trump received more than 12 million votes in 2016, that is a lot of support that he may have just permanently angered. But an insult was answered. “Lyin’ Ted” had his moment of vengeance. In his speech, Mr Cruz told supporters to “vote [with] their conscience” and not to stay at home for the general election.
He finished second to Mr Trump in the delegate count during a campaign that featured personal attacks by the New York businessman on Mr Cruz’s wife and father.The boos that drowned him out stopped when Mr Trump entered the convention hall before Mr Cruz had finished speaking.
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