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Ted Cruz

Sen. Ted Cruz calls Mexico trip amid Texas winter crisis and power outages 'a mistake'

Nicholas Wu
USA TODAY

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, called his trip to Mexico "a mistake" following a flurry of criticism as his state faced a major crisis and power outages.

Standing outside his home in Houston, with the chants of protesters audible, Cruz said his original intention was to stay through the weekend on a trip to Cancun with his daughters. His daughters had requested the trip, he said.

After losing power, huddling around the fireplaces and learning school was canceled, Cruz said his daughters told him they wanted to travel somewhere warmer. He and his wife decided to go along with them to be good parents, but "I started having second thoughts almost the minute I sat down on the plane."

"In hindsight, I wouldn't have done it," Cruz said, adding it had been his "intention to work remotely," but it became "more compelling" for him to return as controversy grew about the trip.

"Leaving when so many people were hurting didn't feel right and so I changed my flight to come back today," he said.

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Cruz's office had declined to respond to queries from news outlets for hours as pictures of his trip first started circulating on social media.

Pictures of Cruz at the Houston and Cancun airports and on a plane first started circulating on Wednesday night, drawing the ire of his progressive critics as winter storms left many Texans without power in houses not designed to withstand the winter's cold.

About 325,000 customers in Texas were still without power Thursday evening after frigid temperatures kicked large shares of the state's power plants off its grid this week, leaving more than 4 million in the dark and triggering outrages.

Overnight temperatures were in the single digits early in the week. Austin's main weather station reported as much as 6.4 inches of snow this week, the most the city has seen in over 70 years.

In a statement issued early Thursday afternoon, Cruz said in a statement his daughters had wanted to take the trip to Cancun with their friends.

"With school canceled for the week, our girls asked to take a trip with friends. Wanting to be a good dad, I flew down with them last night and am flying back this afternoon," Cruz said.

The Houston Police Department confirmed Cruz's presence at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston on Wednesday. Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo said in a statement the senator's staff had contacted the department and asked for assistance "upon the senator's arrival at the airport."

"HPD officers monitored his movements through the terminal," Acevedo said.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) checks in for a flight at Cancun International Airport after a backlash over his Mexican family vacation as his home state of Texas endured a Winter storm on February 18, 2021 in Cancun, Quintana Roo, Mexico. The Republican politician came under fire after leaving for the warm holiday destination as hundreds of thousands of people in the lone star state suffered a loss of power. Reports stated that Cruz was due to catch a flight back to Houston, Texas.

Cruz brushed off the criticism and said he was "just trying to be a good dad" in video of the senator at Cancun International Airport obtained by Al Dia and the Dallas Morning News.

"I'm also a senator and working hard to fight for the state of Texas," he said at the airport.

He arrived back in Houston later Thursday and was flanked by a police escort.

More:Ted Cruz escaped to Cancun during a crippling Texas storm in a pandemic, and travelers have so many questions

Cruz had previously criticized Austin Mayor Steve Adler for flying to Cabo in a private jet while telling Austinites to stay home, writing in a Dec. 2 tweet, "hypocrites. Complete and utter hypocrites." The post began recirculating on social media as pictures of his trip to Mexico went viral.

In a Tuesday radio interview, Cruz told Texans to stay home amid the severe weather.

"Don't risk it. Keep your family safe and just stay home and hug your kids," Cruz said.

Cruz said in his statement he and his staff were "in constant communication with state and local leaders to get to the bottom of what happened in Texas."

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"Guess which US Senator from Texas flew to Cancun while the state was freezing to death and having to boil water?" wrote Democratic state Rep. Gene Wu, D-Houston, along with a picture of Cruz on an airplane.

Wu told USA TODAY he had not taken the photo, but it had been passed along to him by former congressional candidate Sima Ladjevardian, whose friend was on the flight with Cruz and sitting nearby.

Tommy Vietor, former spokesperson for President Barack Obama, called Cruz's trip "callous and politically masochistic."

The liberal PAC American Bridge 21st Century called on Cruz to resign.

"Senator Cruz should do his constituents a favor and stay on the beach instead of getting paid by taxpayers to do a job he clearly has no interest in doing," American Bridge 21st Century President Bradley Beychok said in a statement.

More:Texas mayor who wrote 'only the strong will survive' amid deadly winter storm says he has resigned

Texas Democratic Party Chair Gilberto Hinojosa also said Cruz should resign, calling the trip "disturbing and disappointing."

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