Since the disaster in Texas, where more than 100 lives were lost to a flash flood in the middle of the night, Senator Ted Cruz has been readily available to comment for every television camera.
He has warned Democrats and Republicans alike not to politicize the tragic events (forgetting that Republicans pounced on the Los Angeles fires to blame Democrats and DEI as the 98-mile-an-hour winds were still spreading disaster. They blamed Mayor Karen Bass [who is female and Black], they blamed the female leaders of the LA Fire Department, they blamed Governor Gavin Newsom for refusing to turn on an imaginary faucet in Northern California).
What Cruz has not mentioned is that he inserted a cut into Trump’s Big Ugly Bill that slashed $150 million from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s budget for forecasting the weather.
The Guardian reported:
“There’s no doubt afterwards we are going to have a serious retrospective as you do after any disaster and say, ‘OK what could be done differently to prevent this disaster?’” Cruz told Fox News. “The fact you have girls asleep in their cabins when flood waters are rising, something went wrong there. We’ve got to fix that and have a better system of warnings to get kids out of harm’s way.”
The National Weather Service has faced scrutiny in the wake of the disaster after underestimating the amount of rainfall that was dumped upon central Texas, triggering floods that caused the deaths and about $20bn in estimated economic damages. Late-night alerts about the dangerous floods were issued by the service but the timeliness of the response, and coordination with local emergency services, will be reviewed by officials.
But before his Grecian holiday, Cruz ensured a reduction in funding to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (Noaa) efforts to improve future weather forecasting of events that cause the sort of extreme floods that are being worsened by the human-caused climate crisis.
Cruz inserted language into the Republicans’ “big beautiful” reconciliation bill, before its signing by Donald Trump on Friday, that eliminates a $150m fund to “accelerate advances and improvements in research, observation systems, modeling, forecasting, assessments, and dissemination of information to the public” around weather forecasting.
Cruz was vacationing in Greece with his family when the flood occurred. A few years ago, when the power grid in Texas collapsed during a bitter cold spell, Cruz and family were on their way to Cancun. Maybe he should put out public alerts about his vacations so we can all be prepared for disasters.
Politifact debunked the claim that Trump totally defunded NOAA and the National Weather Service, it acknowledged that cuts were made (at the insistence of DOGE).
“While the administration has not defunded the NWS or NOAA, it is proposing in 2026 to cut significant research arms of the agency, including the Office of Atmospheric Research, a major hot bed of research,” Matt Lanza, Houston-based meteorologist and editor of The Eyewall, a hurricane and extreme weather website, told PolitiFact. “Multiple labs that produce forecasting tools and research used to improve forecasting would also be impacted. The reorganization that’s proposed would decimate NOAA’s research capability.”

I thought the boards of trustees of respectively, Princeton and Harvard Universities, voted, unanimously, to revoke the diplomas handed him, on the basis of his reflecting poorly on the image and reputation of each.
LikeLike
No, Harvard did not revoke Cruz’s law school diploma. Students petitioned for it but it didn’t happen.
LikeLike
Too bad.
LikeLike
Another of life’s inequities we have to put up with in “the new abnormal”…
LikeLiked by 1 person
The people of Texas should remember Cruz does not work for them has has betrayed them before. When people in Texas were freezing in their homes due the failure of an antiquated power grid, Cruz and his family got on a plane to vacation in Cancun while people froze to death. Texans should stop rewarding repeated GOP incompetence.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I just asked Google: “How accurate has the NOAA historically been predicting flash floods in advance?”
Google’s AI Overview’s reply was too long to share here. So, just one paragraph.
“Timeliness and challenges: Flash flood warnings often have limited lead time (generally 30 minutes or less) compared to river floods (6-18 hours or longer). This is because flash floods are triggered by intense, localized rainfall events that are difficult to predict precisely days in advance.”
Still, this does not excuse Cruz for his hypocrisy and double standard.
LikeLike
In other news, what do the puppet Trump’s controllers want with the largest, best-funded police force in the world, one that is anonymous and completely unaccountable?
“Vote for me, and you’ll never have to vote again.” –Donald Trump, at every rally, during the last election
LikeLike
So confident that he TOLD EVERYONE what they were going to do
LikeLike
Why was he so confident before the election? Remember that Trump always projects on to others what he did or intends to do. He spent four years claiming that the 2020 election was rigged. Well….
LikeLiked by 1 person
People knew who they voted for. Sadly, they have reaped the consequences. Let the rest of our nation be warned. You get what you pay for. I am sorry for the innocents who had no choice.
LikeLike
#FEMA47 🌊🌪️🔥 #Felon47sEmergencyMagnificationAgency
LikeLike
Project 2025 is defunding just “arms of NWS and NOAA” because those arms link much of their research to the concept (aka: reality) of climate change. Not a theory. It’s written n there.
So they’re leaving the agencies intact but, like DEI, are axing anything to do with “Woke” scientific research.
LikeLike