Sen. Ted Cruz’s (R-Texas) trip to Cancun, Mexico, is trending on social media after he tweeted about not leaving “Americans behind.”
Cruz tweeted in response to a report of a Texas family “abandoned” in Afghanistan after the U.S. completed its withdrawal.
“This is horrifying. And wrong. America doesn’t leave Americans behind,” the senator wrote.
This is horrifying. And wrong.
— Ted Cruz (@tedcruz) August 31, 2021
America doesn’t leave Americans behind. https://t.co/k1olAjUkmh
Then, the hashtag #Cancun began trending on Twitter.
“Unless your daughters tell you to go to Cancun,” one Twitter user wrote.
Another person wrote, “Didn’t you leave your fellow Texans behind to freeze without power while you went to Cancun?”
Check out reactions below:
Unless your daughters tell you to go to Cancun pic.twitter.com/iq2bqaaLda
— 🌻 Emily Brandwin 🌻 (@CIAspygirl) August 31, 2021
https://twitter.com/trvsmrtn/status/1432702174035787776
https://twitter.com/HeidiOCanada/status/1432707476906983425
https://twitter.com/Rae83403106/status/1432719980458614793
Ted Cruz: America doesn’t leave Americans behind.
— 𝓙𝓲𝓶𝓶𝔂 𝓙 🫒🗝️🇵🇸 (@JimmyJ4thewin) August 31, 2021
That’s right @tedcruz, so why did you flee to Cancun, and leave behind Americans to freeze?
https://twitter.com/Ross_Swim14/status/1432732740756115460
https://twitter.com/OhOEvie/status/1432713575534104580
Every time I see Cancun trending
— Mercedes Gomez (@Mercedesguera) August 31, 2021
My senator comes to mind pic.twitter.com/yIccnkF5Gf
https://twitter.com/plasticmartyr/status/1432751756606279681
Cruz came under fire after photos circulated on social media in February of him traveling to Cancun after a winter storm wreaked havoc in Texas, resulting in millions being out of power.
The senator previously defended his trip and taking his daughters to Cancun.
Cruz said he initially planned to “stay through the weekend and to work remotely there.” However, he added, “But, as I was heading down there, you know, I started to have second thoughts almost immediately because the crisis here in Texas, you need to be here on the ground. And as much as you can do by phone and Zoom, it’s not the same as being here.”













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