Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Ted Cruz's Past Tweet Mocking California Comes Back To Bite Him Amid Texas Energy Crisis

Ted Cruz's Past Tweet Mocking California Comes Back To Bite Him Amid Texas Energy Crisis
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Just months after his last scandal during an unprecedented winter storm left scores of Texans without heat, Republican Texas Senator Ted Cruz is once again in hot water—no pun intended—as his state's electricity grid crumbles amid a near-record heatwave.

As Texas' electricity authority struggles to meet demand for air conditioning, folks on Twitter were at the ready to remind Cruz of when he mocked California last year for rolling blackouts due to the exact same problem.


In those tweets, Cruz attempted to paint California as a failing state incapable of providing "basic functions of civilization."

The 2020 rolling blackouts in California were the state's first since an infamous period of sustained rolling blackouts in 2001.

Nonetheless, Cruz and many other conservative politicians seized on the news in an attempt to cast California as a crumbling Democrat-led state besieged by cuts to basic services.

Cut to less than a year later, and the electrical power authority in Cruz's Republican-led state—The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT)—is begging citizens to cut power usage as much as possible this week, just as California did in 2020.

According to an ERCOT spokesman:

"A significant number of forced generation outages combined with potential record electric use for the month of June has resulted in tight grid conditions."

Those outages—which ERCOT official Warren Lasher called "very concerning"—seem to have caught the utility by surprise.

As Lasher told The Texas Tribune:

"I don't have any potential reasons [for the plant outages] that I can share at this time."

As temperatures soared to near-record June levels, ERCOT's outages left an estimated 2.4 million Texas homes without power—a number that dwarfs what happened in California last year, when rolling blackouts affected just 500,000 of the state's 40 million citizens.

On Twitter, people wasted no time in pointing out Cruz's latest hypocrisy.










This is Cruz's second scandal in just four months to arise from the collapse of his state's power grid.

Cruz was publicly humiliated in February after he was caught fleeing with his family to Cancun during his state's freak winter storm.

The power outages during that storm resulted in an official death count of 151. More recent independent analysis, however, revised the death toll to as many as 978 people.

More from News

Storm Reid
Lexus Gallegos/Getty Images for H&M

'Euphoria' Star Claps Back On TikTok After Troll Criticizes Her For Going To College

Actor Storm Reid had the perfect response to a troll who tried to drag her for, of all things, going to college.

Reid, who is best known for her work on HBO's Euphoria and The Last Of Us, is about to finish her studies at the prestigious University of Southern California's School of Dramatic Arts, graduating on May 16.

Keep Reading Show less
Elon Musk
Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

Elon Musk Dragged After Showing Off His Juvenile Fake Police Badge Declaring Himself 'The Dogefather'

Billionaire Elon Musk was widely ridiculed after sharing a photo of his fake law enforcement badge—complete with the badge number "69420"—that declares him "The Dogefather," flexing his authority as the leader of the advisory Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which is at the center of the ongoing slash-and-burn approach to gutting federal spending.

Musk appeared positively thrilled when he shared the photo—perhaps the most cringey thing he's done, at least thus far, since attaining unprecedented political power.

Keep Reading Show less
Jacob Elordi; Margot Robbie
Don Arnold/WireImage/Getty Images; MICHAEL TRAN/AFP/Getty Images

'Wuthering Heights' Film Casting Director Irks Fans After Justifying Casting Decisions By Claiming 'It's Just A Book'

It was recently announced that Wuthering Heights, the 1847 novel by Emily Brontë, is being adapted for the screen at Warner Bros. Pictures. The leading director is Emerald Fennell, and the casting director is Kharmel Cochrane, who was involved in the award-winning Nosferatu and Saltburn.

For those who got through high school and college without having to read the novel, it's a dark, psychological thriller with Gothic horror undertones—and also a love story. That's the power of Emily Brontë, who published just one novel in her lifetime.

Keep Reading Show less
Terrence Howard; Marvin Gaye
Chris Haston/WBTV via Getty Images; Kypros/Getty Images

Terrence Howard Shares Homophobic Reason He Turned Down Marvin Gaye Biopic Role—And Yikes

Actor Terrence Howard may have an Oscar nomination for his no holds barred approach to roles, but it turns out there is a limit to what he'll do onscreen, and kissing a man is beyond that limit.

Howard told Bill Maher that he turned down the role of a lifetime, playing legendary musician Marvin Gaye in a biopic by director Lee Daniels, once he learned of Gaye's sexuality.

Keep Reading Show less
Lindsey Graham; Donald Trump
Amir Levy/Getty Images; Win McNamee/Getty Images

Lindsey Graham Sparks Fury After Suggesting That Trump Could Be The Next Pope

After President Donald Trump jokingly told reporters that he'd "like to be pope" following the death of Pope Francis, South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham threw himself behind Trump's remarks, which came after Trump already raised the ire of critics for seemingly falling asleep at the Pope's funeral.

Trump said that he himself "would be my number one choice" to be the next pope after he was asked who he’d like to see become the next pontiff. That would never, ever happen—and disrespects the billions of Catholics around the world who are in mourning—but Graham suggested it was a good idea in a post on X.

Keep Reading Show less