Ted Cruz Scolded by Largest Texas Newspaper

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Senator Ted Cruz was scolded by The Houston Chronicle, the largest newspaper in Texas, for getting in the way of Texans being provided low-cost internet service options in an editorial published on Sunday.

The $14.2 billion Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP), part of the bipartisan infrastructure bill championed by President Joe Biden and passed by Congress in 2021, provides a discount of up to $30 a month on internet service for low-income households and a discount of up to $75 a month for families on tribal lands.

Due to lack of funding from Congress, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) had to stop accepting new applications and enrollments for the program in February and the FCC has notified current benefit recipients that April will be the last month that the program is fully funded.

A bill that extends the ACP through the end of 2024 with an additional $7 billion in funding is currently held up in the Senate Appropriations Committee.

The Houston Chronicle‘s editorial board in an opinion article titled, “Texans desperately need expiring federal internet subsidy,” called out Cruz, a Texas Republican, as one of “those standing in the way” of additional funding for ACP.

Newsweek reached out to Cruz’s office and the FCC via email for comment.

Senator Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, speaks during a news conference on February 6 in Washington, D.C. Cruz was scolded by The Houston Chronicle for getting in the way of Texans being provided low-cost internet…


Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Cruz was one of four Republican senators who wrote a letter to FCC chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel last December claiming that “the vast majority of tax dollars have gone to households that already had broadband [internet] prior to the subsidy.”

In the letter, they blamed the Biden administration’s “reckless spending spree” for the $34 trillion in U.S. debt. They also asked for additional information and data from the FCC regarding the ACP.

The FCC released a survey in February that showed that over two-thirds (68 percent) of ACP households said they had inconsistent or zero connectivity prior to the subsidy. Meanwhile, nearly half (47 percent) of all respondents and 53 percent of rural respondents said they had either zero connectivity or relied solely on mobile service prior to the program.

“Thanks to today’s survey data, leaders making the decisions about ACP’s future know one thing for certain: if we want to close our nation’s digital divide, the Affordable Connectivity Program is not nice-to-have, it’s need-to-have,” Rosenworcel said at the time of the survey’s release.

The Chronicle said that “Cruz seems to fundamentally misunderstand the
needs of his own constituents.”

The newspaper’s editorial board added: “While major cities with multiple internet service providers offer low-cost options for broadband, areas with one provider often don’t. The Texas Tribune reported that one East Texas provider’s cheapest monthly option was $62. Perhaps while he’s campaigning for reelection, Cruz could swing by an East Texas broadband desert and ask families living below the poverty line how much they pay for monthly internet, or whether they have internet at all. It might be enlightening.”

Cruz, who has been in the Senate since 2013, is running for reelection against Democratic opponent Representative Colin Allred. According to a Cygnal poll conducted from April 4 to 6, Cruz is leading Allred by 9 points (45 to 36 percent). The poll surveyed 1,000 likely voters in Texas with a margin of error of plus or minus 2.94 percent.