Ted Cruz Battles Harvard Professor Over U.S. Origins

The professor's take on the Paris Agreement sparked a fiery debate on Twitter.

June 5, 2017 9:49 am
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) speaks to guests at the 2016 South Carolina Tea Party Coalition Convention on January 16, 2016 in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) speaks to guests at the 2016 South Carolina Tea Party Coalition Convention on January 16, 2016 in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

Republican senator Ted Cruz tried to give a lesson in politics to a Harvard professor in an angry exchange sparked by the Trump Administration’s decision to pull out of the Paris climate deal.

Cruz, of Texas, rebuked the notion that the United States was created through an international agreement, not the Declaration of Independence, after Joyce E. Chaplin, the chair of American Studies and history professor at Harvard University, shared her take on the U.S. withdrawal from the global agreement to fight climate change.

Chaplin said the United States was betraying the international community that established it by not abiding by the climate accords, citing the agreement that ended the Revolutionary War. The Treaty of Paris was signed by the U.S., Britain, France, Spain, and the Dutch Republic in 1783. In addition to stopping the conflict, it was an agreement to recognize territory claims made by each signatory.

Senator Cruz sparked the debate by saying Chaplin didn’t understand how the United States came to be, prompting a reminder from the Harvard professor that statehood requires international recognition. Cruz, himself a Harvard alum, replied by dismissing the historian as one of the “lefty academics” from his alma mater.

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