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Ted Cruz to Seth Meyers: 'I'm not Freddy Krueger'

The guest spot gave Cruz a chance to accomplish two tasks, one aimed at squelching a short-term PR problem, the other at establishing a persona for the longer-term run of the 2016 race.

Sen. Ted Cruz, (R) of Texas, a tea party favorite and possible presidential candidate in 2016, speaks to Baily Ealy during a Strafford County Republican Committee Chili and Chat on Sunday in Barrington, N.H.

Jim Cole/AP

March 17, 2015

Ted Cruz was on NBC鈥檚 鈥淟ate Night with Seth Meyers鈥 Monday talking politics, policy, and presidential bids.

Did you know Mr. Meyers is a native of New Hampshire, the first-in-the-nation primary state? Perhaps that鈥檚 why he booked the firebrand conservative Texas senator 鈥 to preview Senator Cruz鈥檚 likely candidacy for the folks back home.

So how did Cruz do? Did he hold his own? After all, late night talk TV generally leans left, a la Jon Stewart. In that sense, Cruz might have been worried his appearance was a trap. Indeed, Meyers hit him up front with general questions about gay marriage, climate change, and Cruz鈥檚 occasionally-strained relations with GOP Senate colleagues.

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鈥淚t鈥檚 tough for Cruz to come out of an interview like that looking good,鈥 grumbled right-leaning on Tuesday morning.

But we think that鈥檚 an overreaction. To our eyes Cruz did fine. The guest spot gave him a chance to accomplish two tasks, one aimed at squelching a short-term PR problem, the other at establishing a persona for the longer-term run of the 2016 race.

The short-term dealt with an incident over the weekend in New Hampshire at a town hall meeting where Cruz went through a litany of perceived administration shortcomings and then yelled, 鈥淵our world is on fire!鈥 That roused a three-year-old girl in the audience.

鈥淭he world is on fire?鈥 piped up the tot, identified later as Julie Trant, who was there with her mother Michelle.

Some media played this up, and by the time the game of aggregation exaggeration was over he鈥檇 scared the girl, Cruz complained in his Meyers appearance.

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鈥淚 was Freddy Krueger. I had fingernails. It was terrible,鈥 Cruz said.

In fact the girl wasn鈥檛 scared at all, the Texas lawmaker said. (Video of the event appears to bear this out.) He鈥檇 said that she and her mommy would douse the fire, and now the girl thinks Cruz is a fireman, apparently.

Her mom confirmed this in interviews with local media. Cruz told Meyers that kids actually like him. He pointed to that time where he read the Dr. Seuss classic 鈥淕reen Eggs and Ham鈥 during a Senate filibuster.

鈥淚 poll very well with three-to-six year olds,鈥 said Cruz.

His long-term task was a bit more complicated. To be a viable White House contender, Cruz needs to show he鈥檚 tough enough to satisfy GOP primary voters hungry for someone to fight what they perceive as the abuses of the Obama administration 鈥 but without being, you know, scary.

That鈥檚 a fine line, and Cruz walked it. When Meyers asked him about the time his GOP colleague Sen. John McCain of Arizona called him a 鈥渨acko bird,鈥 Cruz insisted that he and Senator McCain are now friends. He added that he鈥檚 now got a baseball hat in his office, made by a Texas constituent, that鈥檚 got a picture of Daffy Duck and the words 鈥渨acko bird鈥 on the brim.

鈥淢erchandising opportunity!鈥 said Meyers.

On issues, Cruz kind of sped over the most conservative parts of his positions, and then framed his answer in a way meant to appeal to a more bipartisan crowd. He said that gay marriage is a states鈥 rights issue, for instance. States have been setting marriage laws for 200 years, and now the 鈥渇ederal government or unelected judges鈥 shouldn鈥檛 be changing that, according to Cruz.

(In this case 鈥渦nelected judges鈥 refers to the Supreme Court, but Meyers did not bring that up.)

Cruz might have been a bit stiff on the Meyers show, but seemed able to handle all the policy stuff a late night host could throw his way. The Texas senator was a champion debater in school, remember. That鈥檚 going to make for interesting candidate debates during primary season.

If he runs. Meyers asked him why he was spending so much time in the Granite State.

鈥淣ew Hampshire is lovely this time of year,鈥 said Cruz. That got a big laugh.