I followed both Cruz and Trump this week at multiple campaign events across New Hampshire. It was, in a sense, a pleasure to see them use their prodigious skills of character assassination against each other. It was demagogue against demagogue: lie versus lie. Both men riled their supporters with fantasies and straw men. But there were discernible differences. Trump owned anger. Cruz, by contrast, had a lock on nastiness. Trump is belligerent and hyperbolic, with an authoritarian style. But while Trump fires up the masses with his nonstop epithets, Cruz has Joe McCarthy’s knack for false insinuation and underhandedness. What sets Cruz apart is the malice he exudes. Cruz jokes that “the whole point of the campaign” is that “the Washington elites despise” him. But Cruz’s problem is that going back to his college days at Princeton, those who know him best seem to despise him most. Not a single Senate colleague has endorsed his candidacy, and Iowa’s Republican governor urged Cruz’s defeat, then called his campaign “unethical.” Ben Carson, who rarely has a bad word to say about anybody in the GOP race, accused Cruz of “deceit and dirty tricks and lies” this week after the Texan’s campaign spread the false rumour during the Iowa caucuses that Carson was quitting the race. Two former rivals who also appeal to religious conservatives, Mike Huckabee and Rick Santorum (who endorsed Senator Marco Rubio of Florida), have questioned Cruz’s truthfulness, too. Sarah Palin, whose support for Cruz in 2012 helped get him elected to the Senate, this week denounced him after a Cruz surrogate accused her of accepting payment from Trump to back him. She, too, accused Cruz’s campaign of “lies,” a “dirty trick” and “typical Washington tactics”. Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson says he lost votes to Senator Ted Cruz in Monday’s Iowa caucus because of rumours he says Cruz staffers spread about him leaving the race. Cruz, in Nashua, slashed back at his onetime benefactor: “It seems if you spend too much time with Donald Trump, strange things happen to people.” Somebody in the crowd shouted “Fire Palin!” and the audience cheered. The Iowa secretary of state, a Republican, issued a statement before the caucuses accusing Cruz’s campaign of “false representation” because of a mailing to voters charging them with a “voting violation” and assigning them and their neighbours phony grades. After Cruz’s caucus-night skullduggery — a campaign email to supporters and a tweet by a Cruz national co-chairman suggesting Carson was quitting the race — his response continued the deception. Though he apologised to Carson, he said that “our political team forwarded a news story from CNN” and “all the rest of it is just silly noise”. But CNN said nothing about Carson dropping out. After Trump, in his overblown way, accused Cruz of stealing the election, Cruz replied righteously that “I have no intention of insulting him or throwing mud.” No? He accused Trump of “a Trumpertantrum.” He said Trump as president “would have nuked Denmark”. He said Trump “does not have any core beliefs”. He mischaracterised several of Trump’s positions, saying “he wants to expand Obamacare”, that “for his entire life, 60 years, he has been advocating for full-on socialised medicine” and that Trump favours “amnesty” for illegal immigrants and “wants to deport people that are here illegally but then let them back in immediately and become citizens”. He speculated that Trump may have “billions” in loans and said the concept of repaying loans is “novel and unfamiliar to Donald”. The misrepresentation is not limited to Trump. In a single speech in Nashua last week, he mischaracterised things said by, among others, Jimmy Carter, Chris Wallace, guests on Sean Hannity’s show, Atlanta’s mayor, Rubio and, of course, President Obama. I asked the Cruz campaign Thursday evening to substantiate several of these claims. After this column was published online Friday afternoon, the campaign provided citations that did not back up what Cruz had alleged. Unsurprising: Cruz’s purpose is not to inform but to insinuate. A version of this article appeared in The Washington Post one February 5, 2016