Ted Cruz Is Running For President: 5 Obstacles Between Him and the White House

He announced today that he's running for president.

"It is a time for truth, it is a time for liberty, it is a time to reclaim the Constitution of the United States," Cruz said this morning at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia.

How Ted Cruz is Practicing to be a Presidential Candidate

Ted Cruz First GOP Candidate Set to Run in 2016 Presidential Race

Who Is Ted Cruz?

Cruz became the first major candidate to formally declare his candidacy.

"I believe in the power of millions of courageous conservatives, rising up to reignite the promise of America," he said.

1. Standing Out As The Conservative Candidate

Ted Cruz's presidential campaign will largely hinge on appealing to the conservative base of the Republican Party, and his ability to distinguish himself from other conservative candidates.

2. Jeb Bush's Fundraising Juggernaut

With $100,000-per-ticket fundraisers and a purported goal of raising as much as $500 million for the Republican presidential primary fight, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush has emerged as the fundraising heavyweight in the 2016 race, pressuring other candidates to ramp up their own efforts.

Cruz had the backing of traditional donors in his 2012 Senate race, but also raised a significant amount of money from small-dollar donors. Cruz will need that grassroots support once again to sustain his campaign. As the first candidate to declare, he'll be the first to solicit direct contributions to his campaign. Against Jeb Bush's prolific fundraising machine, every direct dollar, from contributions big or small, will help Cruz in what is expected to be the most expensive presidential campaign cycle to date.

Can Cruz -- who was born in Calgary, Canada -- legally run for president? He says yes. His mother, a U.S. citizen, gave birth while his parents happened to be working in Canada at the time.

4. He's Not Always The Most Popular Guy In The Room

In his three years in the Senate, Cruz has irked his colleagues over and over -- whether it was leading a 21 hour filibuster just days before a government shutdown or making one senator miss a performance of the “Nutcracker” with her family ahead of Christmas.

In 2013, McCain called Cruz a "wacko bird" for his positions and representation of the Republican Party. But Cruz--who tellingly called himself a "proud wacko bird" in response to McCain's comment--has built his political brand on such confrontations with Democrats and Republicans, and will likely bill himself as an uncompromising candidate willing to stand up to both parties in defense of his principles, and regardless of popularity.

5. He Hasn't Been Around the Block

Unlike many of the current and former governors in the Republican field, Cruz is a relative political newcomer, having only taken office in 2013. While Bush can draw from eight years of governing experience, and Walker can highlight five years of battling public sector unions in Wisconsin, Cruz has only three years in Washington to his name. That level of experience didn't stop then Sen. Barack Obama (who had just as much experience as Cruz does now when he ran for president), but it leaves Cruz open to criticism from his potential challengers.