(Bloomberg) — Former House Speaker John Boehner said he’d vote for Donald Trump in the general election if he were the Republican presidential nominee, but he wouldn’t vote for Ted Cruz.
“Lucifer in the flesh,” Boehner called Cruz on Wednesday during a talk at Stanford University, the student newspaper reported. “I have never worked with a more miserable son of a b—-h in my life.”
See also: Cruz’s rise against Trump fails to win over Senate colleagues
Boehner’s scathing remarks are the latest sign of Cruz’s poor relationships on Capitol Hill, which the Texas senator has attempted to turn in his favor as he campaigns against what he calls the “Washington cartel.”
Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich are trying to deprive Trump of a delegate majority in the waning weeks of the nomination race in order to force an open convention in July.
Boehner, a Ohio Republican who left office in 2015, said he was “texting buddies” with the billionaire Trump and had played golf with him.
Boehner also mocked Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton, saying, “Oh I’m a woman, vote for me” to suggest she is campaigning on her gender, before adding she was accomplished and smart.
Cruz responded that Boehner’s Trump admission showed that he and his newly named running mate, Carly Fiorina, are the better outsider choice for the White House.
“I’ve never worked with John Boehner. The truth of the matter is that I don’t know the man,” Cruz told reporters in Fort Wayne, Indiana. “If I have said 50 words in my life to John Boehner, I’d be surprised.”
Bad blood
This isn’t the first time Boehner has unleashed on Cruz: He’s previously called him a “jackass” and a “false prophet,” and his loathing of Cruz is legendary inside the Capitol.
The tension is a result largely of Cruz’s drive to defund the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) — Obamacare — in 2013, leading to a government shutdown. In Boehner’s final years as speaker, Cruz was his nemesis, often plotting with a breakaway group of conservatives—many of whom would later form the Freedom Caucus—in opposition to Boehner’s hopes for big budget deals and an immigration overhaul that would ultimately allow most undocumented immigrants to stay in the U.S.
When Boehner released his immigration principles in 2014, Cruz quickly labeled it amnesty, and few Republicans outside of leadership were willing to publicly sign on.