Send Us Newt

The arguments against Gingrich are not compelling.

From National Review Online, by By Melissa O’Sullivan, January 26, 2012 Last fall, people in Washington told me, “Get over it, Melissa. Newt’s not going to be the nominee.” Later, in New York City over Thanksgiving, I was told, “Get over it, Melissa. It’s going to be Romney. There’s still so much stuff out there on Newt that’s just waiting to drop.”

Well, here we are in the thick of the race, and I’m still not over it.

Many years ago, I spent a frustrating morning trying to ice skate when it hit me: I wasn’t trying to ice skate; I was trying not to fall. I submit that the Republican establishment is repeating my mistake. They are trying not to fall by endorsing — or at least accepting — the supposed safe bet. It is reminiscent of an encounter I had with some editorial types during another presidential-primary season.

I was in New York with my husband, John, a former editor and current editor-at-large of National Review. He had arranged to meet some friends from the Wall Street Journal for lunch. At the eleventh hour, John had a conflict, and I went in his place. As the meal developed into an election-strategy discussion, one distinguished woman writer declared firmly that obviously the most qualified person to carry the Republican banner into the election was John McCain. She said it was a pity that the Republican rhubarbs in the sticks would not be bright enough to choose him.

“Wow!” I thought, “Mr. Campaign Finance Reform? Our nominee?” I remember being truly stunned that she thought so highly of McCain. Well, she and the Republican establishment got their wish, and we rhubarbs in the sticks got the shaft.

I have been told that Romney is the inevitable nominee, that he is the only one who can beat Obama, and that polls back up both of these propositions. My frustration with such talk is that it is about where the needle points at present. It ignores the issue of who can move the needle.

For conservatives who have served on Republican committees at the county and state levels, have gone door to door for local candidates, and can remember when here in the South we couldn’t even field a candidate for most races, Newt is The Man. Back in the early Nineties he had, dare I say, a “grandiose” idea that we could be a majority party when most Republicans in the House were quite content with the leadership of the nice Mr. Robert Michel, minority leader. For that, I personally am forever indebted to Newt.

Right now, we are in a perilous state of affairs. We have a president who has put the kibosh on the Keystone pipeline at a time when Russia has just announced a new pipeline to provide energy to Western Europe, thereby increasing its influence in the region. China is building up its military while ours is shrinking. Our European partners’ defense spending is in even worse shape, with the U.K. and France having actually discussed a “time-share” arrangement for an aircraft carrier. To say nothing of the problems we face regarding Iran and Venezuela.

Now, Newt is a great debater. He has not failed to deliver in any debate I have seen. More important to me, however, is that as president he’ll hit the ground running on Day One. He is firmly grounded in the kind of knowledge someone acquires by spending the better part of 30 years studying and advocating various public policies. More than that, though, he possesses the contextual knowledge — the historian’s perspective — that enables someone to stand back and draw on past events to understand current crises. And that gives him a larger philosophical understanding of our past, present, and future role in world affairs. He’s not wandering in the dark; he knows where he wants this country to go and — just as important — where he doesn’t.

To those critics who say he’s reckless, I reply that a bold president will sometimes seem reckless to those trapped in the status quo. Can you imagine a President Romney ignoring the advice of his State Department and National Security Council and delivering an incendiary line like “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!”?

And those ethics charges? What exactly were the offenses? A Rostenkowski-type scandal? Some sort of improper personal enrichment? Income from a Dominican Republic resort pad he “forgot” to report on his income-tax form? Nope. Nothing so obvious. The charges originated over the course he was teaching on American history; he supposedly violated some arcane IRS provision regarding the way the income is to be reported. Looked at from another angle, it was a kind of “ethics” charge that one party uses to tie up a dangerous opponent in a legal tangle. As Byron York wrote, at the end of the day, after the Dems had led a frontal assault against Newt, initiated by a candidate Newt had bested for a congressional seat and ginned up by the Dems as payback for their loss of the House majority, the conclusion of the three-year IRS investigation was:

Gingrich acted properly and violated no laws. There was no tax fraud scheme. Of course, by that time, Gingrich was out of office, widely presumed to be guilty of something, and his career in politics was (seemingly) over.

What about the money he received as a consultant from Fannie or Freddie? Sure, I wish that Newt hadn’t bedded down in that particular flophouse. However, it was standard behavior for Washington, and not remotely illegal. Actually, my first thought when I heard about that criticism was, Well, good for him! I’m glad to see someone on our team getting money out of that Sunnyvale Retirement Home for Old Democratic Hacks! At the very least, it’s less for the Dems.

Married three times? That’s not a recommendation either, but half of America has been through a divorce and the other half has experienced sticky patches in their marriages. There’s a lot more understanding of human frailty out there than there was previously. Americans recognize that we shouldn’t judge someone’s entire life on the basis of his worst moments. Besides, we’re not electing the president of the Baptist Sunday School Board.

It seems we all can relate to someone who has crashed and burned but then gotten up off the mat and rehabilitated himself. Americans are very forgiving people, and Newt is better than the other candidates at connecting with people.

Electability? The gender gap? Two very liberal women friends of mine who voted for Obama have come up to me recently and said they like and would vote for Newt. Why? Because he’s “so damn smart”!

Bad poll numbers? Being a change agent does not engender popularity (think cutting welfare rolls in half, cutting the capital-gains tax from 28 percent to 15 percent, balancing the budget for four years straight, etc.), but again, the current favorable/unfavorable poll numbers are a snapshot of one moment, not an indicator of where things will wind up — as Team Romney has been painfully reminded.

Speaking of electability, with big bank bailouts still fresh in voters’ minds, do you really think it’s going to be easy to sell Mr. Bain Capital to working-class voters, a demographic that has been written off by this White House, which means they are up for grabs? If you do, then explain to me why Republicans failed to effectively market their opposition to the Dodd-Frank financial-reform package to these same voters. The late, great Tony Blankley told to me at the time that Republicans felt they would not be able to stop the bill, even though it was named after two who should have done the perp walk in the whole mortgage meltdown mania. If we couldn’t go to the country and mount a successful opposition campaign explaining the difference between the big investment houses and community banks — the latter of which have been hit hard by the increased regulatory burden of the act — how can we hope to defend poor Cayman Islands Romney against the demagoguery to come from Team Obama?

Finally, the fact that Newt was ousted from his leadership role by his own party reminds me of someone else who had her own party turn on her — Margaret Thatcher. Enough said.

Actually, that isn’t enough said. The charge against him now is that he’s “reckless.” Yep. In 1990, as minority whip, Newt was reckless enough to stand up to his own president, George H. W. Read-My-Lips Bush, over the tax increase. In 1995, as Speaker, he was reckless enough to go for a government shutdown over spending, only to have his fellow Republican Bob Dole, the Senate majority leader, cut the legs out from under him with his “Enough is enough” edict (as I recall, just as public opinion was starting to turn in our favor on this issue, Dole pulled the plug, thereby ensuring that we got zero out of the exercise). Newt was reckless enough to be above the fray and do what he had to do, going against the hard-line reactionaries to get welfare reform and a balanced-budget compromise from President Clinton.

And when members of his own party ousted Newt from the leadership, with whom did they replace him? Dennis Hastert. NOW, enough said!

We are living in extraordinary times. The American people are truly afraid of what kind of future we are bequeathing to the next generation. This is not the time for a green-eyeshade managerial type who doesn’t seem capable of selling himself, let alone his vision of the path forward.

We are electing someone to go into that cesspool we call our nation’s capital, make some really tough decisions, and then sell those decisions to a cynical public while fighting a rear-guard action against a hostile press. Like Governor Chris Christie, Newt has endeared himself to the American people in dealing with his detractors in a head-on, unapologetic way. And the fact that Newt, like the Energizer Bunny, keeps coming back after every setback is a truly positive sign. He’s got the true grit that is one mark of a real leader.

As we have a late primary here in Alabama, we are out of the action until the middle of March. It is very frustrating to see early states pick nominees before we even get to weigh in. On behalf of the many Republicans in later states, I ask that early states (ahem, Florida) please send us someone we can enthusiastically rally behind. Send us one of Reagan’s lieutenants. Send us Newt!

Melissa O’Sullivan lives in Alabama and drives her daughters crazy with political stuff.

6 Responses

  1. Ms O’sullivan, Your a smart lady and the vast majority of what you say is true, my problem is that your conclusion that Newt is the right guy might be coming at the wrong time. My fear is that he will be so rigidly Reganist in his approach based on what Reagan did back during his service to this country and I don’t believe even Reagan would follow that course today. I believe Reagan would say that was then this is now and it will take much bolder action on everyone in this country today than he thought necessary back during his precidency. We need solid, complete tax reform from city hall to the nations capitol. One consumption tax at 25% paid distribution to city/state/fed. Thas just the starter.

  2. Delete completely 4 US Departments, everyone knows which ones, cut DOD in Half. Return all education to the State and Local Governments. If private education can do the job better and cheaper than Local Governments without subsidies, let them. Four years of public service is required of all citizens! Military Service, United Way, Red Cross, Americorp organizations, would qualify, and other non-profs excluding religios organization would qualify in this service. For this four years of service, tuition/books/housing/food in a two year public college or 2 years of a four year public college would be paid for for traditional college or trade schools with associate degress.

  3. Sell all Railroads to Private Business. Sell Postal Service to Private Businesses. Sell 50% of all National and State Parks to Private Businesses for fair market value. (Use the proceeds to pay down National Debt. Folks thats just some ideas of how we regain control of that which we have lost control, many of you have much better ideas of how to do it, but the time for talk is done, and the time for action is now! Eliminate all subsidies everywhere along with trade deficits. Business make it on your own or go out of business! That is free enterprise.

  4. There is a definite struggle within the good-old-boy Republican political establishment to unseat the pre-destined loser to Obama…Mitt Romney.

    The article above that attempts to whitewash a dirty, rotten scoundrel like Newt Gingrich is proof of that internal conflict.

    2008 Constitution Party presidential candidate and long-time Baptist pastor Chuck Baldwin accurately makes the case against Newt Gingrich in his recent article entitled, “Newt Gingrich? Really?”

    An excerpt…

    “In all candor, understanding the power and influence of evangelical Christianity in South Carolina Republican politics, Newt Gingrich’s victory in that State last week is extremely difficult for this writer to digest. I cannot think of a candidate that is more reprehensible to the values and principles that born-again Christians claim to embrace than Newt Gingrich!

    Newt Gingrich? Really?

    Have Christians (and other conservatives) had complete and total memory failure? To what problem could Newt Gingrich possibly be the solution (unless it’s the problem of Gold Diggers running out of good looking rich guys to sleep with)?

    If one believes that the problem is out-of-control government trampling our Bill of Rights, Newt Gingrich is definitely not the solution. If one believes the problem is the lack of Christian morals among our civil magistrates, Newt Gingrich is definitely not the solution. If one believes the problem is the slaughtering of over 50 million innocent unborn babies, Newt Gingrich is definitely not the solution. If one believes that the problem is honesty and integrity in the White House, Newt Gingrich is definitely not the solution. If one believes that the problem is out-of-control federal spending, Newt Gingrich is definitely not the solution. If one believes the problem is the United States catering to the evil machinations of the Security Council of the United Nations, Newt Gingrich is definitely not the solution. If one believes the problem is more and more outsourcing of America’s manufacturing jobs and products, Newt Gingrich is definitely not the solution. If one believes that the problem is ever-burgeoning deficit spending, Newt Gingrich is definitely not the solution. If one believes the problem is the banksters at the Federal Reserve, Newt Gingrich is definitely not the solution. If one believes the problem is illegal immigration, Newt Gingrich is definitely not the solution. If one believes the United States gives away far too much foreign aid, Newt Gingrich is definitely not the solution.

    Newt Gingrich? Really?”

    Full Article…
    http://chuckbaldwinlive.com/home/?p=4437

  5. Senator-Blutarsky | Reply

    You can put all the lipstick and makeup on a pig you want.

    They are still a pig. All the assorted spinmeisters like O’Sullivan can do, is “spin” – but of course the 80IQ average flagwaver neocon Republican voter , seems to fall for this nonsense.

    Serial adulterer – check !

    Pro-abortion proponent – Check !

    He repeatedly has catered to the “counterculture” and the militant homosexual lobby. – Check !

    Free Trade globalist – head cheerleader for WTO, GATT, NAFTA etc and send our manufacturing base overseas – check !

    Member of the very anti-American Council on Foreign Relations – check !

    Open border proponent – check !

    Global warming crackpot with Pelosi, Gore et al – check !

    Gingrich’s activities outside Congress are equally distressing. Alvin Toffler is a New Age guru and dear friend of Newt.Alvin Toffler’s book, Creating A New Civilization: The Politics of the Third Wave, is a bizarre, revolutionary view and blueprint for the 2lst century. Gingrich WROTE the forward for this book – it’s frightening and you should read both editions. These books became best sellers in Communist China because they mirror Mao.

    Gingrich is the perfect “conservative republican”- right? , and with “R’s” like this, who needs the Dims ?

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