Gingrich: Maybe the GOP should work with Pelosi on health care

posted at 7:59 pm on January 22, 2010 by Allahpundit

Golly, I wonder what the reaction in the comments to this bon mot will be.

Gingrich sees the Massachusetts as a boost for his party, but also as a renunciation of go-it-alone by either party, and thinks Republicans would be “clever” to pass a series of relatively non-controversial measures with “huge bipartisan majorities.”

That said, he thinks many Republicans disdain Pelosi so much they simply won’t go along with anything with the speaker’s name on it, even if it serves the party’s larger interests.

“If you are a House member in the [GOP] caucus, I suspect we are about to have a huge argument. We could get clever and work with her…And I think people should work with her… But at that point it becomes a huge problem because nobody trusts her, they distrust her ideology and distrust her because she has run over them so hard…

Insane? Eh, not really. It all depends on how inoffensive the new stripped-down ObamaCare bill is and whether it looks like the Dems really do have the votes this time. If it’s a fait accompli and the reforms are minute, why not take a free kick by voting yes and blowing a hole in the left’s “party of no” crap before the midterms? Then the GOP could boast that not only did it help kill the awful first iteration of ObamaCare, but that when they finally got a good-ish bill, they proved themselves to be “Scott Brown Republicans” or whatever. The problem is, the left is already worried about precisely this scenario and is whining about it to HuffPo:

That the latter strategy [of passing a pared-down bill] is being seriously considered by progressive lawmakers is a testament to how large an albatross health care reform has become for the party. But the worry, for some, is that it could lead to Republicans claming victory.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell “will have his whole caucus vote for it and make it a political win for the Republicans,” one well-connected Democratic health care strategist said. “They’ll say, ‘This was the Republican plan from the beginning. We’re glad the Democrats joined us.’ And take all the credit for passing reform.”…

Alternately, some Democrats might welcome such a move. “Hell yeah,” a Democratic congressional aide said. “We would have created a bi-partisan bill. We would have shown leadership. And we’d get credit for that.”

They would get some credit for it, which is the main partisan objection to it on the Republican side. It’s also hard to imagine the circumstances in which Pelosi would need a bunch of GOP votes for a health-care bill. Is she really going to float something that’s so centrist and modest that House progressives would walk away from it, leaving a vacuum for Boehner to fill? I’m skeptical, but if this drags on another week or two and there’s still no clear path ahead for Dems, they might just be desperate enough to try it. The urgent question right now: Should McConnell and Boehner approach Reid and Pelosi with their own compromise plan? At the moment they have as much leverage as they’re every going to get. If they think some sort of legislative accomplishment is important before the midterms, there’s no time like the present to strike.

Elsewhere, my lefty pal Michael Roston is horrified that the Democratic strategist quoted by HuffPo would reduce the health-care issue to such pure partisan politics. To which I say: But why? Hasn’t the goal from the beginning been simply to pass something to placate the left and preserve the Dems’ electoral viability? Politics has always been job one here. Effective health-care reform is an afterthought.

Blowback

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In the end, few remember who passed what. If you were to ask modern day students who passed the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments to the Constitution, or who passed most of the Civil Rights Acts, you’d get a far different answer than the truth — those programs were designed to endure through the ages. If you were to ask who passed Social Security and Medicare, you’d certainly get the correct answer, but those are exactly the programs which have, in the end, been crafted by stupidity to self-destruct because they are pay-as-you-go and are dependent on ever-increasing populations of children to pay in — a scenario which would only be true in an Islamic country. Ditto, of course for Obamacare — which, thankfully, has an experienced American population to oppose it.

unclesmrgol on January 22, 2010 at 9:30 PM

The Dems just got beaten. Why not work with the Dems to pass the stuff BOTH Republicans and Democrats agree on?

This is politically obtuse, and counter to the interests of country or party.

1. “The Dems got beaten”? Hardly. They lost one election. They still have huge majorities and the White House. If you knew anything about the Left you’d realize that every conversation and every strategem being plotted behind closed doors at this moment has absolutely NOTHING to do “working with the Republicans,” but rather about how to find a new more clever way to cram their poisonous plan down all our throats.

2. What do “republicans and democrats agree on” about healthcare reform? Name one thing?

3. After the litany and tonnage of lies and backroom deals and extortions and slanders of conservatives during this entire travesty if “reform” you now want to “work with” these people?

4. So we had one victory. But this one victory augurs even greater victories in November. If we really care about healthcare reform for the good of the country — not half-measure healthcare reforms designed only to set the stage for even more bad half-measure reforms until the Left gets what it wants i.e. total government control of the healthcare sector — than you would know the best and only strategy would be to compel the democrats into true, market-based reform that empowered individual choice, which is ONLY possible by overwhelming Republican victories in November.

5. The American people don’t even believe healthcare reform is a priority. Why would you want to see Republicans supporting democrat mythology to the contrary?

6. If the democrats were defeated, as you say, then shouldn’t they be the ones reaching across the aisle to republicans? THEY should offer to work with US, no?

Time and again I’ve seen this spirit-crushing and self-deceiving impulse to negotiate with the Left arise in Republicans. Mostly it arises from a simple failure to understand the Left — whose entire collective being is about one thing: annihilating conservatism, indeed all political opposition, from existence. The Left couldn’t care less about real reform that gives people more choices or actually improves their lives. It cares only about power. So “working with them” under these circumstances is a false and self-destructive premise to begin with. Conservatives know that we care about true reform. So the only answer, for us and our country, is to achieve the victories necessary to force them into true reform.

rrpjr on January 22, 2010 at 9:33 PM

And today’s riddle is why would any self respecting conservative be caught dead siding with Nanzi? Newt you magnificent bastard. That’s your game. Out the smucks who too stupid to recognize political suicide when it bites them in the a$$.

Blacksmith8 on January 22, 2010 at 9:34 PM

Does he have multiple personalities going on or something?

JellyToast on January 22, 2010 at 9:29 PM

No, he sees an entry point to get himself back into power. A larger “Bob Dole” kinda guy; the Great Compromiser.

As nice a guy as Dole is, compromise is the effort that dumbs down legislation into worthless words that the country is stuck with for years, and provides the cracks in the culture that fanatics exploit in the courts.

Compromise is poison in government. It sounds good at the time (it gets “something” done, which BTW is the game at the present time with ObamaCare), but ends up as a disaster.

BobMbx on January 22, 2010 at 9:34 PM

What happened to the Newt Gingrich of 1994 that acted on conservative principles and worked for the betterment of them vs. the betterment of the Democratic Socialist Party? I used to love that guy and dream he would run for POTUS despite the naysayers that said he “couldn’t win.”

I cry bitter tears at the loss of that Newt. Because, this guy, ain’t him!

SimplyKimberly on January 22, 2010 at 9:35 PM

I do not trust Pelosi at all. She will not go for anything “moderate” enough to be acceptable.

If she were to do so, Repubs should look for what we conservatives would do if it were all on us and agree with exactly that alone. “What we would have done anyway”? Yes. Negotiate with the left? It’s like dealing with the devil – watch your back. They always cheat.

IrishEyes on January 22, 2010 at 9:37 PM

Newt is sooooooo sad that a repub won in MA
And Rudy and Mitt campaigned for Brown
Boo frikin hooo Newt
Nobody needs you
Go away

macncheez on January 22, 2010 at 9:42 PM

rrpjr on January 22, 2010 at 9:33 PM

Bravo rrpjr! Thread winner!

Rovin on January 22, 2010 at 9:43 PM

Newt is inconsistent. He seems to sense that Pelosi can’t be trusted but he still advises collaboration. Why not wait until after the midterms when she’s somewhat defanged or even gone. Maybe Newt could out fox her but I wouldn’t expect the Republican stooges presently in the House to pull it off. Also, I’m old and a little sickly so I’m concerned about the quality of the health care we end up with. I’d rather not be left at the mercy of a system whose main raison d’etre is to give cred to some leftie congressmen. And I don’t think this pack of thieves has a clue how to improve anything.

snaggletoothie on January 22, 2010 at 9:43 PM

I think I have discovered what is going on!
There are two Newts. There is conservative Newt and then there is Android Newt.
I saw this same thing in Calvin and Hobbs years ago. Calvin made a duplicate of himself that went to school, did the chores and so on while he stayed in his room and played with Hobbs! So I know this can happen!

Only, I don’t think Newt did this, I think aliens are doing experiments on Newt’s brain from time to time while Android Newt walks around DC giving speeches. When ever they are done with the real Newts brain, they teleport the real Newt back down to earth and call Android Newt back up to the mother ship to report on climate change.
You see, tha’st why there are so many freaking conflicting statements and remarks coming out of Newt! They guy doesn’t have a clue! He wakes up some mornings and the base is mad and he doesn’t have a clue why! He picks up the paper and sees something he says and thinks, when did I ever say that? My god, I’m losing my mind! I better give a speech about Victory or Death! Then the next thing he knows, he’s back on the mother ship having his brain experimented on again and this freakin Android Newt is down here on a couch smooching with Pelosi!

JellyToast on January 22, 2010 at 9:45 PM

It’s hard to fathom Newt Gingrich as a left leaning moderate but maybe that’s a sign of how far left the left has turned. Politics has always been a sliding scale proposition. It’s okay for congress to make deals as long as it’s in the open and we the people benefit in the best possible way.

mike_NC9 on January 22, 2010 at 9:47 PM

This thing is finally almost dead, why is he offering the Dems a defibrillator and then smiling hopefully back at the GOP?

Newt, shut your hole.

citrus on January 22, 2010 at 9:48 PM

Newt is inconsistent. He seems to sense that Pelosi can’t be trusted but he still advises collaboration.

Hmm. On second thought, perhaps he’s trying to offer someone (GOP) enough rope with which to hang themselves to bolster his bid for 2012?

citrus on January 22, 2010 at 9:50 PM

Sometimes, both Newt and Allah talk too much

Janos Hunyadi on January 22, 2010 at 9:51 PM

Thanks RHINO

mixplix on January 22, 2010 at 9:52 PM

no no no No NO!
You make Pelosi, Reid, and Obama CHOKE on this crap sandwich. You WIN in 2010 and THEN talk about “solutions to the real problems”.

This discussion is like watching a horror flick when the protagonist turns their back on the supposedly dead villain. You don’t turn your back on Pelosi or Reid, and you CERTAINLY don’t extend a hand or olive branch.

WWCathodeRay on January 22, 2010 at 9:53 PM

I don’t trust Pelosi at all!
I don’t trust Newt at all!

How about they both STFU or don’t listen to them!
Now if harry wants to pass tort reform. OK!

Forget the rest, forget Newt!

dhunter on January 22, 2010 at 9:54 PM

If it’s a fait accompli and the reforms are minute, why not take a free kick by voting yes and blowing a hole in the left’s “party of no” crap before the midterms?

No, this is the same argument Rove had for a bunch of Bush’s big gov’t programs, it doesn’t work, and it just gives us more government bloat, this suggestion is dumb as hell, and yet we see it again and again.

doubleplusundead on January 22, 2010 at 9:55 PM

The real next battle is the increase in the debt limit.

The repubs need to fight this tooth and nail, trench to trench. The Dems are spending us into servitude and socialism and the people know it. This is the battle worth having for votes and for country!

Fight that fight and kill HealthScare!

dhunter on January 22, 2010 at 9:57 PM

Gingrich: Maybe the GOP should work with Pelosi on health care

Maybe Pelosi should have worked with the GOP on healthcare

macncheez on January 22, 2010 at 9:59 PM

This astounds me, but given Gingrich’s track record of the past three to four years, not really, in retrospect.

Gingrich wants to be known as someone who can reach across the isle, and put partisan bickering aside in order to get things done. Scott Brown’s election proved that the Independents are fed up with the warring between the Left and the Right, and are seriously concerned about the results of a One Party Government’s agenda. Perfect scenario for Newt to toss his hat into the ring once again, to try for his own run at the Presidency.

What he consistently fails to recognize that, when the Dems and the GOP “compromise” on legislation, it is always, repeat always, something that borders on socialism in order to assuage the Libs/Progs. Which is exactly the type of “toe-in-door” legislation that the Dems feed off of, with the ultimate plan of modifying and expanding on it in years down the road when they have more Congressional votes to do so.

Ultimately it leads, incrementally, to total socialism. This is the goal of the Progressives and the Democratic Party of the past 20 years or so: To accelerate the process. The biggest mistake they made since the 2006 elections was to think that, once they had Congress and the White House sewn up, they could do anything faster and with impunity.

What they neglected to pay attention to was the fact that voters are so much more informed about issues these days, and can no longer be fooled all of the time. This week’s “perfect storm”, as Rush Limbaugh called it, was an awesome wake-up call. The Libs/Progs/Dems, and all politicians of all stripes who have engaged in business as usual, smoke and mirrors and backroom politics, had darn well better be paying attention this time. Otherwise, they’re history.

KendraWilder on January 22, 2010 at 10:01 PM

Dumbass

bill30097 on January 22, 2010 at 10:01 PM

Fat Bastard… serves Dr. Evil Nancy Pelosi in her quest to defeat Austin Powers the people of the United States. The character is portrayed by Mike Myers Newt Gingrich

P. Monk on January 22, 2010 at 10:02 PM

Newt, WE know them. WE say NO. STFU and GTFA.

Maquis on January 22, 2010 at 10:12 PM

Hey Newt
Its nice of you to bring out your chivalry to save a damsel in distress
but
do it on your own
Don’t try to take the conservatives and hardworking people of this country down with you
That thing you are trying to save is no damsel
She’s going down and we should all pitch in and help her go down

macncheez on January 22, 2010 at 10:13 PM

Why can’t this man just STFU and go away.

We don’t care what he has to say anymore, and he damn sure doesn’t speak for me.

F off, Newt. Retire or something.

tickleddragon on January 22, 2010 at 10:14 PM

“Republicans would be “clever” to pass a series of relatively non-controversial measures with “huge bipartisan majorities.”

Well, actually, I agree with that. For example, mandating that states allow insurance companies to compete across state lines is within the power of the Congress.

Obstruction of interstate commerce is completely within the power of the Congress to eliminate.

crosspatch on January 22, 2010 at 10:16 PM

So much for Newts trial ballon

pffffftt!

BobMbx on January 22, 2010 at 10:18 PM

Obstruction of interstate commerce is completely within the power of the Congress to eliminate.

crosspatch on January 22, 2010 at 10:16 PM

True. And WE should be inviting THEM to join us on that, not on any monstrosity of their design.

Maquis on January 22, 2010 at 10:20 PM

Newt has a crush on Pelosi?
Hilton at 11:00 Newt brings the champaign,
Pelosi brings the whips and chains!

dhunter on January 22, 2010 at 10:23 PM

And then you further mandate than any insurance company doing business across state lines must allow individuals and small businesses to band together into larger groups for better group rates.

And then you mandate that state mandates on required coverage are not binding on insurance bought from or sold by a company operating across state lines.

There–health care reform!

crosspatch on January 22, 2010 at 10:23 PM

Why do I want to poke my eyes out. Probably because I can not get the picture of Newt and Pelosi sittin on a couch together off my brain!!!! Why would he say that crap now that we are wakin up the country. Please go away Newt, I USED to like you, but no more!

conmo on January 22, 2010 at 10:25 PM

You guys are reading something different into what Newt said than what he actually said. If you look at what he SAID, he is right. He didn’t say cooperate with Pelosi. He said propose legislation that would get wide bipartisan support.

crosspatch on January 22, 2010 at 10:27 PM

Bravo JellyToast! Agree 100% thanks

conmo on January 22, 2010 at 10:28 PM

When “bipartisanship” happens, government always grows.

The Dean on January 22, 2010 at 10:45 PM

No way Newt! Why? Because conservatives are the intelligent, responsible adults in the room. And intelligent, responsible adults never acquiesce to children’s/democrats demand for more candy/Obamacare because they get angry and throw a temper tantrum. Intelligent adults/conservatives know that to much candy/Obamacare will not only give them/democrats a severe stomach ache but also several cavities. Thus, forcing the adults/conservatives to acquire massive debts ( Stimulus,TARP,Obamacare etc, etc…) to rectify the problem.
It seems like Newt’s thinking “what’s good for Obama should be good for me.” He is thinking that if Obama could associate with criminals like Rezko and Blagojevich. Pal around with vile preachers like Rev Wright and father Pfleger. Be friends with terrorists like Bill Ayers and Bernadine Dohrn and still be elected President. He, Newt, should be allowed to “at least” champion global warming and amnesty for illegal aliens. Hang around with creatures like Al Sharpton and Nancy Pelosi and the American people should award him the same courtesy. Plus – and I know he believes this one – conservatives owe him big time for securing that magnificent victory in 1994 anyway. Right Newt?

RMR on January 22, 2010 at 10:57 PM

He didn’t say cooperate with Pelosi. He said propose legislation that would get wide bipartisan support.

crosspatch on January 22, 2010 at 10:27 PM

That is his problem right there
Its all about a bipartisan legislation for Newt n Nan
Not a single word about what the people want
Not one sentence about the right thing to do , for the people

macncheez on January 22, 2010 at 10:59 PM

Newt, I love ya man for the Contract With America… But lately, my best advice for you is STFU.

hburns on January 22, 2010 at 11:18 PM

Not a single word about what the people want
Not one sentence about the right thing to do , for the people

macncheez on January 22, 2010 at 10:59 PM

Bingo. Gotta stop the Tea Party. It’ll just mess up the gig the DNC and GOP have had for a 100 years.

BobMbx on January 22, 2010 at 11:28 PM

Not one sentence about the right thing to do , for the people

macncheez on January 22, 2010 at 10:59 PM

Right! Nothing about socialism! Nothing about why in the freaking world does the government think it needs to insert itself into healthcare! Nothing about nationalization! Nothing about big government! No,, just “we need to show everybody we can work with Pelosi and be bipartisan!”
See? This is the Android Newt!

I am telling you, the real Newt would never say that! The real Newt just gave a speech about Victory or Death where he even called Pelosi a radical! So, the real Newt is way smarter than this and that is why I believe he is unconscious right now in a comma ray having his brain experimented on!
In a week or two the real Newt will show up again somewhere, maybe on Hannity or someplace, none the wiser, not have any idea why his head hurts and then he’ll say something really good again about small government or that Obama needs impeached (like he did in that speech a few weeks ago!).

JellyToast on January 22, 2010 at 11:30 PM

Did Republicans come up with the idea of pushing for socialized medicine? No.

Then why get involved with pushing it forward?

Makes no sense.

Dr. ZhivBlago on January 22, 2010 at 11:32 PM

Hmmmm.

You gotta be kidding me!

wtf!?

Newt: STFU! Shut your stinking piehole!

Palin: WTF!? A couple months of McCain trying to fix his image does NOT counter decades of being an absolute dick.

memomachine on January 22, 2010 at 11:36 PM

I gave up on Newt, although he’s an intelligent fellow on most subjects, when he jumped on the AGW bandwagon.

Go sit on a spiral light bulb, Newt.

hillbillyjim on January 22, 2010 at 11:51 PM

Newt is wilfully underestimating the extent to which libs will go to use+abuse+accuse+misuse anybody they can, to get what they want
and then toss him/her into the dumpster of infamy once they are done with them
With hateful radicals like Nan and Dingy in the congress and a relentless spiteful jihady in the WH, there is no reason to trust anything these people say or do.
Thank God we ripped off their masks
We are not so naive anymore , Newt
We may not be rolling in dough like your cohorts in DC but when we learn a lesson, we never forget it.
Try spinning that the next time you share a sofa with someone who has such tranparent and deepseated contempt for the American people

macncheez on January 23, 2010 at 12:01 AM

Let it die the death it deserves. They didn’t work in a bipartisan fashion for the last year, why give them any sort of victory now?

Dumb reasoning Newt.

dthorny on January 23, 2010 at 12:03 AM

OKAY……This settles it…..NEWT is officially an IDIOT!!!

PappyD61 on January 23, 2010 at 12:20 AM

Boot Newt right up Colon Powell’s Frum-P!
Let’s wait until after November when the new Democratic minority leader can come hat in hand to work with the Republicans on tort reform and portability across state lines!

chickasaw42 on January 23, 2010 at 12:23 AM

Newt’s all over the political map these days. He’s no idiot, but his comments don’t make sense. His strategies come in more flavors these days than Baskin-Robbins. Maybe he’s not well.

MainelyRight on January 23, 2010 at 12:36 AM

Go dry up in a desert, Newt.

AshleyTKing on January 23, 2010 at 12:41 AM

Gingrich: Maybe the GOP should work with Pelosi on health care

In the first place, they’re not working on health care. We already have health care…the best in the world. This is about health INSURANCE changes that remove what little competition is left and ultimately destroy the best health CARE in the world.

Working with anyone on the left at this time is tantamount to just flipping-off the American people. These elites think government is their toy and the American people are irrelevant. We’ve given the left a bloody nose. Now we must stand resolute against their disastrous programs. If I wanted to live in China or Russia or even Europe, I’d go live there. Good Grief.

MainelyRight on January 23, 2010 at 12:46 AM

ANY bipartisan bill will be reported by the MSM to be the work of the dems, NOT the GOP.
Plus the dems will use it to get the nose of the camel under the tent. When they think they can get everything in one fell swoop they go after it. When they don’t, they move incrementally.
See the war on the 2nd Amend as proof of this.

Hard Right on January 23, 2010 at 12:50 AM

NOOOOOO!

This bipartisan compromise crap is what has gotten the country in trouble in the first place. It’s merely the nose under the tent.

I want free market reforms, not legislation, to deal with health care. Our problem is too much government, not incorrect government.

PattyJ on January 23, 2010 at 12:56 AM

Work with Pelosi?
Supported Scozzafa…whatever her name was?

I think Newt is completely off his rocker

tommer74 on January 23, 2010 at 12:59 AM

Newt, you stomped on your johnson for the last time. Every time I think that by some medical miracle, your head has been removed from your ass, you have a relapse. Take a hike, sellout.

Sam_I_Am on January 23, 2010 at 1:02 AM

No surrender.

No compromise.

The Democrats are dying politically.

The Republicans should go play golf, and let them do it.

….So, how ’bout another riff on Newt’s favorables? He’s CLEARLY our guy for ’12……

Hawkins1701 on January 23, 2010 at 1:17 AM

The left is not doing well lately.

To avoid withering fire:

Maneuver right and change public posture and positions on existing issues.

Change the subject to something like attacking the bankers.

Make nice with new allies. Newt. Sarah. Number 41. And maybe morph old programs for the new enviroment.

Hope that there is no scandal involving the Illinois Dept. of Corrections. Like missing prisoners and not knowing where they are.

This can really end a bad week since the Prez has security departments he forgot to create.

Hope that the media continues to ignore the disaster your side has created.

IlikedAUH2O on January 23, 2010 at 1:36 AM

Conservatives: Maybe Newt Gingrich should just STFU

BTW – if you love Pelosi so much, Newt, then get a room and LOCK THE DOOR AND CLOSE THE FREAKIN’ BLINDS. Don’t continue to give Nancy and the dhimmis a tongue bath in public.

Timothy S. Carlson on January 23, 2010 at 1:40 AM

Scott Brown’s election was, as many have said, the result of “the perfect storm”. Conservatives supported Scott Brown because he was the 41 vote against health care. But people should not see this as a conservative acceptance of an overly big tent.

If Scott Brown’s election had been this November, with 33 other Senate seats and all House seats up for grabs, there is no way that his campaign would have received contributions of a million dollars a day every day for a week. Conservatives would have invested their money in candidates that were fiscal and social conservatives in purple States rather than “throw there money away” on what would appear to be a “lost cause”.

I don’t think that RINOs, moderates or kinda/sorta conservatives should expect a lot of financial support from tea party folks this fall.

A “Scott Brown Republican” is great for Massachusetts, but don’t expect that kind of Republican to be acceptable to the base across the nation.

I think that a Scott Brown Republican or another John McCain Republican running for President in 2012 would result in a third party conservative candidate, even if that would throw the election to the Democrats.

Scott Brown mania will settle down after he makes a couple of votes “in the best interest of Massachusetts”. As he said, his job is to represent Massachusetts and Massachusetts does not represent mainstream America.

Back to Gingrich

If the Dems what to pass legislation for tort reform and allowing insurance companies to compete across State lines, fine. Make it bipartisan. If it is just more of the same under a different name, just say no.

Ordinary American on January 23, 2010 at 7:05 AM

STFU, Newt

darwin-t on January 23, 2010 at 7:19 AM

In my best Dr. Evil voice….How about…NO!

5u93rm4n on January 23, 2010 at 8:01 AM

Beware the self serving whores of the Republican party.

Hening on January 23, 2010 at 8:03 AM

Newt you’re a great historian. Let’s leave it there.

Oldnuke on January 23, 2010 at 8:37 AM

This crap happens every time we get the Dems on the ropes – the RINOs in Washington start feeling sorry for them and start pushing the idea of working with them. STOP IT! They need to be defeated and run out of town! Compromising conservative principles and making deals with the Enemies of America doesn’t get more conservatives or RINOs elected, it only allows the Dems to keep their seats and continue to destroy us incrementally.

NO MORE RINOs or RINO COMPROMISES! GO AWAY NEWT! You are brain damaged.

Sporty1946 on January 23, 2010 at 8:41 AM

Does Newt have a thing for SFNan? Why doesn’t he run for a house seat so he can be closer to her. He caved for Clinton, and he had 4 more years of him. Stop compromising with those far left nuts just when we get the pitchforks out to get rid of them.

Kissmygrits on January 23, 2010 at 8:52 AM

Does Newt have a thing for SFNan? Why doesn’t he run for a house seat so he can be closer to her. He caved for Clinton, and he had 4 more years of him. Stop compromising with those far left nuts just when we get the pitchforks out to get rid of them.

Kissmygrits on January 23, 2010 at 8:52 AM

Newt needs to run for Gov. somewhere. He flirts with running for President, why not just show us what he could do as Gov?

JellyToast on January 23, 2010 at 9:12 AM

The incredible Newt exists in all places in time and space yet really occupies no particular place at all.

Why he is darn near omnipresent but far far from omniscient!

There is to be no compromise or working with Pelousi, Sir!

I now consider newt to be an interesting pet, but Newt to be a bore.

I have personally blacklisted him.

Does he now join the group of hasbeens going nowheres?

This commenter thinks so.

Go sit in the corner with McCain this minute Mr. Newt Gingrich!!

Sherman1864 on January 23, 2010 at 9:40 AM

Newt has passed his expiration date! Move on and don’t come back!!!!!!!

flytier on January 23, 2010 at 9:41 AM

Maybe we should work together with the Russians in rebuilding Eastern Europe. . .

- The Cat

MirCat on January 23, 2010 at 9:49 AM

Elsewhere, my lefty pal…

As if you had anything but.

SKYFOX on January 23, 2010 at 10:24 AM

After some missteps, Newt is back on track. He the best tactician in the fold right now.

MarkT on January 23, 2010 at 10:24 AM

Please contact Newt and tell him what you think.

NEWT.ORG

nondhimmie on January 23, 2010 at 10:32 AM

Gingrich and McCain are Democrat in Republican makeup.
You can’t trust these dummies any farther than you can throw the average monument.
McCain just got thrown out by the Supreme Court with legislation that looks like it originated in Obamas administration.
Gingrich hasn’t been involved in anything but petty politicking; Anything to support his ego; No intention to listen to the constituents.

Cybergeezer on January 23, 2010 at 10:33 AM

Yes, the GOP should continue to make the effort and if it is rebuffed by the Dems, then all will know that the fault is not on our side. But, when all is said and done, some effective reforms need to be made to our health care system , if not now then very soon. Don’t throw out the baby with the bath water.

jeanie on January 23, 2010 at 10:35 AM

Newt Gingrich is all about one thing and one thing only…Newt Gingrich. Been that way for a long time folks.

t.ferg on January 23, 2010 at 10:43 AM

I think what the GOP should do is once again float a very simple version of the “Republican Plan”… maybe let some Democrats co-sponsor it this time so they’ll feel better about it:

1. tort reform
2. lift the ban on interstate commerce
3. give individuals the same tax break as employers

And no earmarks, no extras, not a dime of taxpayer spending. Both parties should be able to agree on that. Those who object will be basically outing themselves as bought and paid for by trial lawyers and/or unions, which will be a nice visual for the folks back home.

joe_doufu on January 23, 2010 at 10:50 AM

It all depends on how inoffensive the new stripped-down ObamaCare bill is and whether it looks like the Dems really do have the votes this time. If it’s a fait accompli and the reforms are minute, why not take a free kick by voting yes and blowing a hole in the left’s “party of no” crap before the midterms?

I’ll agree to a point. But if they want some wins, the GOP should be insisting on including ACTUAL VALUABLE changes, tort and x-state insurance. I believe the VAST MAJORITY of folks could get behind these changes, only special interests have a problem with them.

JusDreamin on January 23, 2010 at 10:50 AM

Forget Newt for a moment and look at the whole situation. This country does need health care reform though not in it’s present incarnation. If one wants to paint conservatism and the GOP as the folks truly on the side of the People, then we have to buckle down and prove it by putting the good of the People first and not the good of either conservatism or the GOP. If, in the present political climate, this means compromise from both sides then let’s put the People first and get on with it. To do anything else makes us as partisan as the left has lately been.

jeanie on January 23, 2010 at 10:50 AM

If the Democrats want to pass a bill that we all must jump from a 400 foot cliff, Gingrich will negotiate in good faith to reduce that to a 200 foot cliff.
Let’s all give a big whoop!

Herb on January 23, 2010 at 11:08 AM

What’s with the matching suits in the pic?
Are they calling each other in the morning?

Disturb the Universe on January 23, 2010 at 11:20 AM

Personally, I don’t trust the party of slick to do the right thing, even now. I see the party of slick, putting together a bill with 10 items, 9 of which the Republicans will support and then including a bill killer, like government paid for abortion, and then, when the Republicans vote no, trying to hang it around their heads.

The Democrats no longer want a bill they want an issue, because that’s really what they do best, so expect them to play games until November. I just hope the Repubicans, Fox News, and Talk Radio are smart enough to keep up with them. The Democrats, and their Leadership, has only learned one thing, to heck with legislating, it’s back to politics.

bflat879 on January 23, 2010 at 11:30 AM

When the next health care debate takes place, I’d love to see Fox News put on a special (like the networks did) only present both sides and see who watches. After seeing Fox draw 6 million plus viewers Tuesday night, they have the potential to put the ABC infomercial on the floor. If the Democrats try to pull stuff, Fox News can shine a light on it and it will not succeed.

bflat879 on January 23, 2010 at 11:34 AM

One word: appeaser.

shick on January 23, 2010 at 12:11 PM

Why not wait to see how ‘bi-partisan’ the Dems will be first?

If “Newt the Total Dumb-A$$” doesn’t realize how “bi-parisan” liberals are by now, then HE needs Obeyme-care so that the taxpayers can send someone to give his meds, feed him his porridge, and change his Depends because what was left of his mind is completely gone. I’m starting to believe that Newt is currently attempting to seize the title of “Most Stupid Human Ever To Come From Georgia” from Jimmy Carter.

You don’t compromise with evil.

oldleprechaun on January 23, 2010 at 1:17 PM

Goes away and leaves us alone!

Coronagold on January 23, 2010 at 1:26 PM

The solution for healthcare reform should start with the Blue Dogs and GOP attempting to execute some sort of a ‘no confidence’ vote on Speaker Pelosi and her leadership gang to get them to step down in favor of installing a Blue Dog in the Speakership. The new Blue Dog House leadership would then establish a bipartisan process to rework committee assignments and rules so things can move forward in a reasonable fashion without the Pelosi/left wing taint.

OK, this pipe dream ain’t going to happen (if for no other reason than there aren’t any leadership types in the Blue Dog crowd — they’re more blue puppies than blue dogs).

The important thing is this is an easy to understand ‘line in the sand’ that a majority of common sense voters around the nation could agree upon as a foundation for an interesting 2010 election season.

drfredc on January 23, 2010 at 1:54 PM

NEWT-

Blow me.

Doorgunner on January 23, 2010 at 2:10 PM

The more Newt talks, the less I like him…

ladyingray on January 23, 2010 at 2:13 PM

do not trust Pelosi at all. She will not go for anything “moderate” enough to be acceptable.

If she were to do so, Repubs should look for what we conservatives would do if it were all on us and agree with exactly that alone. “What we would have done anyway”? Yes. Negotiate with the left? It’s like dealing with the devil – watch your back. They always cheat.

IrishEyes on January 22, 2010 at 9:37 PM

Reminds me of the fable The Scorpion and the FrogNewt.
Scorpion needs to get across the creek so he asks the Newt for a ride. The newt says, “I don’t trust you, your a scorpion.” Scorpion says, “sure you can.” Hops on the newts back, mid way across the creek, the scorpion stings the newt. The newt looks at him and asks, “why would you do that, now we’re both gonna die.” Scorpion says, “I can’t help it I’m a scorpion.” Moral of the story never, ever trust Nancy Pelosi.

redridinghood on January 23, 2010 at 2:54 PM

I agree with Newt. Hit it hard and get out there with a plan that people will accept.

The GOP shouldn’t let a day pass without talking about their own HC reform plan.

AnninCA on January 23, 2010 at 4:07 PM

First you have to accept that the healthcare system in our country is broken and that it’s at a crisis point. Then you work with Pelosi. However, I do not believe that we are at a crisis point in healthcare. I think the crisis is only manufactured by the Dems whenever they get into power. Funny how it works that way.

We have problems in the healthcare arena. Those problems first need to be specifically identified, then two things need to happen. 1) Seek solutions in the private sector under the present system; or if unworkable because of a factor that requires legislation to smooth out the stumbling block for the private sector, legislate only that much.

Newt has it wrong here. We’re not buying that the sky is falling; only that the Dems are doing their best to fracture the sky so that it will fall.

Tennman on January 23, 2010 at 7:23 PM

What a douche. I’ve been saying since the Brown Out killed O-Care we are entering the most dangerous stage of this nonsense. There are enough moderate left leaning R’s who want to be co-Fathers of NHS to actually work with Pelosi, thus saving her, O, and the permanent D majority. Remember the parable about combining a quart of ice cream with a quart of dog shit: Sure the final product is made of 1/2 each. but…

Hucklebuck on January 23, 2010 at 7:25 PM

Hasn’t the goal from the beginning been simply to pass something to placate the left and preserve the Dems’ electoral viability? Politics has always been job one here. Effective health-care reform is an afterthought.

If effective health-care reform had been the goal, the bill would look nothing like it looks today. It’s all about the statist agenda.

smellthecoffee on January 23, 2010 at 7:29 PM

Ah yes, the old refrain of let’s just get along and work with the Socialists, it won’t hurt and we won’t be called such bad names by the media or Democrats.
 
First, while Scott Brown’s win was great in defeating a deadly expansion of Socialism in this country it does not mean his moderate RINO social position will fly this fall.
 
Second, if we want to negotiate with Democrats why not try doing so by forcing them to accept some of the conservative positions like privatization and reductions in government. How about elimination of the HHS department in the federal government for starters?
 
Enough of these idiotic positions where some group of RINOs or Moderate Republicans claims how great they are for getting a temporay LITE version of what the Democrats originally wanted only to have the full version forced on us later as a FIX for the problems caused by the LITE version. Heck of a trick the Democrats use there on dunderheaded Moderates.
 
Third and final, failed old moderates like Newt need to fade away or else join the party they seem to really want to be part of…..the Democrats.
 
The People have had a brush with seeing what Socialism can and will look like in this country if allowed to happen. A place where they have little or no say and where government grabs ever more power over them. Brown’s election seems to show that even those in the Democrat party that used to think it could never happen have now waken up and the time is ripe for REAL change.
 
So why at such an opportune moment would you EVER want to align yourself or your party with those currently despised by the masses out there? When a group of power hungry Socialists is self-destructing why would you want to cut the timing wire and save their sorry butts???
 
Let them destroy themselves so that those not involved can help clean up the mess they have made of this country and hopefully save its economic and political future.

woodythesingingcowboy on January 23, 2010 at 9:59 PM

rrpjr on January 22, 2010 at 9:33 PM

Exactly correct! Well said. The liberal dems in my own town care not one bit about helping anyone. They just want the votes and the power.

4shoes on January 23, 2010 at 10:08 PM

rrpjr on January 22, 2010 at 9:33 PM
Exactly Almost correct! Well said. The liberal dems “ruling class” in my own all towns care not one bit about helping anyone. They just want the votes and the power.

4shoes on January 23, 2010 at 10:08 PM

fixed…

jerrytbg on January 23, 2010 at 10:37 PM

country it does not mean his moderate RINO social position will fly this fall

But that’s the conumdrum here. It is flying. It’s pulling in moderates and, right or wrong, they are controlling elections right now. I consider myself right of center(perhaps not as right as some here, but right none the less)and I would pull the lever for someone who ran for Prez on Brown’s platform.(Yes, I’m aware that he has no record as yet)I’m basing my opinion on what I know to date.

jeanie on January 23, 2010 at 10:47 PM

Sorry–conundrum?(oh never mind–read it ‘puzzle’ thanks)

jeanie on January 23, 2010 at 10:49 PM

“Newt” Gingrich burst upon the scene as a “Politician of Politicians”.

He had a lot more studying of history but was just as venial as the D’rats of his time. In fact equal in keeping his peter in his pants.

So somehow he wants respect now?

FO American Solutions.

Caststeel on January 24, 2010 at 12:47 AM

Newt doesn’t get it either! There are 545 people that run this country and we put them there to represent us. They all are doing a lousy job and we the people have but one thing we can do and that’s to vote. 85% of Americans were satisfied with their health care but these characters wanted some credit to the 15% that weren’t. Bribes, lies,broken promises, secret meetings and Newt thinks we should work with them. NO! The cleaning shall be in November and the GOP better put some new faces in the primaries because the RHINOS are going too.

mixplix on January 24, 2010 at 7:00 AM

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