Is it now Gingrich’s turn? Update: Video added
posted at 12:15 pm on November 5, 2011 by Ed Morrissey
While Mitt Romney has remained a constant in polling for the Republican presidential nomination at around 25-28%, inconstancy has been the constant among his opponents. Michele Bachmann became the first to ride a wave to Romney’s relative polling position, only to fade when Rick Perry entered the race. Now Perry has faded after a series of awful debate performances and Herman Cain has taken his place for the last six weeks. If Cain can’t maintain his momentum, who will be the next Not-Romney? Byron York reports from Iowa that it may well be Newt Gingrich:
For days, there’s been talk of a Newt Gingrich boomlet in the Republican presidential race here in Iowa. After Friday night’s Reagan Dinner at Hy-Vee Hall in downtown Des Moines, that Gingrich boomlet talk might turn into talk of a Gingrich boom.
Five candidates — Gingrich, Rick Perry, Michele Bachmann, Rick Santorum, and Ron Paul — addressed a crowd of about 1,000 GOP faithful at the state Republican party’s biggest fundraiser of the year. In brief interviews after the dinner — the only question was which speaker did the best job — audience members were unanimous: Gingrich, Gingrich, Gingrich.
“It was Newt,” said Chad Kleppe of Waukee, Iowa. “I think he’s the smartest one in the field.”
“Gingrich knocked it out of the park,” said Earlene Nordstrom of Fort Dodge, Iowa.
Byron talked to twelve people at the event, and all twelve scored it a knockout for Gingrich. Neither Romney or Cain made an appearance at the Reagan Dinner. Romney sent his son, who confessed that he had no idea where his father chose to be rather than the Iowa GOP’s big fundraiser. York also wondered why Cain, who said this week that he must win Iowa and is conducting a money bomb specifically for that purpose this week, chose to stay in Washington DC rather than try to keep momentum with an appearance. Both are attending AFP’s Defending the American Dream conference, and Cain has been a regular on AFP’s circuit, and presumably committed to that event long in advance of his sudden rise in the presidential polls.
Why is Newt poised to catch fire? York credits Newt with a counterintuitive strategy, at least for the former Speaker and his public reputation: he is on a charm offensive. No, really:
Gingrich won the night in large part by doing one simple thing: He lavished praise on his fellow candidates. Perry has been “my mentor on the 10th Amendment,” Gingrich said. Bachmann deserves credit for efforts to stop the Dodd-Frank financial regulation bill. Rick Santorum has worked to “rouse America to understand the challenge of radical Islam.” Ron Paul has been “consistently correct” about a sound dollar. Gingrich did not offer praise for the two frontrunners, Herman Cain and Mitt Romney, who skipped tonight’s dinner. But had they attended, Gingrich said, “I would have said nice things about them, too.”
“I am here with very fine competitors, but no opponents,” Gingrich concluded. “We only have one opponent, and that’s Barrack [sic] Obama.”
Gingrich has figured out that voters in this primary want to be inspired, rather than choosing which candidate to despise least. Herman Cain has campaigned the same way, and his optimism and vision has been a key to his ascent to the top tier. If that seems odd considering Gingrich’s well-earned reputation as an infighter, it’s another indication that Gingrich is a master at politics and campaigning. He has another advantage that some of his opponents — excuse me, competitors — do not in this regard. Unlike Tim Pawlenty, Cain, Romney, and everyone else currently or formerly in this race, Gingrich has earned his reputation for hard-nosed battles inside the Beltway. He can afford to be gracious now, but no one thinks for a moment that Gingrich would insist on a rainbows-and-flowers campaign in a general election.
Gingrich’s polling has begun moving upward in the last couple of weeks. Who would have guessed in May that Gingrich would have the second-highest positive intensity score in the field in November, tied with Romney behind Cain? Plus, even though Cain was the immediate beneficiary of Perry’s debate performances, the lesson may well redound to Gingrich’s benefit in the longer run:
“He is so good,” said Becky Ervin of Urbandale. “I want to see a debate between him and Obama.”
We’ll see more of that tonight in Gingrich’s Lincoln-Douglas style debate in Texas with Cain. If Republicans want a proven substantive fighter who can out-debate Barack Obama, they may come to Newt Gingrich — even if it’s just by default.
Update: The Right Scoop gives us the video of the speech itself, and it’s just as York described:
I was trying to come up with a word to describe Gingrich’s approach in this primary, and I think the right word is “statesmanlike.” That doesn’t mean he’s the best person for the job, but it’s hard not to take him seriously for the job, either.









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OK, so any y’all that are trying to make the case that Newt will come out and govern as a liberal are smoking wacky tabacky.
Will he veer off course and suggest some some stuff that is flaky, yeah, probably, but he is not Romney and tell me what other candidate do we know so much about?
Newt is good on taxes and the economy…yeah he has some pol disease like on ethanol…so, congress will need to vote on that anyways and with 16 ethanol Senators from both parties, I’m not sure it we can change it fast anyways
He is very good on building the military and fighting the jihadists for real, not just killing a few guys here and there.
And even more, Newt is smart enough and willing enough to try some new things could make a real difference
And finally, he knows how to work with the Congress to get things done.
georgealbert on November 5, 2011 at 6:30 PM
If Cain was serious and knew what he was talking about I would have considered him. Sadly, that just isn’t the case.
I could imagine a scenario where President Cain gets the 3 AM phone call and is told Russia is invading Georgia. Hilarity would ensue, of course, followed by unfortunate tragedy since Cain wallows in his ignorance on world affairs. Sorry, Joy, but times are too serious for a President Cain. :-(
Punchenko on November 5, 2011 at 6:31 PM
If the Perry and Cain supporters would stop supporting duds of candidates and would back Gingrich, I would easily switch from Romney to Gingrich. The only reason he isnt my #1 right now is because he is a longshot to get the nomination and I don’t want to see a Perry or Cain be our nominee.
thphilli on November 5, 2011 at 6:34 PM
; ) back at ya…
RalphyBoy on November 5, 2011 at 6:36 PM
I want to know how much of a deal breaker Newt’s personal life really is. To me, it’s completely irrelevant if he can oust the Marxist in chief and make this place feel like America again.
People who aren’t emotionally invested in other candidates (and who aren’t women scorned) feel free to weigh in.
Kataklysmic on November 5, 2011 at 6:37 PM
Right. I’m going to support the most conservative candidate who can defeat the Marxist in chief. I don’t know who that is yet, and until I think I have it figgered out, I’m supporting them all against lsm and other assorted lefties.
petefrt on November 5, 2011 at 6:41 PM
Remember just how creepy the thought of the 3am call is NOW !!!!
I’m of the thought that even Cain would assemble a helluvalot more capable team @ 3:15am than who’s in the WH atm.
Wouldn’t the majority of our candidates have cabinets / advisors we could trust, to advise ??
Methinks so.
pambi on November 5, 2011 at 6:42 PM
I’ve ben quietly rooting for Newt since Palin announced she would not run. He’s the smartest man in any room he walks into. He can win a head-to-head debate with Obama, and that is something that most of the candidates cannot do. When out comes down to it, he’s the one I trust most to beat Obama head-to-head. I don’t have to like every position of his. 1-he’s more conservative than Romney. 2-His platform does not rely on radically changing the tax code. There will be a time for that (I hope), but it’s too risky to base the election on. Moderates want stability. I think Newt is the best choice remaining for POTUS.
And if he doesn’t get the nomination, hope he is considered for VP. Like Palin in 2008, he could be a sparkplug. And he would mop the floor in a debate with Biden.
connertown on November 5, 2011 at 6:43 PM
How is US authority being supplanted by global governance? We told the world to go pound sand when our tanks went rolling into Baghdad. We will tell the world to go pound sand again if and when we decide to pay a visit to the Ayatollah in Tehran. Money and military might rules the world and we still have both in spades.
P.S. — Lay off the Bircher junk and pick up some books by Carroll Quigley. :-)
Punchenko on November 5, 2011 at 6:45 PM
connertown on November 5, 2011 at 6:43 PM
Can’t really argue with you on that.
pambi on November 5, 2011 at 6:47 PM
Not a doubt in my mind. None.
petefrt on November 5, 2011 at 6:49 PM
Kataklysmic – One doesn’t have to be a ‘woman scorned’ to realize that a morally bankrupt man can never make a good leader. Not to mention the enormous list of subjects he has strayed on.
But I will say this, we all have the right and obligation to vote for who WE, as individuals, think would make the best candidate.
Joy on November 5, 2011 at 6:51 PM
My Father is rooting for a Gingrich/Palin ticket.
I don’t know about that — not if Cain’s campaign team is any indication. We forget that Obama did bag Bin Laden, Qaddafi, and might have Assad at room temperature next. Those are pretty good FP talking points going into a General Election.
Punchenko on November 5, 2011 at 6:54 PM
Some of the great leaders throughout history would wither under the type of moral scrutiny candidates experience in 2011. Don’t get me wrong–I would love nothing more than to vote for an ideological pure candidte who has never strayed in his marriage. I believe we have one, actually. Santorum. Can he beat Obama? I guess if we all rally behind him he can.
Kataklysmic on November 5, 2011 at 6:58 PM
Newt!
lorien1973 on November 5, 2011 at 6:59 PM
‘
It may be a deal breaker to the evangelicals but the DNC and Barrack Obama will have a field day with all of it.
Ethanol subsidies? Really Newt? That really flies in the face of what the Tea Party stands for and smaller government.
Knucklehead on November 5, 2011 at 7:00 PM
Having been morally bankrupt myself at one point in my life, AND THEN having gone thru a change that Newt has asserted that he has, too, makes me step back and ‘watch the fruit’.
I’m just saying that from this perspective, I find no rotting fruit. Am I missing any ??
I agree in most part with his political thinking, and knowing it’s all FAR PREFERABLE to what’s in there now, so I’d pull the lever for him.
Whether the populace would is another matter.
Just my 2cents ~ his past.
pambi on November 5, 2011 at 7:02 PM
Pssh, Herman can’t even be bothered to press the flesh with the hoi polloi in Iowa. I looked at his calendar and saw that he has a fundraiser… IN NEW YORK.
Your guy is a total tool for Romney and the establishment.
Punchenko on November 5, 2011 at 7:04 PM
I’ve clearly stated before that I’m one of those the ‘true conservatives’ call a RINO and I will vote for the GOP nominee for the sake of my country. So, I don’t think anyone disagrees that Newt is a smart man or that Newt would mop the floor with Obama. But I suspect that anyone over the age of 40 who had been political involved knows about Newt’s personal history and it is reflected in his poll numbers. The problem he will have IMHO is those who are not aware, will be made aware if he is the nominee. I don’t suspect that any of the current challengers are going to bring it up, but that will change in the general, and it will not be pretty. I look at how ‘supporters’ of Cain jumped ship right here on HA … ‘social con central’ … over allegation without any proof, names, etc. and that scares the beegees out of me when the stuff about Newt … and Callista … is used against him.
It’s a sad thing, but he did it to himself.
And BTW, (and who aren’t women scorned) is insulting to an informed electorate.
Texas Gal on November 5, 2011 at 7:07 PM
Punchenko on November 5, 2011 at 7:04 PM
He’s simply proving that he is an unconventional candidate, no ?
Gotta admit that he is that. ;-)
pambi on November 5, 2011 at 7:08 PM
Yeah, Newt has been a huge rino on a lot of issues, I don’t think that is up for debate. In my opinion everyone in this field has huge flaws in different areas. I’m weighing whose flaws will be the worst for the general and whose flaws will prevent them from governing as a conservative either because of ideology or incompetence. It’s actually a very complex question on both fronts. I’m not emotionally invested in Newt, but would like to see him do well becasue I think there is a void in the field.
Kataklysmic on November 5, 2011 at 7:09 PM
Texas Gal on November 5, 2011 at 7:07 PM
Totally understand that concern, TG.
But he IS smart enough to have good, honest answers for those hearing these things for the first time.
I’m praying for ears to hear, that’s for sure.
pambi on November 5, 2011 at 7:13 PM
Me too. I’ll happliy wear the “candy ass rino” label because I don’t care if the nominee is Mike Castle, I’m voting for him.
I hear you. And I think if anyone was dumping Cain becasue of the nature of the allegations, they are being ridiculous. My opinion of him waned a little, but because of how he dealt with it, not because of what he was accused of.
I would agree. But unfortunately we don’t have an informed electorate, so the point is moot. Unforutnatley most voters vote based on emotion. Exhibit A currently resides in the White house.
Kataklysmic on November 5, 2011 at 7:16 PM
Ethanol subsidies? Really Newt? That really flies in the face of what the Tea Party stands for and smaller government.
Knucklehead on November 5, 2011 at 7:00 PM
Yeah, a toughy, here, but remember that HOW the legislation is worded can make a HUGE difference as to pass/fail (support or not).
There are stands for/against that Cain has taken and is battered with, sometimes, but when one hears the explanations, one can see the minute details that came into play that = a very conservative stance.
pambi on November 5, 2011 at 7:19 PM
Unfortunately, it’s worse, he is already on record in explaining it … to the effect that he was just too overworked doing his job for the country. And that was recently.
Texas Gal on November 5, 2011 at 7:22 PM
Yeah, that really made me cringe… and that he decided this is something he wants to highlight, oy. Oh well, overall, this is small potatoes.
El_Terrible on November 5, 2011 at 7:24 PM
LSU vs Alabama soon and Newt/Cain debate. Gonna be fun.
El_Terrible on November 5, 2011 at 7:24 PM
That’s right. That was a major facepalm moment. He can afford exactly ZERO more of those.
Kataklysmic on November 5, 2011 at 7:26 PM
Texas Gal on November 5, 2011 at 7:22 PM
Ok, granted.
Seems I’d seen that headline, earlier, but didn’t read it, and don’t remember where.
Can you share a link, please ?
pambi on November 5, 2011 at 7:26 PM
Oh, kewl ! We have an open thread for tonight’s debate !!
Thanks, y’all !!
:-)
pambi on November 5, 2011 at 7:29 PM
I don’t fault Cain for how he handled it because for me it reflected he’s not a experienced politician. So I can’t have it both ways.
And that is my fear with Newt. Here at HA, among this gathering of political junkies, it appears that many have no idea of the details of Newt’s affair with wife #3. That’s an indicator of just how informed the informed are and that worries me.
Texas Gal on November 5, 2011 at 7:29 PM
I just remember him explaining it and I’d guess it was last spring.. maybe. But you ought to be able to google Newt and Callista and find it. I’ve not doubt it’s out there.
Texas Gal on November 5, 2011 at 7:32 PM
I was okay with all of it except for the blaming Perry without proof part.
Kataklysmic on November 5, 2011 at 7:33 PM
The entire field has flaws and we have to deal with the hand dealt to us. And you have to remember, none of the other candidates have gone after Newt in the debates because he’s been bottom tier for so long, I guess they didn’t feel the need to do it especially when he slapped around the debate moderators so well.
But it’s his RINO issues and his judgement I have a problem with and that Obama will use to destroy him with, along with that old personal baggage. Individual mandates? Can he get enough campaign contributions in order to finance a national run? As of a couple weeks ago, his campaign was still a half a million in the hole but maybe that’s changed.
And I’m not saying this stuff because I’m supporting Cain right now. I want the most conservative candidate out there than can beat the idiot in the White House and I’m trying to look at the big picture and what kind of ammo is going to be used against him.
Knucklehead on November 5, 2011 at 7:36 PM
Well, that was an unfortunate move, but frankly I suspected Perry’s Camp too, so I can’t throw stones at Cain for it. :shrug:
There is some under current between Cain and Perry that I just can figure out, I have my suspicions, but I’ll keep to myself until this shakes out.
Texas Gal on November 5, 2011 at 7:37 PM
Sarah is un-electable because she is… Palin…
Newt because of his past infidelities and his RINO stance on a few issues…
Cain has no real international political background, and the sex charges… well…
Romney has RomneyCare… and plastic hair…
Perry seems erratic and weak in the debates… has he been drinking?…
Paul is too far out there for Prime Time… and this is like his 17th run isn’t it?…
Bachmann has crazy eyes (especially when the MSM exaggerates them) and she says weird stuff sometimes…
Christie is too… big… and direct…
Huntsman is weak on some stuff… and they’re making fun of his daughters already…
Santorum is a loser… or lose once or some-such…
-
Got it.
-
Anybody but Obama…
-
Sorry if I missed anyone… No sarc tag cause I’m not joking.
-
RalphyBoy on November 5, 2011 at 7:38 PM
Cool, posts from 8 years ago are coming across space time! Pu is living in a dimension where the WTO has not yet repeatedly ruled against us, we’re not $15T in debt, our manufacturing base is not gutted and stagnant and China’s GDP is not poised to overtake us in 3 years!
PU! IF YOU CAN STILL HEAR ME, GET OUT OF THE MARKET BY 2008!
elfman on November 5, 2011 at 7:39 PM
Being smart is not All a leader needs. If I am not mistaken, Mr. History professor is the one who came up with the brilliant idea of individual mandates as a way to solve the “health care” crisis back in the days of Hillary Care. The problem is the government’s involvement vis a vis Medicare and a politician like Newt, steeped in the ways of the House, will naturally gravitate towards government solutions. A large part of Cain’s appeal is that his natural tendency towards a solution is NOT to take the path that a politician would choose, but one that someone in the private sector would choose. That said, Newt is infinitely better than Obama.
txmomof6 on November 5, 2011 at 7:40 PM
Here ya go.
Newt Gingrich: ‘Passion for the country’ led to personal indiscretions
Knucklehead on November 5, 2011 at 7:40 PM
A debate between Newt and Obama would be a dream come true. Newt would dribble Obama around the way the Harlem Globe Trotters dribbled a basketball.
Obama would NEVER expose himself to such a discraceful rout.
Louis on November 5, 2011 at 7:41 PM
I’ve said this here before, but the reason so many are looking so closely at every GOP candidate is because we aren’t just choosing a candidate, we’re choosing the next president of the United States. Obama is going to lose to one of these people. The democrats understand this. The media understands this. Obama understands this. With the clean-up job this new president is going to have, we want to make sure it’s the right person.
Rational Thought on November 5, 2011 at 7:55 PM
Newt is entertaining to watch, but he has no chance. Being a global warming fan boy alone makes him a fail.
ray on November 5, 2011 at 7:57 PM
GO NEWT.. I wanna see that debate too. Love the fact that he will show up within 4 hours of Obama where ever he goes..
reshas1 on November 5, 2011 at 8:35 PM
Newt is masterful. Kill ‘em with your love. But so far (8:57) Herman is doing fine. Good for both of them.
petefrt on November 5, 2011 at 8:55 PM
Chilean social security plan?
Chile. Chile. Chile!
petefrt on November 5, 2011 at 9:02 PM
Down with Newt
Snake307 on November 5, 2011 at 9:24 PM
Knucklehead on November 5, 2011 at 7:40 PM
Thanks .. Just now getting back to this thread. :-)
pambi on November 5, 2011 at 11:26 PM
I forgive him.
I forgive him for the couch.
I forgive him for Dede What’s Her Name.
I forgive him for “right wing social engineering.”
…..Help us, Newt.
Hawkins1701 on November 6, 2011 at 12:41 AM
Newt’s the only one mentally and emotionally equipped to take on Obama and the media. He’s a fighter!
HellCat on November 6, 2011 at 1:46 AM
Newt also said late after Clinton’s affair was exposed that he’d speak every day about it… a few weeks before his own affair was exposed. He’s a fraud.
elfman on November 6, 2011 at 6:31 AM
Newt is the one to take on the mantle of Ronald Reagan and defeat the radical socialist presently in the White House.
Is Newt perfect? None of us are; Reagan had a divorce. Is Newt experienced in the ways we need? Yes. Does Newt have an encyclopedic knowledge of government, history and politics? Yes. Is Newt conservative? Yes. Is there any other candidate who would be better in matching up to Obama? No.
Phil Byler on November 6, 2011 at 7:09 AM
‘Gingrich has figured out that voters in this primary want to be inspired, rather than choosing which candidate to despise least. Herman Cain has campaigned the same way.’
This is why SP was so popular. She is inspiring. BO wanted to heal, unite, change, and stop the oceans from rising. What a load, but people bought it.
Kissmygrits on November 6, 2011 at 8:11 AM
I am very excited about what I’ve seen the last 24hours starting with the Cain debate and now this speech. Have to admit, I never took the time to figure out what exactly happened in Newt’s personal life but now I have—and it’s not what the “myth” portrays it to be.
Newt is at the top of my list now. Cain is also very good, but Newt’s laser intelligence mopping up the floor in a future debate with Barry added to the media’s inability to portray Newt as some mental lightweight or buffoon, is very VERY seductive to think about.
Dare I say, the thoughts send “tingles” down my leg?
For those who wish to correct the Newt “moral failures issues please read the following:
http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/correcting-the-record-newt-gingrich-didnt-divorce-his-first-wife-while-she-had-cancer/
Renwaa on November 6, 2011 at 10:32 AM
If we’re nominating Newt, I’m going to donate to Obama, because he’ll win re-election, and I want to be on the right side of the victory when the re-education camps get fired up.
Snake307 on November 6, 2011 at 1:22 PM
A Gingrich – Obama debate would be an earth quake of pudding and rainbows. I would give anything to see Newt expose Barry as the complete intellectual light weight that he is. The dressing down Gingrich would do to Obama would not only secure general election victory but put an exclamation point on the statement that Obama was never qualified to be anything but a community organizer.
I would love to see Gingrich/Cain. With Gingrich mentoring Cain on the finer points of policy minutia, Cain would be a certain favorite for President when his time came.
That sounds a heck of a lot better than, “hold your nose for Romney”, which seems like the only other choice that has been consistently available .
alecj on November 6, 2011 at 1:28 PM
Yes Newt would kill obama in a debate, few problems tho.
The Base: His pro-global warming schtick with Nancy
How he criticized Ryan’s logical tax plan and called it and essentially Ryan extreme.
His support of an insurnace mandate.
His cheating on his wife, then his mistress/new wife despite preaching family values.
Ethical issues- Misuse of tax exempt donations and book advance he was forced to give back.
The average voter: He is a Washington insider and people are tired of that.
Sure he’s a great speaker, but so was obama(so it seemed). They are wary of another smooth talking- politician-as-usual.
They don’t understand his role in balancing the budget and give Bill Clinton the credit for doing so.
His adultery and the story about his cancer stricken wife/divorce will re-surface. True or not it doesn’t matter. If we had a majority of the electorate educated as to the facts we would be b*tching about president McCain right now.
Like Sara Palin, there is an irrational hatred of him. The media did a wonderful hatchet job on him, partly with his assistence.
I still support Cain for the nomination, but I would definitely vote for Newt if he was the candidate. The problem is I think he’s been tainted by the media slur plus some of his own actions. As a result has no chance at beating obama.
Hard Right on November 6, 2011 at 11:04 PM
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