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Newt's Past and Future Leadership
· Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Almost all political commentators agree on one thing. The Republican presidential campaign is unlike any we have experienced. It is not a campaign of steady trends and continuities, but rather of emotional reversals and discontinuities. Perhaps this is so because the last 3 to 4 years have been a shocking time of discontinuities and reversals for America. Really, America has been bewildered, shocked and disoriented since Sept. 11, 2001. The economic collapse and the unprecedentedly statist policies of the last three years have just compounded the anxiety. The rise of China, the fall of Europe and the chaos in the Middle East have been startling in their swiftness -- and the lack of American leadership as these dramatic events unfold is sending a shudder throughout the world.
We don't know what to make of events. We have not been convinced that either President George W. Bush or incumbent President Obama have had a clue about how to make things right.
The GOP primary voters reflect this helter-skelter search for leadership. And I predict that when the general electorate is engaged in the general election campaign next year, the independents and some Democrats will reflect the same desperate confusion and search for the right kind of leadership for these treacherous times. But what kind of candidate is most likely to make sense of the terrible events and forces that weigh down our country; be capable of vividly describing our plight and what needs to be done; and convince the public that he or she has the intelligence, courage, experience and sheer willful capacity to force events favorably to America's historic interests and needs?
As I have chosen to phrase that question, the question answers itself. It is the GOP candidate currently at the top of the polls -- my former boss, Newt Gingrich.
But most Washington politicians don't see it that way. They see a conventional, close election -- not a bold, historic lunge by the voters to save the country. They suggest Mitt Romney may be better positioned to stitch together a safe campaign that noses out Obama by a point or two, or comes up short by a point or two. He might be that candidate.
Thus, Romney received the endorsement of the GOP political types -- congressmen and former congressmen. Now they are doubling down on their early bet and are out telling reporters that Gingrich was never much of a leader and never got much done.
Curious. I remember most of them enthusiastically following his leadership year after year as the Republican whip from 1989-1994. It was the most successful congressional opposition movement since Benjamin Disraeli formed the modern Conservative Party in Britain in the mid-19th century. And after the GOP took back the House for the first time in 40 years (and the Senate, too, by the way), Gingrich's four years as speaker proved to be the most productive, legislative congressional years since at least 1965 to 1967, and they were led by Lyndon B. Johnson from the White House. Working against -- and with -- Democratic President Bill Clinton, we passed into law most of the Contract with America, welfare reform, telecommunications reform (which ushered in the modern cell phone and Internet age), we had the first balanced budget since before the Vietnam War, we cut taxes and lowered unemployment to under 5 percent.
Just who the heck do all these wizard political pros think managed all that? It wasn't us clever staffers or many of the now grumbling GOP K Street crowd. We helped, but Gingrich led. I admit Gingrich's methods were not orthodox. He modified the seniority committee chairman system and picked the best members for the key posts. More than a few feathers got ruffled.
One of his key insights was to recognize that the two-dozen Northeastern moderates and liberals in the GOP caucus held the balance of power -- we didn't have 218 safe conservative votes in the House. Gingrich needed to avoid them playing off the GOP against the Democrats, which is what such a faction in any congressional party normally tries to do. Rather, he wanted them to feel fundamental loyalty and value in sticking with the GOP working majority. To do that, they had to get some of the provisions that they wanted in bills, often enough that they would stick with the conservatives on other issues.
This required a lot of maneuvering by Gingrich. Conservative members got frustrated that he did that. They called that erratic on his part. No, it was a necessary, calculated maneuver. He was actually shrewdly managing a precarious majority. If Gingrich hadn't kept the Northeastern liberals in the fold, very little would have been accomplished in those spectacular four years of legislating and leadership.
But when it came to fundamental conservative principles and the political strategies necessary to protect them, Gingrich saw the threats to them and never wavered. I was amused to see Gov. John Sununu, President George H. W. Bush's chief of staff and a current Romney supporter, criticize Gingrich last week.
I remember back in 1990, just after Gingrich had become the GOP whip, President Bush, urged on by Gov. Sununu, was about to break his campaign pledge and raise taxes, which eventually cost him his re-election bid against Bill Clinton. It was Gingrich who opposed it. In fact, Marlin Fitzwater (Bush and Sununu's loyal, shrewd White House press secretary -- and no fan of Gingrich's at the time) later wrote in his memoirs, "As it turned out, one of the few people on the Republican team who understood this trap (the Democrats demanded Bush raise taxes as the political price to reduce the deficit) was Newt Gingrich. ... Newt had ... recommended a different course of action: Abandon the budget negotiations (with the Democrats), keep the tax pledge, insist that Congress cut spending, and make a political fight out of it. It's clear now that we should have followed his advice."
Years later, when Gingrich was speaker, he followed his own advice. He refused to raise taxes, he made a political fight of spending cuts with Bill Clinton (paying a big price in personal smears run against him), but we won the historic balanced budgets.
In dangerous times, the safer choice for president is not the candidate who has always played it safe, nor is it the candidate who has not already faced and defeated adversity.
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Jeremy
Nice try, Tony.
But, how do you explain Newt and Nancy P. on the love seat? Newt and Al Sharpton on education reform? Newt's highly-profitable (at taxpayer expense) love affair with big government housing subsidies? Newt's infamous "right-wing social engineering" comment?
These were not attempts to placate "Northeastern moderates and liberals in the GOP caucus." These are not the actions of a conservative, or even a moderate. These are simply hairbrained, idiotic, ill-conceived, and indefensible, no matter how hard Newt's limited supply of friends try to convince us otherwise.
Posted December 14, 2011 at 10:42:50 AM
Richard Ryan
Thanks Tony. It`s good to have at least one writer on here who will champion someone with the qualities to be a leader rather than a northeastern milk sop such as Romney. One thing you failed to note however is the fact that AlGore invented the internet. I trust you not the fact that my tongue was firmly implanted in my cheek with the AlGoire statement. Keep up the common sense editorials. After watching the various Republican candidates over the last few months, I have settled on Newt Gingrich. I believe he has what it takes to be a tough leader.No one single candidate is going to be everything for everyone.
Richard Ryan
Lamar,Missouri - Birthplace of Harry S Truman
Posted December 14, 2011 at 12:10:32 PM
Richard Ryan
Sorry Tony. I failed to proof read my post. I should have said "I trust you noticed" instead of I trust you not. My visit to California isn`t helping my attention span.
Richard Ryan
Lamar,Missouri - Birthplace of Harry S Truman
Posted December 14, 2011 at 12:18:37 PM
Jim
Mr. Blankley,
Thank you for the calm commentary. I did not know that you worked for Mr. Gingrich, but this should give you a good handle on the man.
If what you say is true, then Mr. Gingrich is the best candidate the GOP has and we who oppose Mr. Obama, should, collectively, support Mr. Gingrich.
Posted December 14, 2011 at 2:53:07 PM
Damare
Tony, I happened to catch an interview you did awhile back on our local conservative radio station here in Central Wisconsin. Because of positive impact of that interview I've been following your commentary with interest here on the Patriot Post. Your analysis of Newt and your familiarity with him cements my support for his candidacy. I know there isn't a Jeremiah Wright or a Bill Ayers type in Newt's inner circle but I'd like to know more about those that have his ear and are likely to serve in his administration. I hope you are on his short list.
Posted December 14, 2011 at 3:24:30 PM
Jim Darlington
Thank you Tony. Carry the banner high. We need dearly to hear these views now.
I hope that the naysayers will take a deep breath after Newt wraps up the prize in a few actual primaries.
"In dangerous times, the safer choice for president is not the candidate who has always played it safe, nor is it the candidate who has not already faced and defeated adversity."
Amen to that!
The perfect is the enemy of the good.
Newt's the only one out there who can laugh at his imperfections. The rest are terrified they might be found with a hanging booger.
There is one who cares less about his own imperfections, but he, Ron Paul, is humorless. Though perhaps brilliant on matters of fiscal policy (not that I'd know exactly) he really thinks the Jews should just go away, and if we'd just toss their little country to them there A-Rabs we could all stay home and build lotsa pretty bridges.
While articles like this one give me some measure of hope and confidence in what great things we might yet do, I am feeling a dread that Ron Paul may prove to be the next election cycle's Ross Perot all over again.
Posted December 14, 2011 at 11:23:29 PM
Daylo
Jeremy,
I see people bringing up the couch scene with Nancy. I look at like this and you can correct me if I am wrong, but during that time frame all of the scientific evidence that this country has was pointing toward global warming. It was much later that it was discovered the books were being cooked on this particular subject. He is allowed to change his opinion when new evidence appears, just as you and I are allowed to change our minds when evidence is presented to contradict what we had previously believed.
Tony is right. Sure Newt ruffles feathers. I like ruffled feathers. They look better on politicians.
Posted December 17, 2011 at 1:21:25 AM