Newt's Ego of Historic Proportions
Every few years, heinous Democratic policies -- abortion, gay marriage, affirmative action, Hillarycare, Obamacare, to name a few -- compel previously uninvolved Americans to leap into politics.
This is great, except for two things: (1) We have to get heinous Democratic policies first; and (2) newcomers have short memories, sometimes no memories at all.
The second point is the only possible explanation for why some conservatives seem to view Newt Gingrich as the anti-Establishment outsider who will shake up Washington.
Newly active right-wingers would do well to spend a little more time quietly reading up on Newt's political career, and a little less time shaking their fists at some imaginary "Establishment" -- which now apparently includes Michael Savage, Mark Steyn, Christine O'Donnell, Ramesh Ponnuru, Glenn Beck and me, all of whom oppose Newt's candidacy. (By the way, guys, are we car-pooling to the next Trilateral Commission meeting? I have a thing at the World Bank that same day.)
Only then will they realize that Gingrich would be a disaster for everything they believe in.
His history of lurching from guru to guru, fad to fad and wacky pronouncement to wacky pronouncement has produced few real gains -- except for Gingrich's personal bank account.
Despite Gingrich's constant claim that he -- hand in hand with Ronald Reagan -- lassoed big government and won the Cold War, this is delusional. Newt was a freshman House member when Reagan was elected president, no more important than Rep. Bill Green, R-N.Y., who was also elected to the House in 1978.
But Gingrich recently told Sean Hannity, "I helped Ronald Reagan and Jack Kemp develop supply-side economics ..."
In Ronald Reagan's autobiography, "An American Life," he writes extensively about supply-side economics. He cites Jack Kemp several times. He never mentions Newt Gingrich.
(However, in Reagan's massive 784-page diary, Newt's name does come up -- once. On Jan. 3, 1983, Reagan wrote that he met with "a group of young Repub Congressmen," and says that one of them, "Newt Gingrich," proposed freezing federal spending at 1983 levels, which Reagan rejected out of hand because it would "cripple our defense program.")
I licked stamps for Reagan mailings when I was in high school. I didn't formulate supply-side economics or win the Cold War.
Gingrich is credited -- mostly by himself -- for single-handedly engineering the 1994 Republican takeover of Congress.
Actually, I think Clinton deserves the lion's share of the credit for that one. In November 1994, a majority of Americans didn't know Newt's name; they voted Republican in reaction to two years of Clinton's liberal policies.
The current speaker of the House, John Boehner, presided over a bigger Republican victory last November, handing Democrats the largest single-party loss in the House since 1938. (Again, all glory to Obama for that one.) I don't see Boehner going around comparing himself to Winston Churchill or proposing that we make him president.
Nor, by the way, does Boehner seem "scary" or "unlikable" -- which is how half to a majority of Americans described Gingrich after one year of seeing him as speaker.
Boehner is also not likely to be reprimanded by the House Ethics Committee and fined $300,000, as Gingrich was his second term as speaker. Nor, as far as we know, is he sleeping with any of his female staffers in the middle of a sex scandal involving the White House, as Gingrich -- well, you know.
Contrary to Gingrich's boast, "I balanced the budget for four straight years," he was one of 535 members of Congress -- he wasn't even a senator, who don't rule by simple majority vote like House members do.
Balancing the budget required the votes of hundreds of representatives and senators -- many of whom did not come from safe Republican districts like Gingrich's -- as well as the acquiescence of President Clinton.
His fellow House Republicans apparently did not consider Newt crucial to victory, inasmuch as they forced him out in 1999, after he had served just two terms as speaker.
The man who obsessively compares himself to Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and Winston Churchill responded to his ouster as speaker by denouncing disgruntled Republicans as "cannibals," and announcing his retirement because, if he stayed in Congress, "it would just overshadow whoever my successor is."
(I gather Ron Paul is doing well, since Newt is suddenly claiming that in the '90s, he single-handedly invented, developed and passed Ron Paul.)
Before angry rebels foist another Sharron Angle on the national party and turn a likely win into a landslide defeat, consider that Gingrich is almost certainly unelectable based solely on his having cheated on and divorced two wives.
This isn't just a personal moral position. You may call it a historical fact.
Despite regular assurances from The New York Times that Americans don't mind divorced presidents anymore -- why, look at how well Bob Dole, John McCain and John Kerry did! -- only one president in the nation's history has been divorced: Ronald Reagan. And his first wife left him, as was well-documented in Hollywood gossip sheets.
Reagan also didn't commit adultery ever, much less twice, much less once in the middle of impeaching a Democratic president for perjuring himself about an adulterous affair.
(For close Newt watchers, Reagan also didn't write a doctoral dissertation criticizing Christian missionaries who discouraged adultery in the Congo on the grounds that adultery was "the essence of tribal stability." Guess who did?)
The good news, right-wingers, is that if you read up on Gingrich's history pre-November 2011 -- even just as far back as a couple of years ago when he was cutting global warming ads with Nancy Pelosi, lobbying for embryonic stem cell research, or taking a $1.6 million payoff from Freddie Mac -- you won't be so despondent about divorce and adultery keeping this particular adulterer out of the White House.
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Comments
We get it Ann, you don't like
Submitted by motherbelt on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 8:49pm.
We get it Ann, you don't like Gingrich.
BTW, it was interesting the other night listening to you try to explain away your going from "If Chris Christie doesn't run, Mitt Romney will be the nominee and we will lose" to supporting Mitt Romney now.
And no, your explanation wasn't really one.
You said Romney was the most conservative and had the ability to win in a state like Massachusetts. Those two statements are mutually exclusive.
Love hurts
Submitted by MidAmerica on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 8:59pm.
Get under cover boys we are taking friendly fire!!!!
Ms Coulter*
Submitted by cajun2 on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:05pm.
I generally like your articles and your assessments of DC but I humbly ask that you concentrate on the blind libs and independents who will be voting for Obama again. So far there is only one dem in the picture, you know the one with all the money. Let republicans thin the herd themselves while you expose the real Obama.
Thank You,
Respectfully,
Cajun2
Amen, cajun!
Submitted by motherbelt on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:19pm.
For someone who supposedly admired Ronald Reagan, she certainly has no use for his 11th commandment.
She may be right, but there is no shortage of Democrats who will be willing to say everything she has said. Does she have to make their case for them?
Caution motherbelt*
Submitted by cajun2 on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:23pm.
There are some agnostics and atheists on board that seem it is their ordained duty to inform us of how stupid we are to believe in a higher power.
Keep using that AMEN and they may think you just genuflected before the PERFECTION that is known as Cajun2
Amen:
Submitted by motherbelt on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:30pm.
—used to express solemn ratification (as of an expression of faith) or hearty approval (as of an assertion)
Not necessarily involving a higher power.
So don't be having delusions of grandeur ;-)
MB*
Submitted by cajun2 on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:34pm.
de-lu-sion: a false belief
Nope, not me...;-)
I love you Gal's
Submitted by Boudin on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 2:00am.
And think you are absolutely Right. Hoping Ann will pardon me
amen
Submitted by m1xram on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 10:05pm.
Amen is translated as "truly". Learned that in The Truth Project.
The opposite of Left is Freedom.
bigger fish to fry
Submitted by MidAmerica on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:02pm.
If a loved one is deathly sick do we really care whether the doctor his faithful to his wife?
Yes, I wouldn't mind if Dr.
Submitted by Ken Shepherd on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:07pm.
Yes, I wouldn't mind if Dr. Greg House were my physician. Not sure he'd have the character requisite for the highest executive office in the land, though.
With Obama as prez, Biden next in line, and---
Submitted by matthewdean on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:16pm.
then Pelosi; we had "characters", all right.
Not so sure about 'character' being in evidence, period, let alone as a requisite.
MD
the doctor will see you now
Submitted by MidAmerica on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:22pm.
I've seen very little of that show but i've never wished he was my doctor. He's got the eyes of a man who's been living under an alias for the last twenty years ever since he murdered his brother-in-law.
House would never had made it
Submitted by Ken Shepherd on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 10:48pm.
House would never had made it under ObamaCare. Would have been pushed into clinical work rather than diagnosing perplexing medical mysteries.
Man Oh Man Mid, I'm scared to ever read Ann again
Submitted by upcountrywater on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:26pm.
Have you noticed a total absence of any lefty attacks on Mormonism...Really Zip Zero Nadda
The MSM Gauntlet awaits
What I thought interesting in 08, was the polygamist group in Texas, getting busted after Mitt got booted by McCain...ahhh timing.
There is an October before the elections right, probably hire Spielberg to get it looking authentic.
You Didn't Build That.
The Three Faces of Eve
Submitted by MidAmerica on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:37pm.
It's like Ann has gone all Peggy Noonan on us.
Think...
Submitted by Tenebrous on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 1:36am.
If a loved one is sick, do you dare trust someone that his own wife wouldn't trust? Newt is more than a robot doctor; he is a man who will make 1000 moral decisions in running the country. I care very much about his character, because history has shown that men of low character make poor presidents; not only that, but morality infuses every decision because it is constantly in the mind. If Newt cheated on his wife, it's because he thought he wouldn't get caught. What else does he think he won't get caught doing? What other corners will he cut?
Oh, I know. You just lurve a guy who thinks Dede Scozzafala (that left-of-the-Democrat candidate for NY 23) is a great Republican, don't ya?
Newt's judgment sucks and so does yours. Finis.
Visions and Principles blog
Newt has one overwhelming virtue.
Submitted by NL207 on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 1:42am.
He is not Mitt Romney.
Actually 2
Submitted by Boudin on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 1:46am.
He aint Paul either
Ron Paul's foreign policy platform
Submitted by NL207 on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 1:52am.
borders on insanity.
think about these two statements
Submitted by MidAmerica on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:14pm.
The second point is the only possible explanation for why some conservatives seem to view Newt Gingrich as the anti-Establishment outsider who will shake up Washington.
Newly active right-wingers would do well to spend a little more time quietly reading up on Newt's political career, and a little less time shaking their fists at some imaginary "Establishment" -- which now apparently includes Michael Savage, Mark Steyn, Christine O'Donnell, Ramesh Ponnuru, Glenn Beck and me, all of whom oppose Newt's candidacy.
Newt isn't even the nominee and already he is shaking up Washington.
bottom line....
Submitted by MidAmerica on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 9:46pm.
Ann can't make the case for Mitt unless Newt is no longer standing next to him.
or.... Mitt is the perfect candidate if he is the only candidate.
Ann, for you to point out
Submitted by nixon on Thu, 12/22/2011 - 10:37pm.
Ann, for you to point out someone as having an ego is hypocritical.
Ann has stolen the neos' goat
Submitted by lrgon on Fri, 12/23/2011 - 1:38am.
In a previous column Ann Coulter exposed Mr. Gingrich for endorsing the "death of the Constitution" by his endorsement of Alvin Toffler, the socialist author that called for an end to our beloved Constitution. Toffler showed his Constitution hating colors in a book titled The Third Wave.
http://m.newsbusters.org/blogs/ann-coulter/2011/12/08/newt-presents-fres...
In this screed the "futurist" Toffler aimed his socialism at the Founders of this great nation in which he lambasted them and their venerable Constitution. All that was ok with Mr. Gingrich who wrote the foreward to one of the Toffler books.
In Gingrich's world FDR is a hero and loves FDR's domestic policies. FDR was the god of socialism of the 20th century.
With Mr. Gingrich, neos will have their Hobson's choice with socialist candidate A, or, socialist candidate B. Typical "choices" that neocons always leave the electorate to pick from. No Thanks~!
Thanks Ms. Coulter for your assessment of the gingrich that stole the GOP.
Stop the Witch Hunt Already
Submitted by Tenebrous on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 1:30am.
Yes, yes, we know that those cwaaazy neocons (read "Jews") are hanging out everywhere corrupting the republic. Spare me, ok?
Visions and Principles blog
Thank you Ann
Submitted by shawn. on Fri, 12/23/2011 - 10:44am.
its nice to hear somebody voice their displeasure of somebody they do not support even if it their own party
You have just joined the NB club that already consist of Karl Rove and Brent Bozell. They are not allowed to criticize fellow conservatives because that somehow gives comfort to the liberals
Shawn, Do You Remember Anything Prior to Last Week?
Submitted by Tenebrous on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 1:28am.
Seriously, do you? There are plenty of people who don't like Gingrich, and have disliked him since the sofa sessions with Pelosi, and their displeasure was cemented with the Dede Scozzafala (sp) imbroglio. Hannity has criticized crazy man Ron Paul, and the list goes on. You should work on your memory.
Visions and Principles blog
The photo matches the name
Submitted by John Francroix Jr on Fri, 12/23/2011 - 11:04am.
But Im still not certain Coulter really wrote this. Never the less, if Newt becomes our next president conservatives will be making excuses for decades to come. See: Bush, George W.
Liberal troll - See:---
Submitted by matthewdean on Fri, 12/23/2011 - 8:03pm.
John Francroix Jr.
MD
Uh oh..I sure hope Ann doesn't get "Scarboroughed" for this
Submitted by Jer on Fri, 12/23/2011 - 8:10pm.
stunning heresy.
Jer
Why Would She?
Submitted by Tenebrous on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 1:25am.
If you can't figure out how the two can't be compared, keep trying until you do. I know you come to NB so that other people can do your thinking for you, but honestly, it's tiresome. You really should exercise that thing above your shoulders sometime.
Seriously, Jer. Reading your illogical posts is like trying to decode a doctoral thesis written by a schizophrenic. You type word salad and amuse yourself with it.
Visions and Principles blog
Sorry to disappoint, Tenebrous...
Submitted by Jer on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 4:04am.
But I am more than adequately amused simply by reading the laughable drivel you continue to post having convinced yourself it is actually serious commentary.
When you're confounded by an easily comprehended thirteen-word post, it may be time to move on to some of the myriad websites designed for middle schoolers.
Jer