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Bob Novak: Newt in 'One-Two'?
Townhall ^ | November 08, 2008 | Robert D. Novak

Posted on 11/08/2008 3:09:11 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet

In serious conversations among Republicans since their election debacle Tuesday, what name is mentioned most often as the Moses, or Reagan, who could lead them out of the wilderness before 40 years?

To the consternation of many Republicans, it is none other than Newt Gingrich, the former speaker of the House.

Gingrich is far from a unanimous or even a consensus choice to run for president in 2012, but there is a strong feeling in Republican ranks that he is the only leader of their party who has shown the skill and energy to attempt a comeback quickly.

Even one of his strongest supporters for president in 2012 admits it is a "very risky choice." But Republicans are in a desperate mood after the fiasco of John McCain's seemingly safe candidacy.

Republicans appear chastened by the failure of seeking moderate, independent and even Democratic votes. They are ready to try going back to the "old-time religion."

One Republican critic of Gingrich concedes that he has an "unlimited" energy flow and a constant stream of ideas, an important commodity in a party that appears to have run short of ideas during the Bush years. But there is widespread concern about what is described in the party as deep "character flaws" of Gingrich's that would be difficult to overcome in a presidential campaign.

Nobody in Republican ranks, however, matches Gingrich's dynamism.

The consternation among Republicans is concentrated on McCain's failure to capitalize on Democratic flaws.

It would be a rocky road for Gingrich to the nomination, much less the presidency, but there are no other serious candidates inside the party at the moment.

What's clear is that Republicans are unanimous in trying to avoid a repeat of what happened this year, and there is a surprising consensus that McCain was going in the wrong direction and was the wrong candidate.

What one GOP critic calls Gingrich's "unlimited energy supply" must be overcome by anyone opposing him. Several old Republican hands feel that Gingrich in 2012 is no more outrageous than Ronald Reagan was in 1980.

What is certain is that Gingrich has the desire and the will. He has a deep-seated ambition. He had not even settled into the House speaker's chair in 1995 when he confessed to me his presidential desires for 1996. That was not to be, but he never abandoned the personal dream and is ready to pursue it now.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections; US: Georgia
KEYWORDS: 16yearcycle; 2012; bho2008; bobnovak; election; elections; gingrich; gop; mccain; newt; newtgingrich; novak; obama; republicans
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Comments?
1 posted on 11/08/2008 3:09:12 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

no


2 posted on 11/08/2008 3:13:59 AM PST by gusopol3
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Forget it.

Palin


3 posted on 11/08/2008 3:14:48 AM PST by Nathan Zachary
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I would rather see Newt as RNC Chairman and lead the party in vision, recruitment of candidates and fund raising. He would be far more valuable there than as a candidate for office.


4 posted on 11/08/2008 3:15:40 AM PST by Old Retired Army Guy (tHE)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Newt sending out a trial balloon. Won't happen. Way too much baggage to be elected Nationally, especially after playing global-warming kissy face with Pelosi on that couch.. Considering the way that Governor Palin was treated, imagine what Obama, RINOs, and the MSM could do to him.

No, he just needs to focus on either the RNC or some other behind the scenes roll for himself and let the young gun Conservatives like Palin step up.

5 posted on 11/08/2008 3:15:49 AM PST by Virginia Ridgerunner (Sarah Palin is a smart missile aimed at the heart of the left!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I have no objections.


6 posted on 11/08/2008 3:16:00 AM PST by Tom_Busch (The big media IS the enemy)
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To: Tom_Busch

I do.


7 posted on 11/08/2008 3:16:33 AM PST by WilliamReading
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Retread pushed by an “over-the-hill” Democrat columnist. Why in the world would Republicans take advise from Novak?


8 posted on 11/08/2008 3:16:36 AM PST by kittymyrib
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To: Old Retired Army Guy

I second that motion.


9 posted on 11/08/2008 3:17:33 AM PST by G.Mason
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To: Nathan Zachary

Palin will move up in the party but really doubt she will ever run for Pres or VP again. She’s doing well as Gov...and she’s in love with Alaska. Let her get some gas and oil to the lower 48.


10 posted on 11/08/2008 3:18:36 AM PST by Sacajaweau (I'm planting corn...Have to feed my car...)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Newt has a few problems, but one thing is sure, he is right on MOST of the issues. He is also highly intellectual about the process, smart as heck, plugged in to the media, and able to make long term plans. He also can articulate very effectively. Neither Bush nor McLame was able to speak without sounding like a stumbling mess.

I, for one, would love to see him become more of a mover and shaker than he already is.

We need to be rid of RINOS like Romney and we need to be rid of them QUICK before we end up stuck with idiots like that. We need someone that understands conservatism and is willing to advocate for it, not someone like Romney who’ll flip and flop with every wind and will only mealy-mouth conservative principles as long as it benefits him.

I say we get Newt moving. Or, if not Newt, then someone like Mark Sanford. But GOD help us shed Romney and Huckabee and Giuliani.


11 posted on 11/08/2008 3:18:38 AM PST by Mobile Vulgus
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To: Mobile Vulgus

Oh, and I forgot to say, I don’t see him as being the party presidential nominee. He is better in planning stages.


12 posted on 11/08/2008 3:20:02 AM PST by Mobile Vulgus
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To: Mobile Vulgus

anybody that “melted” around Clinton.. is going to vaporize around Obama.


13 posted on 11/08/2008 3:20:48 AM PST by gusopol3
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Newt is compromised. #1, I always remember when he shook the hand of the one Slick Willy in front of some retirees; in a sense kissing his ring. Because Slick Willy Clinton had all the files on Republicans, including Gingrich himself, Newty said, “Let’s all just get along” and for #2 reason, Newty cheated on his wife.


14 posted on 11/08/2008 3:21:16 AM PST by rambo316 (God help America....)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Yes....Newt is a man of ideas....granted, some of them are crazy....but right now we need him and new ideas.

My theory is that when the GOP took Congress back in the nineties, and failed to remake Washington as promised, they began a long fall that ended last Tuesday.

When Republicans stand for conservative principles, and actively defend them, they win, when they don’t, they lose.

Ask that conservative Democrat John McCain.


15 posted on 11/08/2008 3:21:49 AM PST by kjo
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To: Old Retired Army Guy

What you say is very astute.
Newt is a perfect choice for RNC chairman. an ideologue like no other.
Problem for him running for pres is that he has made so very many enemies.


16 posted on 11/08/2008 3:22:51 AM PST by Joe Boucher (An enemy of Islam)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Here is a compilation of selected posts concerning Newt Gingrich which I repeat here because it shows that we were considering him for this post[for chairman of the Republican national committee]as long as two years ago. Incidentally I am proud of my predictions concerning the 2008 election made two years in advance -and I might add that I am as distressed as I am proud that they were so dreadfully proved out.

The next to last post in which he tears up the Bush administration on a Sunday talk show demonstrates that, if Newt gets the Republican National Committee he would not shrink from dressing down the Rinos.

Finally, this post from just the other day is included to demonstrate that we are not unmindful of Newt's biography.

Here are the posts:

The problem I think is that Newt will never get a nod from George Bush and therefore he will not be named chairman of the RNC which is a very great pity. I have long thought that Bush, instead of mediocrities like Governor Ridge and his successor, should have made Gingrich czar of Homeland security. Had Bush done so, we almost certainly would have avoided the catastrophic aftermath of Katrina and its consequences at the polls in November.

But Gingrich is not Bush's kind of man. Gingrich is not button-down. Gingrich is a team leader more than a team player and Bush, if nothing else, wants conformity on his team. Maybe this is what led us to the disaster in Iraq. In any event, Bush will not tolerate Gingrich in any position where he can make policy. So in order to have influence, Newt is left with making a run at the White House in 08. In this respect the Republican establishment's attitude towards Gingrich resembles that of British Conservatives toward Churchill between the wars. Indeed, in many ways including his intellectual candlepower, his prodigious output of writings, and his incendiary tendency to piss off friend and foe alike, Gingrich resembles Churchill. How nice it would be if the Republican Party could send out a message to its ships at sea, "Newt is back." If the nation finds itself in a fix resembling that of Britain in 1939, after a strike on the homeland for example, such a message might have to be sent.

Meanwhile, we really need Newt to play a bad cop to Bush's good cop for the next two years. Newt can attack, attack, attack, and unmask the lunacy of the coming Pillosi/Reed Congress. Any hope that Bush will even attempt to do this is forlorn.

The really depressing thought is that the only ball carrier we have on our team now is George Bush. We need somebody in some pulpit, bully or otherwise, who can at least fashion a coherent sentence if we are not to be swamped in 08.

And here:

While Bush is preoccupied with his historical legacy which is all wrapped up with and the war in Iraq, the Republican Party must be concerned, literally, with its own survival as a viable national party. In the 2008 election the odds are against us: the 2006 election demonstrated that the Democrats are capable of raiding deep into our territory and we can make no gains anywhere in the blue states. We will be conducting a national election after having held office for eight years. The demographics are increasingly against us as unchecked immigration changes the coloration of America and in America all politics are racial, not local. From the top of the ticket on down, Republicans will face a relentless media tsunami which will require a whole new set of tactics to counter. Finally the war in Iraq is a political disaster which may shatter our election hopes across-the-board and leave the party holding not much more than the old Confederacy. The last election demonstrated that the Republican hold on Missouri, Tennessee, Virginia (gasp, the Old Dominion!), Ohio, and even Florida are in grave jeopardy and with the loss of almost any one of these states we cannot have the presidency.

Enter Newt Gingrich who I believe sees the handwriting on the wall in the general terms which I have just set down. Newt knows the only possible chance Republicans have is to revert to conservative principles and to do so while changing the subject away from Iraq, away from health care, in short, away from the entire "progressive" Democrat agenda and onto a whole new way of seeing the world. We simply cannot win the election if it is fought over Iraq and healthcare as the establishment media will try to achieve as it sets the agenda. Gingrich is possessed of the kind of mind which can change the whole agenda but he is not the right messenger.

And finally, along the same lines, here:

Gingrich has nearly as much downside as Hillary but 10 times the upside. Historically, our closest article to Winston Churchill was probably Theodore Roosevelt. But among the current crop of politicians in America, the closest to Winston Churchill is clearly Newt Gingrich. He has not been utilized by the Bush administration for the same reasons that Winston Churchill was not utilized during the years of appeasement in Great Britain-neither one was a team player, both were brilliant, and both had a pyrotechnic ability to piss people off.

The Bush administration never embraced Gingrich, not because he is radioactive, but because he is not button-down. Can you imagine the last election if Newt Gingrich had been chairman of the Republican National Committee? Can you imagine the aftermath of Katrina if Newt Gingrich had been ram rodding Homeland Security? We might still have the House and Senate.

There was wide scope to let play the genius of Newt Gingrich in this administration but the country club Republicans would not have it. Karl Rove would rather pretend to be a real conservative than to actually set one loose inside the harem.

Newt Gingrich cannot be our nominee, we all know that, but he can save the party.

WASHINGTON - The following is a partial transcript of the June 3, 2007, edition of "FOX News Sunday With Chris Wallace":

.................................................

WALLACE: Let's start with your interview in The New Yorker magazine this week. And I want to quote from it at length. Let's put it up. "Newt Gingrich is one of those who fear that Republicans have been branded with the label of incompetence. He says that the Bush administration has become a Republican version of the Jimmy Carter presidency when nothing seemed to go right."

And later, there's this. "Not since Watergate," Gingrich said, "has the Republican Party been in such desperate shape. Let me be clear: 28 percent approval of the president, losing every closely contested Senate seat except one, every one that involved an incumbent - that's a collapse."

Jimmy Carter? Watergate? Collapse? Are things really that bad?

GINGRICH: Well, let me say, first of all, nothing that I said in The New Yorker disagrees with things I said as early as December of '03 when I talked about having gone off the cliff in Iraq, things I said all through '04 in trying to get the Bush campaign team to shift from attacking Kerry personally to forcing a genuine choice over values and policies, to concerns I raised in December of '04, January and February of '05, about how they were approaching Social Security reform, through what happened at Katrina.

I mean, so what I said in The New Yorker may be compressed, but in fact, it is things that for the last three years I've talked - I've warned all last year that I suspected we were drifting into a catastrophic defeat. I don't see any other way to read '06 except it was a defeat.

And if we don't have a serious, open discussion of where we are, I don't see how we're going to change.

............................................

You go through this list. You say to yourself this government - I mean, not just the president. This is not about the presidency. The government is not functioning. It's not getting the job done.

WALLACE: But you compare George W. Bush to Jimmy Carter, which, as you well know, is fighting words among Republicans.

GINGRICH: Look, the functional effect in public opinion is about the same. Now, Republicans need to confront this reality.

If you were at 28 percent, 29 percent, 30 percent approval, and if things aren't working, and now you have a fight which splits your own party - and this immigration fight goes to the core of where we are.

If you read Peggy Noonan's column last Friday, which was devastating - and I think it resonates with where the base of this party is right now. The base of this party is looking up going, "What are we in the middle of - why are we ramming through an omnibus Teddy Kennedy bill, and attacking Republicans who criticize it, and calling us," for example, as one senator did, "bigots, when all we're saying is this government couldn't possibly implement this bill?"

There's no evidence at all that this government is capable of executing this.

...........................................

In 1988, no one running for president on the Republican nomination tried to differentiate themselves from Ronald Reagan.

There's a lesson there. Ronald Reagan was enormously popular. The fact is that - forget presidential politics. We as a country over the next 1.5 years have to do dramatically better.

..........................................

WALLACE: Basically, what do you think is wrong with George W. Bush?

GINGRICH: Look, I think that he means very, very well. I think he's very, very sincere. But I don't think that he drives implementation and looks at the reality in which he's trying to implement things.

And I think that's why you ended up with, "Brownie, you're doing a great job," when it was obvious to the entire country at Katrina that the Federal Emergency Management Agency had collapsed and was not capable of doing any job at that point.

And I think as a result, the administration has very, very high goals - Democracy throughout the Middle East - and very weak bureaucratic support for those goals, and the result is an enormous mismatch in just sheer implementation.

And this is, in the end, a practical country. Americans want their government to work.

WALLACE: You say that this president doesn't solve anything.

GINGRICH: He doesn't methodically insist on changing things. I mean, again, take the example last week. If somebody with tuberculosis, who is actually in the computer system, can't be stopped at the border; if you have three terrorists in New Jersey who have been here illegally for 23 years - and the Senate, by the way, voted to sanction cities and counties not asking if you're illegal, an amendment to this - what I think is an absolute disaster of immigration legislation - you have to look at that and say, "We're not serious."

............................................

GINGRICH: Well, the bill explicitly grandfathers in somewhere between 10 million and 20 million people. We don't know the number because the government has no idea how many there are - again, an example of incompetence.

..............................................

And it's simply, I think, disingenuous. I'm assuming that the president and his staff understand what this bill does. And if they do, what the president said is disingenuous.

-------------------------------------

GINGRICH: No, I don't think you need to run - in fact, I don't think you should run against President Bush. I think most of his major decisions have been very sincere, and most of them are decisions the average American actually would endorse.

I think what you do have to do is run in favor of radically changing Washington and radically changing government. And I think that all you have to do is look at the examples I've given you today where the government simply fails.

............................................

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,277454,00.html

GOP's conservatives strain for leadership

Posted by nathanbedford to freemike; Mad_Tom_Rackham; Wombat101

On News/Activism 02/04/2007 12:00:31 AM PST • 27 of 92

"We have to act independently of the White House. You do not serve the president, you serve with the president," Mr. Gingrich said, according to a Republican present at the dinner, which was closed to the press.

"Newt blew the group away," said another Republican who attended the dinner. "He is on such a different intellectual plane. He warned that the conference moves too slow and the RSC should be outmaneuvering the conference. He also said that the Republicans should neither blame nor support President Bush on issues that divide the Republicans from their base."

Gingrich is merely recognizing the reality of the 2004 election. That's right, the 2004 election in which sophisticated Republican legislators knew meant the beginning of the parting of the ways between them and George Bush. The 2006 election merely made plain to all that the Republican Party, if it is to survive, must publicly depart from George Bush and must wipe its fingerprints off Iraq.

This is not to say that an open breach with Bush is to be sought or even desired but it is to say that we ought to recognize that our interests diverge from those of the President. He is concentrating on a failed policy in Iraq which will entirely determine his historical legacy. Today he addressed the Democrat National Committee annual winter meeting! Bush will do whatever it takes to survive and that clearly means getting into bed with the Democrats. We already know he is eager to do so on the issue of immigration. We already know that he is quite willing to endorse any level of spending. Why do we not believe that we are witnessing the morphing of George Bush just as we have seen the morphing of Arnold Schwarzenegger after his rebuke at the polls?

While Bush is preoccupied with his historical legacy which is all wrapped up with and the war in Iraq, the Republican Party must be concerned, literally, with its own survival as a viable national party. In the 2008 election the odds are against us: the 2006 election demonstrated that the Democrats are capable of raiding deep into our territory and we can make no gains anywhere in the blue states. We will be conducting a national election after having held office for eight years. The demographics are increasingly against us as unchecked immigration changes the coloration of America and in America all politics are racial, not local. From the top of the ticket on down, Republicans will face a relentless media tsunami which will require a whole new set of tactics to counter. Finally the war in Iraq is a political disaster which may shatter our election hopes across-the-board and leave the party holding not much more than the old Confederacy. The last election demonstrated that the Republican hold on Missouri, Tennessee, Virginia (gasp, the Old Dominion!), Ohio, and even Florida are in grave jeopardy and with the loss of almost any one of these states we cannot have the presidency.

Enter Newt Gingrich who I believe sees the handwriting on the wall in the general terms which I have just set down. Newt knows the only possible chance Republicans have is to revert to conservative principles and to do so while changing the subject away from Iraq, away from health care, in short, away from the entire "progressive" Democrat agenda and onto a whole new way of seeing the world. We simply cannot win the election if it is fought over Iraq and healthcare as the establishment media will try to achieve as it sets the agenda. Gingrich is possessed of the kind of mind which can change the whole agenda but he is not the right messenger.

............................................................................................................................

And that figure is Newt Gingrich. However, he too has disqualified himself by virtue of his personal biography and he cannot get support of the rank and file for elected office. But he is a font of ideas at a time when the Republican Party is fresh out of any new ideas. We desperately need his intellectual energy. Do not forget that of all of the potential leaders of the party mentioned so far only one has demonstrated the capacity to organize a guerrilla against entrenched Democrat majorities and lead the party to victory and into majority status. Do not fail to remember that he did that in the teeth of resistance from the Rockefeller wing of the party. Gingrich can make a speech and he can marshal arguments and he can skewer Democrats without raising a sweat. Gingrich could also head the national party but I think there would be ill considered but widespread resistance to any move he might make in that direction. We must not be foolish and fail to somehow take advantage of Gingrich's political genius.


17 posted on 11/08/2008 3:23:11 AM PST by nathanbedford ("Attack, repeat attack!" Bull Halsey)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Newt needs to first become RNC chairman.
It is the perfect place for him.

He could reconstitute the Republican party from the chairmanship, advance intellectual conservatism, raise his visibility, and remain fairly insulated. If Howard Dean can do it, then Newt certainly can.

The RNC would be a good proving ground for him, and if he is particularly successful and popular, he could use it as a launch pad to win the GOP nomination. Newt needs some kind of position to make himself politically relevant again, and to nurture a revival.


18 posted on 11/08/2008 3:25:30 AM PST by counterpunch ( Mike Pence for House Minority Leader. Now!)
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To: All

The Newtster needs to take over the RNC. Palin needs to take the Senate seat soon to be vacated by brother Stevens. Romney has to change hearts and minds about being a (gasp!) Mormon. The GOP has to purge some people, as Rush suggests, who drove GOP to Dem-lite. But at the same time they should give Lieberman a nice office so he’ll vote with GOP on judges and other things needing filibustered.
The 2012 primary would be Jindal vs Romney vs Palin (we don’t need 6-10 candidates tearing each other apart so media ends up picking out nominee).


19 posted on 11/08/2008 3:26:10 AM PST by shalom aleichem
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Look guys, I am all for Jindal and Palin. But right now we need a proven guy who can lead the party... and thats Newt


20 posted on 11/08/2008 3:26:26 AM PST by babubabu
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