Boy this is truly fascinating. All of this support for Mr. Gingrich in spite of his failed marriages, accusations believed by millions of American women. This is great. Because today I saw on the news Al Sharpton, Newt Gingrich and Mayor Bloomberg speaking together in support of providing educational support for all American children. As far as I know Conservatives only want excellent education for all Americans if they can be in control of all American children.
They oppose Public Education because the very definition of Public Education allows all children, not the least subject to Conservative ideology. Public Education simply means educate all America children and that is a relatively new idea for Conservatives. They want to control who gets excellent educations by pricing the poor out of modernized schools. They want poor Americans to subject their children to the prices and rules of all Americans, realizing that all children cannot afford vouchers, or even part of the price of a voucher.
I think Newt Gingrich appearance with the hated Black American Al Sharpton reveals Mr. Gingrich intellect. He realizes that as long as Conservatives oppose every political goal that minorities, they will be rewarded with political relevance. I hope Gingrich is smart enough to realize that most Blacks do not care what he says or any other Conservative Republican. When Conservative Republicans start making speeches supporting goals minorities want to be enacted, we may consider taking him seriously.
Gingrich seems to think that Southern Conservative Republicans actual care about winning elections more than complaining, criticizing and denigrating American minorities. Kudos to Gingrich, but he is wrong if he thinks there is even one Southern Conservative Republican that has a heritage of oppressing Blacks since the founding of this nation; he is in for a big surprise. Nothing will make White Supremacists stop believing they are superior to all Blacks. They have sacrificed many lives in support of their beliefs. Newt has no chance of coercing for any reason for Southern Whites to see minorities and treat other people as the Lord said to.
Gingrich: It’s Not About The Base
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Newt Gingrich retired from government in 1999, but with his party in disarray, he's back to help sort through the GOP's conflicting opinions on how to rebuild. Gingrich, who now heads the conservative think tank American Solutions, has started talking to gain support for his own broad vision, which is to include more people by building new party ideas from the bottom, rather than the top. If done right, he thinks there's no reason the Republicans can't regain control of Congress as soon as 2010. NEWSWEEK's Eleanor Clift asked Gingrich what those new ideas might be, and where the party is headed. Excerpts:
NEWSWEEK: Where does the party go from here?
Newt Gingrich: I think, first of all, the fact is that we have every probability of reviving pretty dramatically. I've lived through '64, '74 and '92. In '64 we were beaten so badly people talked about whether the party had a future. By '66, Lyndon Johnson had gone so far to the left and spilt the Democratic Party and we gained 47 House seats and picked up a bunch of governorships and Senate seats. Since 1968 you have not elected an overt liberal in 40 years. In '74 to '76, we had Watergate and a bad recession and then a Reagan-Ford nomination fight. In that period, only 17 percent of the country identified itself as Republican and yet four years later, Reagan won a smashing victory and Carter collapsed under a bad economy. In '92, Bush, having thrown away the fiscal conservatives by raising taxes, lost the three-way race and, two years later, we gained the House for the first time in 40 years and kept it. I know how fast the country can switch.
How do you instigate that switch?
The GOP has two key obligations. First to develop better solutions, not to become the opposition party, but the party that develops better solutions than the other team. Two, the Republican Party should think about being inclusive rather than outreach.
What's the difference?
The difference is when I make a decision, I call you to sell you on it. That's outreach. Inclusion is when I ask you to come to the meeting. You and I together think through a policy that you would like.
We seem to have come from a period when cultural ideas were dominant. But maybe with the state of the economy, it seems like maybe more hard ideas than soft ideas are needed.
I wouldn't call them soft or hard ideas. We want to find a way to offer dramatically better solutions. The key focus has to be the economy. But this is an administration that's going to drive all sorts of forces back together. They remind me of the worst of Carter and the worst of Clinton. In the sense that Carter totally mismanaged the economy, they are in the process of fundamentally mismanaging the economy. Having won the fight over the stimulus package, it's going to be very hard to argue that this isn't their economy.
But isn't it a little early to say they've mismanaged the economy.
Sure, but I'm giving you my take.
I see. The polls still show that Obama is quite popular and that his ideas have support.
First of all, 77 percent of the country is against giving any more money to GM. My guess is that 80 percent would be against an energy-tax increase. I don't know that I could agree with you that his proposals are so popular. And second, he is about as popular today as George W. Bush was at this stage in his presidency. And he's less popular than Jimmy Carter was in his presidency.
In terms of the political figures, who can help lead the party out of the wilderness. I presume you see a role for yourself. Anybody else out there?
Oh sure. I look at Bobby Jindal, Sarah Palin, Mark Sanford, Tim Pawlenty, among governors. In the House, under John Boehner, there's a whole collection of people, starting with Eric Cantor ... Mike Pence ... and Pete Sessions. There are a lot of bright people who represent the future of the party.
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