Contributors

Friday, May 20, 2011

Newt's Swan Song?

When New Gingrich first appeared on the national scene in the early Nineties I kind of liked him. He was a proponent of space exploration at a time when the nation on the whole was backing away from it, and that endeared him to me. He wasn't your typical nitwit concerned with only mundane political and economic matters: he could see a bigger picture.

But Newt Gingrich's personal life and career have been a long, sad story of deceit and distortion. He presented his first wife with divorce papers when she was in the hospital. He carried on a full-blown affair with an aide during the Clinton impeachment hearings. He engineered the Republican resurgence in the House during the Clinton administration, in part by providing careful advice on how best to smear your opponent in speeches and commercials.

Recently he justified cheating on his second wife by claiming that he was working so hard and so patriotically that he was practically forced to have sex with his aide. I suppose it was patriotism that forced him to help prop up the economy by buying between quarter and half a million dollars worth of jewelry from Tiffany's.

And then this twice-divorced weasel had the gall to convert to Catholicism. I would give almost any other person the benefit of the doubt on this one. But I know that this was just another cynical political ploy for Newt. The man seems to be a psychopath -- very intelligent, but without any shame or empathy for other human beings.

So it's rather ironic that a man who has spent his entire life lying, cheating and smearing should be taken down by telling the truth. According to this CBS News report, when Gingrich appeared on Meet the Press he said:
"I'm against Obamacare, which is imposing radical change, and I would be against a conservative imposing radical change," Gingrich told NBC's David Gregory. "I don't think right-wing social engineering is any more desirable than left-wing social engineering... I don't think imposing radical change from the right or the left is a very good way for a free society to operate."
The reaction from Republican quarters has been scathing. But Newt quickly returned to form, saying:
Any ad which quotes what I said Sunday is a falsehood. I have said publicly those words were inaccurate and unfortunate. And I'm prepared to stand up, when I make a mistake – and I'm going to on occasion – I want to stand up and share with the American people that was a mistake, because that way we can have an honest conversation.
In essence, Newt is saying, "I screwed up -- I told the truth." He wants a complete do-over, to take back everything he said, as if he could put another quarter in a video game and get three more lives.

Newt is a smart guy. That's why his particular brand of hypocrisy galls me more than most Republicans. When Michele Bachmann says something stupid and mendacious, it's because she doesn't really know what she's talking about.

But when Newt says something stupid and mendacious, he knows full well he's lying. You can see it in his face and his body language. He has that coy little smile, like a ten-year-old kid who thinks he just got away with shoplifting a copy of Playboy.

Why was Newt so uncharacteristically candid and honest on Meet the Press? Perhaps he thought he could attract the political center and the elderly, who have been reacting very negatively to the Ryan plan. Newt needs those voters desperately, because any evangelical family-values Republican could not possibly support this two- and three-timing cheater with a clear conscience.

Why was the Republican reaction to Newt's sudden burst of honesty so vitriolic? They know the Ryan plan for Medicare is a non-starter and will cost them big in the next election if they continue to push it . But like any organized criminal enterprise, the whole thing falls apart if there is no loyalty. As soon as one member of a gang starts spilling the beans, the whole thing falls apart. The Republican Party has been built on a scaffolding of lies for decades now (trickle-down economics, WMDs in Iraq, all regulation and all government is bad).

We can only hope that other Republicans will finally admit what Newt has really been all along, and that he will drop out of the race as precipitously as that other self-promoting, lying hypocrite, Donald Trump.

7 comments:

sw said...

yeah, you liberals give jailed murderers more benefit of the doubt when it comes to their faith than republicans.

rld said...

Democrats haven't proposed a budget in 2 years and Nikto is talking about Gingrich.

juris imprudent said...

Can you blame nikto or M - who can defend Pelosi and the Congressional Dems these days? Much better to talk about all the failings of Repubs rather than the failings of the party that you love. Almost reminds you of the battered wife - I just know he'll change, because he really loves me.

Mark Ward said...

Since Newt Gingrich just announced he was running for president, I think that makes him relevant. His original comments about social engineering were accurate and it shows what happens when you don't goose step with the budget/deficit Nazis these days.

Anonymous said...

...it shows what happens when you don't goose step with the budget/deficit Nazis these days.

This from the guy who is on record as saying the US shouldn't ever have to pay its debts, and everything will be fine.

Well at least you're consistent, I'll give you that.

Anonymous said...

So you agree with Newt that Right OR Left wing social engineering is wrong?

Anonymous said...

Funny how you give Newt grief for spending half a million dollars on jewelry... but unlike the rapist head of the IMF who was arrested in his $3000 a night hotel room, Newt was spending his own money.

I guess if he'd blown half a million in taxpayers' money on his luxuries you'd be praising him to the heavens, huh?

But like any organized criminal enterprise, the whole thing falls apart if there is no loyalty.

Which explains much about why you are so defensive of Democrat criminals... like the President.