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Gingrich Gets Through Debate Unscathed While Romney Doesn’t


If Saturday night’s Republican presidential debate in Des Moines, Iowa is remembered for anything, it may be for that moment where Mitt Romney made what seemed to many a substantial blunder by offering to wager Texas Gov. Rick Perry $10,000 on whether the governor had his facts right about Romney’s record.

For a superwealthy candidate who has had problems connecting with regular voters, it seemed an ill-advised move, reinforcing his image as a tone-deaf rich guy lacking the common touch. And it didn’t help that it came during a time of severe economic pain for many of Americans, employed or not.

Time will tell, however, just how harmful that gaffe will be to Romney’s chances to be his party’s nominee.

It certainly didn’t help him accomplish what had to be his main goals going into the evening which were: slow Newt Gingrich’s momentum, make no memorable mistakes and persuade Republican voters that he was the safer, more electable GOP choice than the former speaker to put up against President Obama.

Unlike Romney, Gingrich, the frontrunner in national and many state polls, didn’t make any obvious errors. He also weathered the criticisms that came his way because of his current role as pace-setter in the polls. All in all, it was a solid performance for Gingrich who showed his satisfaction with how the evening was going at a few points by winking to someone in the audience, presumably Callista, wife number three.

Speaking of which, Gingrich practically sailed through what was potentially the most challenging part of the debate for him, when the question arose as to whether a candidate’s marital fidelity was an important consideration for voters in choosing a president.

Gingrich said it was and largely defused the issue by acknowledging that he had made mistakes and had asked God “for forgiveness. I’ve had to seek reconciliation.”

He added:

“But I’m also a 68-year-old grandfather. And I think people have to measure who I am now and whether I’m a person they can trust. And all I can tell you is that, you know, I am– delighted at the way people have been willing to look at who I am, to look at what my record has been, and the amount of support we’re getting from the American people and from all across the State of Iowa, the number of people who have supported– the candidacy of real change and a record of real change.”

Besides his past marriages, Gingrich had to fend off flak from Romney and the other candidates including Rep. Ron Paul of Texas and Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota on a number of fronts.

To name just a few, the former House speaker was attacked for his past support for individual health care mandates, his acceptance of $1.6 million from Freddie Mac to be a “strategic adviser” and some of his more out-of-the-box ideas, like setting up colonies on the moon to mine minerals.

But on all those charges and more Gingrich, long one of the glibbest politicians around, showed himself skilled at thinking on his feet, a master at deflecting attacks.

Gingrich’s deftness at the rhetorical thrust and parry shone through when Romney attacked him for a recent controversial comment about Palestinians in which Gingrich called them an “invented people.”

Romney, trying to paint Gingrich as too reckless to be the GOP presidential nominee, let alone president, said:

“… Before I made a statement of that nature, I’d get on the phone to my friend Bibi Netanyahu and say, “Would it help if I said this? What would you like me to do? Let’s work together, because we’re partners.” I’m not a bomb thrower, rhetorically or literally.”

To which Gingrich played the Ronald Reagan card:

“I think sometimes it is helpful to have a president of the United States with the courage to tell the truth, just as was Ronald Reagan who went around his entire national security apparatus to call the Soviet Union an evil empire and who overruled his entire State Department in order to say, ‘Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.’ Reagan believed the power of truth restated the world and reframed the world. I am a Reaganite, I’m proud to be a Reaganite. I will tell the truth, even if it’s at the risk of causing some confusion sometimes with the timid.”

(Source: NPR Politics)



3 Responses

  1. But Romney is a super-rich (inherited but built up by his own endeavors) “Country club” (as opposed to “Sams Club”) Republican, who support bailouts and corporate welfare. The Republican problem is finding a candidate who opposes bailouts and corporate welfare. Opposition to bailing out banks and corporations is what “Occupy Wall Street” and “Tea party” have in common, and the party who controls that issue will probably win. That suggests Romney would be a disasterous candidate regardless of any polls to the contrary.

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