Gingrich could have delivered Obama’s State of the Union

Eric Shierman thb Gingrich could have delivered Obama’s State of the Union

by Eric Shierman

If your singular focus is to elect a president that can reduce federal spending regardless of what party holds congress, then Ron Paul is your man.

If any Republican primary voters out there did not watch Obama’s State of the Union address so as to avoid listening to a laundry list of things the federal government can do for you, I suggest you go ahead and do so. Here is a link. I then challenge you to find in its content things Newt Gingrich would never say in 2013 if given the same platform with those bright lights that seem to radiate down from heaven on the U.S. head of state as if to say “this is my son in whom I am well pleased.”

6763458477 4294b89441 Gingrich could have delivered Obama’s State of the Union

Obama was Gingrich on Tuesday night less because of his justified confidence in the prospects of running against a candidate with more baggage than Greyhound afforded Obama the opportunity to deliver a more centrist and less partisan message than many were expecting; no, the reason Gingrich could have delivered that speech was because his confidence in his own genius prompts Newt to support policies that expand the power of the federal government with the same gusto as progressives do when he thinks they support a conservative end or consolidate his power.

Used to having presidential primaries decided before we even vote, this year Oregon will have more influence than New Hampshire for a change. When any contest remains competitive to the end, be it a sporting event or a wide open election, the most interesting part to watch is at the finish line and our May 15th primary will put us in the 4th quarter of this game. Oregon has 25 pledged delegates to give proportionally to every 3.5% of the vote. Allen Alley Chairman of the Oregon Republican Party and Oregon’s two RNC members Solomon Yue and Donna Cain each will also represent Oregon as independent delegates at the national convention in Tampa Bay, Florida. The Republican presidential candidates are going to be competing hard for Oregon’s votes like never before, and my suggestion to all Republicans is to give this some thought for a change. Don’t just vote for the guy who seems to be on top at the moment. If every Republican primary voter was guided to vote for a candidate that best reflected his core values, then there is no way Newt Gingrich could win the nomination saving both the Republican Party and the country a lot of grief.

If you are a cultural conservative and would like to vote for Santorum, do it. I know most of my extended family will. Rick Santorum is no less electable than Newt Gingrich. Assuming that after he resigned from the House Speakership in disgrace Newt’s political career was finished, investigative journalists and opposition researchers have yet to really take the time to dig for the things we have never heard of. Even his supporters expect Obama’s campaign to find a treasure trove in Newt’s closet, not a skeleton or two, more like a graveyard.  I know many evangelicals who do not find it their place to judge Newt for his repeated marital infidelity but they do see an alarming connection between his consistent display of the deadly sin of pride with its corresponding vanity and arrogance that has repeatedly prompted Newt to bend rules and breech trust when no one was looking. With Rick Santorum, even voters who disagree with his strong positions respect his integrity.

If you are one of those few voters that are primarily driven by a form of national security conservatism that demands more defense spending, sparing no expense on the latest most advanced weapon systems to support more intervention in the world’s affairs, then Rick Santorum is probably your guy too. Newt Gingrich may be more eloquent in quoting southern generals’ desire to kill the enemy, but his propensity to dream up things outside the scope of Article I Section 8 of the constitution like a mission to mars will compete against defense spending for scarce dollars.

If your singular focus is to elect a president that can reduce federal spending regardless of what party holds congress, then Ron Paul is your man. In Ron Paul you would have got a President that would veto every spending bill if need be to force deep cuts. Representing no constituency of stakeholders in federal spending he would have no disincentive from shutting the government down. The best way to win a game of chicken is to tear out your steering wheel and hand it to your opponent before the race. Democrats would cave before they let the government remained shut down for four years. Any override of Paul’s veto would require a supermajority in both chambers that would allow congressional Republicans even in a minority position to dictate terms. Only Ron Paul would be in a real position to forge a deal with congress to impose real cuts. Does anyone really think Newt Gingrich, a staunch defender of the creation of Medicare part D, would cut government spending at all?

Perhaps the answer to this question is most evidently revealed in Newt’s repeated defense of government sponsored enterprises, disingenuously likening Freddie Mac to nonprofit credit unions:

Perhaps more troubling is Gingrich’s failure to admit he was wrong, incredulously blaming the financial crisis on the Federal Reserve’s RAISING of interest rates, something that was inevitable to mop up the artificial liquidity and fight the very inflation the fed had created to support the government’s intervention into the housing market:

If you are a moderate Republican, preferring managerial competence over any particular policy agenda, Mitt Romney is obviously your man. Romney has built a long track record of taking over failing organizations that are internally at war with themselves, forging a common purpose to turn the situation around. I think it is a mistake to say Romney has no core. Crafting deals to move people forward is his core. I think there might be something to be said for executive skills that only governors and CEOs posses. Most people fail in these positions, but the few who repeatedly excel bring a unique quality of leadership with them that few politicians offer.  What Ron Suskind’s books on both the Bush and the Obama administrations make clear, it was not their ideologies that failed them, it was their execution. Bush could connect with people one-on-one very effectively and Obama can connect with audiences like no other, but neither was very effective at leading organizations. With Mitt Romney there would be no shooting from the hip, no eloquent speeches, just Bowles Simpson like deals forged in an efficient manner one after another, probably starting with Bowles Simpson itself.

Newt Gingrich has no natural constituency. Only those who fall for style over substance could possible think that simply because Newt is by far the best debater, he would make a better president. Newt would no doubt be a great communicator, but to what end? To flaunt his own vanity? To sell brilliant new federal programs? So many have wondered what is at Romney’s core. Who is asking what is at Gingrich’s core? When voters finally do, perhaps his long love affair with Franklin Delano Roosevelt might be helpful.

No American president has ever wielded power more effectively than FDR, and perhaps no presidential candidate has lusted for power more than Newt Gingrich. That is his core.

The irony here is that Newt’s support comes from the desire to create an alternative to Romney when he is actually to the left of Romney. It is important to remember why Romney has a moderate record. He did what none of his three Republican rivals could ever do: govern Massachusetts. Gingrich has supported even more big government causes than Romney, but did so from a safe Republican district in Georgia, as Speaker of the House in a time of conservative resurgence, or as a hired gun on K-street. To win the South Carolina primary, Newt actually campaigned to the left of Romney, intentionally whipping up class warfare among the angry voters of that state more effectively than Obama ever could. That was in a Republican primary! Imagine what he would do with the bully pulpit. A Gingrich administration would tarnish the Republican brand with more than just the problems of big government conservatism. Republicans would likely end up facing liabilities of the Nixon variety. To avoid this, all Republicans need to do is vote for their first choice; otherwise a year from now they will find themselves sitting through the same speech they heard last Tuesday.

tt twitter big4 Gingrich could have delivered Obama’s State of the Union tt digg big4 Gingrich could have delivered Obama’s State of the Union tt facebook big4 Gingrich could have delivered Obama’s State of the Union tt reddit big4 Gingrich could have delivered Obama’s State of the Union

Posted by at 05:00 | Posted in 2012 Presidential Election, President Obama | 27 Comments |Email This Post Email This Post |Print This Post Print This Post
  • bill sizemore

    I have been following the race closely and have come to pretty much the same conclusions as Eric does in his article.  For the first time in a long time, I have begun to literally hope for a brokered convention.  Paul will stay in to the end.  If Santorum does, as well, then it is conceivable that neither Romney nor Gingrich will win enough delegates to lock up the nomination.

    I don’t even have a strong preference among our four choices, though I like one or two a little better than the others.  I do believe, however, that Newt and Paul are the least likely to win the general.  Given the possibility of four more years of Obama, I would choose any of the four over him.  That goes without saying.  I am not confident, however, that a majority of Americans would agree.

  • Steve Buckstein

    Not being a Republican, I watched from the sidelines, but I was also struck by those “bright lights that seem to radiate down from heaven on the U.S. head of state.”

    I don’t recall such radiance in earlier SOTU events by this president or his predecessors. I was disappointed that Mr. Obama didn’t look up and order those energy-wasting bulbs be turned off post-haste.

    • Rupert in Springfield

      Well, Obama is the guy who put an excessive echo effect on his voice for most of his early speeches. Remember the speech on election night? There was so much echo on that I think he had the intensity turned not to 11, but to setting “Zeus”. He had the ridiculous Greek temple affair after all. Obama has turned down the echo some after people began openly mocking him for it. Maybe the God like lighting is the latest twist. 

      It’s just an astonishing level of conceit. Most peoples way of dealing with being mocked for self absorption is to take stock and tone it down a little. Not try and find a different method they think no one will catch on to.

      We will never know, but I wouldn’t put it past the guy to wear lifts.

  • Bob Clark

    Oh, come on! Newton is anything you want him to be.  Just like Bill Clinton was during his administration.  He’s a sausage maker, meaning he tests the waters before going too far in anyone direction and then cobbles together something edible from various interests.  This is much more preferrable to the current over-lorders Obamas, who want to prescribe by government force what you can eat, what kind of car you can drive, and now when you can leave public schools (just to name a few of his arrogant power grabs).
    @google-89fa503aa05d8aa50976416ca5242f4d:disqus 
    I can’t vote for Ron Paul because isolationism does not work, and is pure fantasy land.  His Federal Reserve Policies are also too limiting in helping clear free market excesses (when the poker party goes bad the Federal Reserve needs to be their to restart the game and cool things off).  And gold standard…like we are going to carry around gold coins like in the Good, Bad and Ugly.  I will say, though, his son is tops (Senator Rand Paul has got great realistic senses).

    I don’t want Santorium in our bedrooms.

    Romney’s o.k.  Don’t think he can elected because the economy is probably going to muddle upwards over the next six to ten months giving Obama the enough opportunity to exaggerate his self proclaimed success.  So, Gingrich at least will be a hoot to follow in his speechifying against Obama.  I still say lets have some fun and go with Newton.

  • valley person

    I agree with most of Eric’s analysis. I don’t agree, obviously with your critique of Obama’s managerial skills. In 3 years he has “managed” to:

    1) Get us out of Iraq on schedule without things falling apart there (yet)
    2) Changed the picture in Afghanistan, possibly allowing the same sort of strategic withdrawal
    3) Killed bin laden and pretty much wiped out al queda leadership
    4) Managed to get rid of Qadaffi with no loss of American life and very little expenditure.
    5) Put a floor under the worst recession since the 30s
    6) Initiated 18 straight months of GDP and job growth
    7) Passed a universal health care sausage that had eluded every democratic president since Truman 8) Rescued the American auto industry and what is left of American heavy manufacturing along with it
    9) Talked that same industry into doubling its fuel efficiency, which will do more to wean us from foreign oil than anything else we have done to date
    10) Initiated a major new renewable energy industry (the future folks)
    11) Led a 3 year scandal free administration.

    Big government? You bet. Smart government? Even more so. Good management? The above could not have been achieved without it.

    None of these 4 remaining candidates is likely to beat Obama next fall, barring some unforeseen event that radically changes this picture. Americans have re-elected their sitting president in every case but 2 since the end of WW2.

    • guest

      Bless you my song!  ~ Jeremiah Wrighter

  • Rupert in Springfield

    The way I see it:

    Newt – A very smart guy and his most desirable quality – he says what he thinks regardless of how someone might feel about it. Both desirable, but I had been wondering for a very long time where his interest in government activism stems from. This article was  a bit of a revelation in that regard. It comes simply from the “I am so damn smart” way of thinking and that’s why Newt has it. This was an amazingly good observation and I thank the author for it. I had always noticed the liberal tendency is to think the reason why socialism has generally failed is because no one as smart as they have been at the helm. We all have heard this, but Mr. Shierman putting it together in his Newt observations is really good, and spot on.

    Santorum – Good on limiting the scope of government, not exactly crazy about the moral piety. We need to get over some things as a society. The anti homo stuff of both Santorum and the now defunct Rick Perry really bug me. Can we move past this? Two gay guys living next door don’t mean your kids will be freaked out for life, two lesbians getting married are two more women out of the bar crowd that don’t have to waste drinks on before they spring the “I’m gay” line on you. If you really are conservative, you’d be for getting government out of the marriage business. Why the hell is the government in the marriage business anyway? Why is it I bet if I checked into it I would find that marriage licenses descend from the same racist policies that brought us gun control and prevailing wage laws? Why is it we question if someone is truly conservative if they believe in either of the latter two, but restricting marriage by government edict is ok?

    Ron Paul – If Iran getting a nuke is none of our business, the presidency should be none of his business.

    Romney – The guy is growing on me. He is plastic as hell but frankly more likeable than I thought a few months ago. Thats a huge thing. Reagan couldn’t clinch the deal until he won the likeability aspect with his “I wont bring my oponant age and inexperience into this race” quip. Romney would be fairly moderate as a president and I could probably live with that, although not be very excited about it. Bush part 3, but a better speaker, kind of taller and better looking.

    Cain – I miss him. Who cares about his policies, the guy was a breath of fresh air.

    Perry – Glad to see you go go go goodbye, glad to see you go go go goodbye….goodbye…..goodbye.

    • valley person

      “Bush part 3, but a better speaker, kind of taller and better looking.”

      And since Bush part 2 was such a smashing success, why not a sequel?

      • Rupert in Springfield

        Actually Bush 2 was the sequel, so a Bush 3 would really be part of a trilogy. But lets face it, at this stage of the game its kind of hard to deny that by most measures things were better under Bush 2 than Obama. Even you would have to concede that one.

        • valley person

          By what measure do you think things better under Bush 2 than under Obama? I can’t think of a single thing. He practically had to sneak out of town.

          Bush 2 left a larger mess behind than any president since Herbert Hoover. A financial crisis, $1.4 trillion last year deficit, 2 unfinished wars, an economy shrinking at 6% annual GDP and losing 750,000 jobs a month…..yikes.

          • Rupert in Springfield

            > I can’t think of a single thing.

            Yes you can, we all can in about three seconds. What you don’t want to do is admit them. So here are two:

            1 – Gas was close to half the price under Bush 2.

            2 – Unemployment under Bush 2 was significantly lower. If you use the same work force population figures during Bush 2 under Obama you get about an 11% unemployment rate.

            Please, let’s not belabor the obvious just because you need to prop up Obama. We all know, and you do to, that under Bush 2 the economy was a heck of a lot better.

            >Bush 2 left a larger mess behind than any president since Herbert Hoover. A financial crisis,

            Please, Obama has had three years to clean up the financial crises, but yet you expected Bush to clean it up in a few months?

            >$1.4 trillion last year deficit

            Yep, Bush 2 definitely overspent.

            But obviously if you think a $1.4T deficit for one year is enough to call a president bad, then obviously you would have to say having a deficit of around that figure for three years, as Obama has done, makes you an even worse president.

            OK, you pretty much hung yourself out to dry with that one, but let us proceed, you are so funny.

            >2 unfinished wars,

            Uh Oh, bad to pick the boiler plate without thinking about it.

            So FDR and Kennedy were lousy presidents as well? I mean they would have to be indicted by the same criteria.

            But there is another oopsie in here you didn’t think through, and its a doosey!

            Had Obama gotten his way while in the Senate, those two wars would have been more unfinished than they were.

            Obama voted against the surge after all, which was the single thing that turned around the Iraq war.

            Ive told you a million times, you need to think before just blindly repeating liberal boiler plate.
             

            >an economy shrinking at 6% annual GDP and losing 750,000 jobs a month…..yikes.

            Yep, the world wide economy was in a shambles, no denying that. However to take your eye off the ball and concentrate on Obamacare while doing nothing on the economy other than the failed stimulus plan, when you have that kind of crises…..that baby is talent!

            How the hell you spend $1T and make unemployment not only go up, but go up close to a full two points over what your worst projections were when you spent the money is absolutely amazing.

          • valley person

            1 – Gas was close to half the price under Bush 2.

            The price had gone up to over $4 a gallon the summer of 08 (Bush), then rapidly dropped as a direct consequence of the economic collapse.

            “2 – Unemployment under Bush 2 was significantly lower. If you use the
            same work force population figures during Bush 2 under Obama you get
            about an 11% unemployment rate. ”

            Under Bush 2 when….the day he left office? We were losing 500,000 jobs a month the day he left office. That loss rate continued for much of Obama’s first year, but can hardly be blamed on Obama.

            I have no freaking idea what number manipulation you are attempting here. The official unemployment rate is what it is. 8.6% (and declining).

            “We all know, and you do to, that under Bush 2 the economy was a
            heck of a lot better. ”

            This statement alone should be grounds for institutionalizing you Rupert. The economy under Bush was in shambles and sinking fast. The economy under Obama is still tattered but rising gradually. It takes a delusional person to claim our economy was better when Bush left than it is today.

            “So FDR and Kennedy were lousy presidents as well? I mean they would have to be indicted by the same criteria.”

            Well, as it so happens FDR didn’t actually want to die a few months before the Nazis collapsed, so I think we can give him a pass. As for Kennedy, the Viet Nam war was a mere skirmish when he died. We had something like 20,000 “advisers” there. Johnson, in leaving that war to his successor with 500,000 American troops on the ground, failed on that issue. Its why he didn’t even run for re-election.

            Bush had 7 years to win 2 wars against guys in sandals and turbans who’s biggest weapon was AK 47s. Roosevelt fought against the 2 most powerful armies on the planet at the same time and beat them both. Please, don’t compare Bush to Roosevelt as war presidents.

            “Had Obama gotten his way while in the Senate, those two wars would have been more unfinished than they were. ”

            No, because had he gotten his way: a) we never would have had a war in Iraq and b) not surging also meant withdrawing over the next 18 months, so the troops would have been home by the time he took office.

            “Ive told you a million times, you need to think before just blindly repeating liberal boiler plate.”

            Yes, so you have. And despite being shown to be wrong time and again, you keep repeating yourself. A foolish consistency is the hogoblin of little minds Rupert.

            “Yep, the world wide economy was in a shambles, no denying that.”

            Oh I see. Bush had nothing to do with it. he was just a victim of circumstances, like Curly of the 3 stooges. I can actually see that.

            “However to take your eye off the ball and concentrate on Obamacare while
            doing nothing on the economy other than the failed stimulus plan”

            Since you don’t want the government spending the money in the stimulus plan, let alone more of it, what exactly do you think Obama was supposed to have done to get 8 million people who lost jobs back into jobs? Hire them as government employees? Cut taxes for rich people? What? He did what he could get past Congress and then had to let his policies play out. The stimulus had to be spent. The banks had to be re-regulated. No one can just flip a switch and restore a decade worth of lost net worth, which is what Bush cost the nation.

            “How the hell you spend $1T and make unemployment not only go up…”

            Oy vez. You are going to repeat that theme until your dying day. Hobgoblins again.

            a) It wasn’t 1 trillion
            b) the projections underestimated how fast things were sinking
            c) Employment has gained ground every month since the stimulus began to be spent.

            Face it Rupert. Arguing for a return of Bush through Romney is not a winning platform. Though the Democrats would love to see Romney make that attempt.

          • Rupert in Springfield

            >The price had gone up to over $4 a gallon the summer of 08

            Yep, so you are going to take the high spike of Bush as the measurement of the price of gas.

            At this point you have lost all intellectual credibility. not much point in reading further.

            You simply are incapable of any criticism of this president in the way I described.

            Obey.

          • valley person

            Well, for all we know you are taking a high spike in gas price under Obama for your comparison. Instead you chose the lowest point under Bush to compare, a point that only happened because the entire economy was imploding. I mean, how intellectually dishonest was that?

          • 3H

            Well.. at one point it was half the price (and even lower), and at another point, it was higher than it has been under Obama.

            They are currently trending downward.  

          • Rupert in Springfield

            Overall gas has been substantially higher under Obama than Bush, if you guys cant admit that you have no intellectual credibility.

          • valley person

            What does “overall” mean?

          • 3H

            Without even looking it up, I’m willing to bet that gas prices are now higher under Obama than they were under Bush. Substantially?  Depends.  If you’e talking pre-economic nose-dive, I’d say no, they weren’t substantially higher (on average).  Post nose-dive?  They are absolutely higher.  However, if my choices are economy tanking, or higher gas prices, I’m gonna pick higher gas prices.

            The worst can happen here is that I’ll end up with no intellectual credibility and be comparable to you.  How’s it going wrapping your head around the LBJ quote?   

  • Disgusted

    His stance on the illegals/criminals has guaranteed that regardless of whether he is nomonated or not, he will never get my vote.

    • Spell checker

      *nominated

      • Rupert in Springfield

        You don’t think his stance on illegals is better than Obamas?

        • guest

          I think the AZ governor, Jan Brewer, ought have stuck two fingers up Barry Soetor’s nose, yanked him over an’ kicked his butt, butt, buttz, literally, too. 

          That Maggie Thatcher persona belongs on the GOP ticket for sure!

        • Scott

          Newt’s stance on illegal’s is just as bad as Pres. Hussein Obama’s is.

          I and many I know, because of his Amnesty non-solution, I will NOT vote for Newt. We’re hoping to have another option this Nov. or Obummer will get re-elected via R’s not voting for corrupt Newt.

          • Rupert in Springfield

            If what you say is true, and Newt is no better than Obama on illegals, then by sitting out the election and reelecting Obama, you have done nothing on the illegals issue, as its the same either way in your opinion.

            However you will have given Obama four more years to run this country into the ground the way he has the past three.

            Do you really want that? Because from where I sit illegals aren’t exactly the biggest problem facing this countries economy. Obama is.

            Think about it. If it weren’t for Obama, we might actually have some oil wells coming on line.

            Just the increase in gas prices under Obama, something he promised to do, have cost you way more than any illegal ever did.

            Health care? Your health insurance costs jumped 10-20% more than they would have whithout Obamacare. That alone probably costs you more than any illegal alien.

            I’m not fan of illegal aliens, and I think Newts attitude that they wouldn’t leave if we started enforcing the law is ridiculous. But if its Obama v. Newt, its the same on illegals either way according to you, but with Obama, its going to cost you a whole lot more in the end.

            Take a look around, if we were using the same population numbers to calculate unemployment as we did under Bush, we would be at 11% unemployment right now.

            You want four more years of that all because of illegal aliens?  If you think things are bad now, imagine four more years of the devastation Obama has brought us.

          • guest

            AB0-2012, absolutely!  The DNC, in order to save itself and US, must divorce itself from this NWO ACE pied piper. 

            42 months of ‘electoral college certified’ Obamanation slated for June 8.
            ‘Weather’ or not revelationary, we shall see what we see in it…something politically. 
              http://www.loc.gov/rr/scitech/mysteries/weather-sailor.html

          • valley person

            “Think about it. If it weren’t for Obama, we might actually have some oil wells coming on line.”

            Think about it Rupert. Oil production in the US is at its highest point in a number of years.

            “Just the increase in gas prices under Obama, something he promised to do, have cost you way more than any illegal ever did.”

            The price of gas is lower than it was in the summer of 2008.

            “Your health insurance costs jumped 10-20% more than they would have whithout Obamacare.”

            And you base this statement on what?

            “Take a look around, if we were using the same population numbers to
            calculate unemployment as we did under Bush, we would be at 11%
            unemployment right now.”

            This is the 2nd time you’ve posted this one. Show us your source for this claim please.

          • 3H

            The civilian workforce has decreased since Bush?  I’m pretty sure if you took civilian workforce available in December of 2008, and the number of jobs available to day, the unemployment rate would actually be lower then the 8.5% reported for December. 

            But why would you compare older populaton statistics to current number of jobs?   That doesn’t even make sense.

            Did they change the way they calculte the civilian labor force? 

Stay Tuned...

Stay up to date with the latest political news and commentary from Oregon Catalyst through daily email updates:

Prefer another subscription option? Subscribe to our RSS Feed, become a fan on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.

Twitter Facebook

No Thanks (close this box)