Posts Tagged ‘gingrich’

Gingrich is winner for 1 night (Politico)

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. ? Newt Gingrich didn?t have a game-changing moment in Wednesday night?s Arizona debate.

But the former House speaker?s newest approach to the Republican presidential race ? staying above the fray, avoiding attacks and focusing on the issues ? proved to be a winner for him anyway.

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?Newt?s last two outings were disjointed and low-energy,? said Rick Wilson, a GOP strategist who is unaligned in the presidential race. ?Tonight was markedly better.?

But Gingrich had more ground to make up than the other candidates in Wednesday?s debate. More than his GOP rivals, Gingrich has used his debate performances ? often marked by scathing attacks on the media ? as a springboard for jump-starting his erratic campaign. Many attributed Gingrich?s sole win this primary season in South Carolina to a confident performance in a pre-primary debate.

As his poll numbers have continued to dive, the debate was seen as one of Gingrich?s last opportunities to regain traction before Super Tuesday on March 6. The question is whether a good debate performance can translate into major momentum so late in the game, especially with Rick Santorum now challenging Mitt Romney for first place.

?He dealt himself back in the game with some of the Newt magic,? Wilson said. ?But Newt doing well now comes out of Santorum?s numbers, not Mitt?s.?

Gingrich laughed and smiled during the debate, leaned back in his chair on several occasions and beamed when Romney gave him several pointed looks during his responses to questions. When asked to use one word to describe himself, Gingrich responded with: ?Cheerful.?

?He looked relaxed and looked like he was having fun,? said Chip Saltsman, who was Mike Huckabee?s campaign manager in 2008. ?Definitely in his element.?

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Romney confident as voters end heated Fla. primary (AP)

TAMPA, Fla. ? Florida Republicans were putting an end to a raucous, big-spending, character-bashing primary campaign Tuesday as they decided whether a confident Mitt Romney or a defiant Newt Gingrich would win the state’s 50 delegates, the biggest prize of the GOP race so far.

Romney grinned as he thanked campaign volunteers in Tampa, while Gingrich swooped in on polling places to shake voters’ hands and complain that Romney had stymied him with outsized spending on “ads that are dishonest.”

Romney, in turn, said he had been forced to defend himself on Florida’s airwaves after losing to Gingrich in South Carolina ? a loss he attributed to negative commercials aired on Gingrich’s behalf.

“I needed to make sure that instead of being outgunned in terms of attacks, that I responded aggressively, and hopefully that will have served me well here,” Romney told reporters.

Romney is heavily favored in the winner-takes-all primary, the final and possibly pivotal contest in a high-stakes month in which the former Massachusetts governor has claimed one win and two second-place finishes so far. Two other candidates ? Rick Santorum and Ron Paul ? have ceded Florida in favor of smaller, less expensive contests.

Gingrich dismissed suggestions that he might be hobbled by a significant loss in Florida, telling reporters outside an Orlando polling place that the race wouldn’t be decided until June or July ? “unless Romney drops out earlier.”

Several Florida voters seemed eager for an end to the continuous volley of charges and countercharges that colored the campaign.

Dorothy Anderson, voting for Gingrich at a retirement community in Pinellas Park, Fla., said “The dirty ads really turned me off on Mitt Romney.”

“In fact if he gets the nomination, I probably won’t vote for him,” Anderson added.

At the same polling place, Romney supporter Curtis Dempsey felt the same about voting for Gingrich if he becomes the nominee. Dempsey said “the only thing Newt Gingrich has to offer is a big mouth.”

Romney and his allies have poured more than $14 million into Florida television advertising primarily attacking Gingrich, who has struggled to compete with Romney’s fundraising ability, staffing and network of high-profile supporters. Gingrich and his allies spent roughly $3 million on Florida advertising, much of it attacking Romney.

In Miami’s Little Havana, car salesman Osvaldo Mitat, 69, favored Gingrich. He’s impressed by the former House speaker’s “commitment to the Cuban community,” Mitat said, and Gingrich’s marital history doesn’t bother him. Mitat has been divorced four times himself.

“Romney also has a past,” he said. “Everyone has a past.”

In Palm Beach, Julian Stoopler, a 68-year-old investment adviser, said he decided to vote for former business leader Romney. “The condition of the country has deteriorated so badly that we need a CEO to turn it around,” Stoopler said.

For a time, Gingrich reset the GOP race with his overwhelming victory in South Carolina. But in the 10 days since, the contest turned increasingly hostile, Gingrich turned in uncharacteristically lackluster debate performances, and polls swung in Romney’s direction.

Gingrich admitted that his momentum against Romney had slowed in Florida.

“He can bury me for a very short amount of time with four or five or six times as much money,” Gingrich said in a television interview Monday. “In the long run, the Republican Party is not going to nominate … a liberal Republican.”

But, without predicting a winner or endorsing a candidate, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., told CNN: “The winner of Florida is in all likelihood going to be the nominee of our party.”

The Gingrich campaign noted that he had raised more than $5 million in January, more than half following his win in South Carolina, after raising $10 million total in the last three months of 2011. Romney’s campaign has said he pulled in more than twice that in the fourth quarter: $24 million.

Romney’s campaign scheduled a night celebration at the Tampa Convention Center. Gingrich visited two polling stations and was stopping at the Polk County campaign headquarters before gathering with supporters for a primary night party in Orlando. The last polls close at 8 p.m.

The path to the Republican nomination ? and the right to face President Barack Obama this fall ? shifts to a series of lower-profile contests in February. Romney was to kick off the month Wednesday with events in Minnesota and Nevada.

The race for delegates is still in its early stages. A candidate needs to collect 1,144 delegates to win. Coming into Florida, Romney had 37 delegates to Gingrich’s 26.

Santorum, who’s won 14 delegates, and Paul, with four, chose to skip Florida on its primary day, instead campaigning across Colorado and Nevada. At Colorado State University, Paul spoke to a boisterous crowd of about 1,100, including Chase Swift, who shrugged off Paul’s abdication of Florida. “Everyone thinks he has no chance,” said Swift, 49, of Wellington. “Now we’ll see.”

Santorum bristled Tuesday when asked about Gingrich seeming to suggest that the former Pennsylvania senator should quit the race. “I don’t think people should be telling other folks to get out of the race and get out of the way,” Santorum told Fox News Channel.

Florida originally had 99 delegates but lost half as a penalty for holding its primary early, in violation of national party rules.

GOP officials in Florida were anticipating a big turnout of more than 2 million voters, up from a record 1.9 million in the Republican primary in 2008.

___

AP writers Christine Armario in Miami, Matt Sedensky in Palm Beach, Tamara Lush in Pinellas Park, Shannon McCaffrey in Orlando and Connie Cass in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120131/ap_on_el_pr/us_gop_campaign

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Romney takes better than 3-1 lead in GOP delegates

(AP) ? Mitt Romney’s victory in the Florida Republican presidential primary gives him more than three times as many convention delegates as his closet rival, Newt Gingrich.

Romney won all 50 delegates in Florida, giving him a total of 87, including endorsements from Republican National Committee members who will automatically attend the convention. Gingrich has 26 delegates, Rick Santorum has 14 and Ron Paul has four.

The race for delegates is still in the early stages. It takes 1,144 delegates to win the nomination.

Next up: Nevada, which has 28 delegates at stake in it caucuses on Saturday. Nevada Republicans award delegates proportionally, making it impossible for any candidate to win them all.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-01-31-GOP%20Delegates/id-d6fae102f01e494fbd0d7cf0b9293334

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GOP race’s approaching lull will test Gingrich

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney campaigns at Pioneer Park in Dunedin, Fla., Monday, Jan. 30, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney campaigns at Pioneer Park in Dunedin, Fla., Monday, Jan. 30, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich arrives for a campaign stop, Monday, Jan. 30, 2012, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The rapid-fire GOP presidential primary is about to ease into a slower pace and a more spread-out map. The shift will pose new challenges for Newt Gingrich.

February’s only televised debate is three weeks away. Some primaries or caucuses will be in states with significant Mormon presences. Also voting in February is Michigan. Mitt Romney’s father was governor there.

Campaigning in several states is costly.

All these factors would seem to play to Romney’s advantage.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-01-30-Campaign-Next%20Up/id-636e3190b8304f01b191108a90530529

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Rivals hope to block Romney trifecta in SC (AP)

COLUMBIA, S.C. ? Mitt Romney says he’s ready for an uphill climb in South Carolina after coasting through New Hampshire. As the Republican presidential contest moves south, his rivals are sharpening their attacks and hoping to win over tea partyers and religious conservatives who feel uncomfortable with the front-runner.

Still, Romney continued to project a confident style Wednesday that must be wearing on his five opponents. He dismissed much of their criticism as stemming from desperation. And he said that while several can raise enough campaign money to keep the nomination fight going, “I expect them to fall by the wayside eventually for lack of voters.”

Despite the rougher tone and tougher ideological terrain ahead, the former Massachusetts governor is looking to force his opponents from the race by achieving a four-state streak with victories in South Carolina on Jan. 21 and Florida 10 days later. He posted a double-digit win Tuesday night in New Hampshire after a squeaker the week before in Iowa ? making him the first non-incumbent Republican in a generation to pull off the back-to-back feat.

“Tonight we celebrate. Tomorrow we go back to work,” Romney told a raucous victory party in Manchester, N.H., probably mindful of the minefields that South Carolina held for him four years ago when he failed to win over Republicans skeptical of his Mormon faith and reversals on some social issues. “We are asking the good people of South Carolina to join the citizens of New Hampshire.”

All the candidates planned to campaign in the state Wednesday. Romney, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, ex-Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, Texas Rep. Ron Paul and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman were flying in from New Hampshire. They’ll join Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who didn’t invest much time in New Hampshire while putting his post-Iowa focus on South Carolina.

Several of Romney’s rivals have made clear they will seek to undercut the chief rationale of his candidacy: that his experience in private business makes him the strongest Republican to take on President Barack Obama on the economy in the fall. Perry, for one, is accusing Romney of “vulture capitalism” that led to job losses in economically distressed South Carolina.

Romney said his opponents sound like Democrats attacking the free enterprise system and encouraging jealousy toward the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans.

“It’s a very envy-oriented attack,” he said Wednesday on NBC’s “Today” show.

Romney said the criticism of his past dealings actually works to his benefit by highlighting the business acumen that will help him set the nation’s economy right and shrink the federal government.

TV ads already are filling the airwaves, including negative spots like a new one from Gingrich assailing Romney for switching his position on an issue that resonates strongly with evangelicals who make up the base of the GOP here.

“He governed pro-abortion,” the Gingrich ad says. “Massachusetts moderate Mitt Romney: He can’t be trusted.”

About $3.5 million already has been spent on TV ads in South Carolina, the bulk of it by Perry and a supportive super PAC. But that doesn’t count the $3.4 million a pro-Gingrich group has pledged to spend to go after Romney, or the $2.3 million a pro-Romney group plans to spend in the coming days. Santorum and a super PAC friendly to him also are pouring money into the state, as is an outside group working on Huntsman’s behalf.

Expect a flood of more hard-hitting commercials ? primarily aimed at the front-runner ? in a state known for brass-knuckled Republican politics.

Romney, for his part, is dismissing the attacks, most notably the ones over his time at Bain Capital.

“President Obama wants to put free enterprise on trial. In the last few days, we have seen some desperate Republicans join forces with him,” Romney said in his victory speech, chastising his critics while acting as though he is already the nominee. “This is such a mistake for our party and for our nation.”

“The country already has a leader who divides us with the bitter politics of envy,” Romney added.

For all of Romney’s challenges, the presence of a cluster of socially conservative candidates fighting to be his chief alternative could work in his favor by splitting the vote on the party’s right flank. Santorum, Gingrich, Perry and others split the faith-focused vote in Iowa. South Carolina also has a large contingent of evangelical voters, some of whom remain suspicious of Romney.

“I don’t know if we can win South Carolina, I was fourth there last time I ran,” Romney said Wednesday on ABC’s “Good Morning America. “I know it’s an uphill battle.”

But Romney noted that he carried the conservative and tea party vote in South Carolina.

Unlike New Hampshire, South Carolina could end up being the last stop for some candidates.

Perry, for one, has had back-to-back dismal showings, and is dismissing the earlier contests as inconsequential as he looks to right his struggling campaign in South Carolina.

“They kind of start separating the wheat from the chaff, if you will,” Perry told a cafe crowd Tuesday. “But South Carolina picks presidents.”

Gingrich, the former Georgia lawmaker, is also playing on his regional ties.

“The ideal South Carolina fight would be a Georgia conservative versus a Massachusetts moderate,” he said, echoing a theme central to his fierce ads.

Santorum and Huntsman also have vowed to press on in the face of Romney’s latest victory. Santorum wants to claim the conservative mantle; Huntsman eschews ideological labels and is selling himself as someone who can heal a polarized nation.

“Third place is a ticket to ride, ladies and gentleman,” Huntsman boomed from the lectern after finishing third in New Hampshire. “Hello, South Carolina.”

___

Associated Press writers Shannon McCaffrey and Beth Fouhy in New Hampshire and Connie Cass in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120111/ap_on_el_pr/us_gop_campaign

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Romney brushes off rivals’ barbs in NH debate (AP)

MANCHESTER, N.H. ? Mitt Romney brushed aside rivals’ criticism Saturday night in the opening round of a weekend debate doubleheader that left his Republican presidential campaign challengers squabbling among themselves and unable to knock the front-runner off stride.

Three days before the first in-the-nation New Hampshire primary, Romney largely ignored his fellow Republicans and turned instead on President Barack Obama. “His policies have made the recession deeper and his policies have made the recovery more tepid,” he said, despite a declining unemployment rate and the creation of 200,000 jobs last month.

Over the course of the lively 90-minute debate, there were attacks aplenty as Romney’s five rivals vied to emerge as his principal rival in the primaries ahead. The former Massachusetts governor won an eight-vote victory in the Iowa caucuses last Tuesday and is far ahead in the pre-primary polls in New Hampshire.

That leaves his pursuers little time to stop his rise, and, all but conceding New Hampshire to the former governor of next-door Massachusetts, they’re mostly focusing their efforts on the South Carolina primary on Jan. 21

Texas Rep. Ron Paul assailed Rick Santorum as a “big government person,” an allegation the former Pennsylvania senator disputed. Santorum finished a close second to Romney in Iowa this week, with Paul coming in third.

Paul, who has called former House Speaker Newt Gingrich a “chicken hawk” who has not served in the military, drew withering criticism in return. “I personally resent the kinds of comments and aspersions he routinely makes,” Gingrich said.

Paul got the last word, saying emphatically, “When I was drafted I was married and had two kids, and I went.” He was an Air Force surgeon in the Vietnam War era.

Gingrich was fourth in Iowa, Perry fifth and Minnesota rep. Michele Bachmann, who has since quit the race, was last. Huntsman did not compete there, hoping to make a splash in New Hampshire.

Romney appeared uncertain only once, when he was asked if states have the right to ban contraception. He avoided a clear answer, suggesting the question was irrelevant.

“No. States don’t want to ban contraception,” he said. In a ruling in 1967, the Supreme Court said married couples have a right to use contraception, a finding that has been expanded in subsequent opinions

Romney, who often touts his business background, was attacked in the opening moments of the debate.

Santorum went first, dismissing him as a mere manager. “Being a president is not a CEO. You’ve got to lead and inspire,” he said.

Gingrich followed a few moments later, referring to published accounts that described how some workers were laid off after Bain Capital, the firm Romney once led, invested in their companies and sought to turn them around.

He said Romney should be judged on the basis of whether “on balance, were people better off or worse off by this style of management.”

Unruffled, the former Massachusetts governor retorted that Bain had created 100,000 jobs on balance, and that a businessman’s experience was far better to fix the economy that a lifetime spent in Washington, D.C. “I’m very proud of the fact that the two enterprises I led were successful,” he said, referring to Bain and another firm.

More than an hour later, Romney turned one question about his vision for the country into an attack on Obama that is part of his standard campaign speech. While his rivals stood by silently, he accused the president of trying to turn the United States into a “European-style welfare state.”

Perry, who flirted with quitting the race after Iowa, emphasized that he was an outsider in the race as he sought to lump his rivals into one, unappealing category.

“I think you’ve just seen a great example of why I got in the race. … I’m the only outsider,” he said as he watched Santorum, Paul, Gingrich and Romney clash.

Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman dismissed much the back-and-forth as “insider gobbledygook … a lot of political spin,” saying he would focus on more important questions such as national security.

He drew one of the few barbs that Romney directed at a fellow Republican during the evening.

“I’m sorry, Governor. You were the last two years implementing the policies of this administration in China. The rest of us on this stage were doing our best to get Republicans elected across this country and stop the policies of this president from being put forward.”

There were a few light moments.

At one point, Paul was interrupted by a bell meant to indicate his time to speak had expired. “There it goes again,” he said.

Santorum replied instantly: “They caught you not telling the truth, Ron.”

The intramural skirmishes reflected the state of the race ? Romney the acknowledged front-runner under attack from his rivals, who face an increasingly urgent need to emerge as his main conservative challenger.

The debate at Saint Anselm College was the first in more than three weeks, and the first since Bachmann dropped out of the race. The candidates faced a quick turnaround for the second debate, set for Sunday morning in Concord.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120108/ap_on_el_pr/us_republicans_debate

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The Gingrich Dive (talking-points-memo)

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GOP’s Gingrich scrambles in Iowa for caucuses

Republican presidential candidate former House Speaker Newt Gingrich makes his way to speak to a group of students, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011, at the University of Iowa College of Public Health in Iowa City, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Republican presidential candidate former House Speaker Newt Gingrich makes his way to speak to a group of students, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011, at the University of Iowa College of Public Health in Iowa City, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

(AP) ? Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich has little choice but to rely on momentum to carry him to victory in the Iowa caucuses.

He has a skeleton campaign organization in a state where successful caucus candidates typically have had well-built machines aimed at turning out supporters. To build a stronger operation with less than three weeks until the leadoff 2012 contest, he has to scramble.

The former House speaker is hoping the typical rules don’t apply to him, in a campaign that already has been far from typical.

“You’re not going to have a successful campaign in the caucuses on organization alone,” said John Stineman, an uncommitted Iowa Republican who ran Steve Forbes’ 2000 caucus campaign. “You have to have some heat. Newt’s getting hot at the right time. It’s a matter of whether he can sustain the heat.”

Getting a winning share of support from caucus goers in 1,774 precinct-level party meetings across the state on a cold, early January night requires some level of coordination, such as nailing down supporters in each of Iowa’s 99 counties.

Gingrich, whose mass staff departures in June stunted his Iowa campaign, is trying to cobble together his Iowa team using emerging social media methods and time-tested grass-roots work.

He has only nine staffers in Iowa, fewer than most of his rivals. He opened his campaign office just two weeks ago, while others have had state headquarters for months. And while Gingrich’s fundraising has picked up, he hasn’t had the vast sums former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Texas Gov. Rick Perry have had at their disposal.

But just as his late rise in Iowa has had more to do with his performance in the national debates than campaigning in the state, his Iowa organization is benefiting from the notice he’s sparked nationally.

Gingrich has argued that his message, timing and the Internet can help him close the organizational gap.

His full-frontal attack on President Barack Obama has been what some GOP activists in Iowa say is the confrontational approach they’ve been looking for in a potential challenger to the well-funded incumbent.

Gingrich, who has asked his supporters to remain positive as he faces attacks, is on the air in Iowa with a positive spot. Time is running out for effective advertising messages to stick, with candidates unlikely to air attack ads over the holidays.

He rolled out a new TV ad on Thursday that chides his rivals for going negative.

“These are challenging and important times for America. We want and deserve solutions,” Gingrich says. “Others seem to be more focused on attacks rather than moving the country forward. That’s up to them.”

“I believe bold ideas and new solutions will unleash America’s creative spirit,” Gingrich adds.

Gingrich’s message attacking Obama and pledging a positive campaign versus his GOP rivals has helped bring potential supporters to his website. It has netted supporters around the country who have made, on average, 1,200 telephone calls per night to Iowa Republicans in the past week, Gingrich deputy Iowa director Katie Koberg said.

Through the same site, a dozen supporters from out of state have traveled to Iowa to log days helping the campaign, Koberg said.

It’s a far cry from Texas Rep. Ron Paul’s campaign, with its statewide supporter network that includes niche groups such as students and doctors.

Although Romney has campaigned in Iowa less often than he did four years ago, his team has kept after supporters of his 2008 campaign, a massive $10 million effort that earned him second place.

That year, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee won the caucuses with a threadbare staff. He was the overwhelming favorite of evangelical Christian conservatives, who functioned as an influential network but were not necessarily organized by the Huckabee campaign.

Gingrich is not the unanimous favorite of evangelicals, but he has the momentum Huckabee did.

“You can’t confuse organization with paid staff,” said Tim Albrecht, who was Romney’s 2008 Iowa campaign spokesman but is uncommitted this year. “Gingrich has a Huckabee quality to him ? late getting in place but with a ready audience, those longtime caucus veterans who don’t need any hand-holding to get them to caucus.”

Given the fluidity demonstrated in Iowa polls, Gingrich could benefit from late-deciding caucus goers. And he has picked up a number of key GOP activists. The campaign rolled out a list of them from across the state and different segments of the party late Wednesday, aimed at portraying Gingrich as a unifying candidate.

They include former Iowa Republican Party Chairman Ray Hoffmann and Dean Kleckner, former president of the American Farm Bureau Federation. Kleckner had been a top Iowa backer of Herman Cain before the Georgia businessman quit the race Dec. 3.

Another key pickup known for his organizational heft is Darryl Kearny, a former finance director of the Iowa Republican Party and now the key finance official for Polk County, Iowa’s most populous.

“I realize they have a lot of catching up to do,” said Kearny, who has amassed a massive Rolodex in his 30-plus years as an Iowa party activist and campaign operative. “But I’m networking with everyone I know, calling and emailing, trying to pass on the word about Newt.”

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-15-Gingrich-Skeleton%20Organization/id-e60c132f1da5477a8d5b1aebd167c502

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Gringrich and science (Time.com)

The busy mind of Newt Gingrich has been much in the news lately. He’s the man of grand ideas — a thinker, a theorist, the big brain in a GOP field of bureaucrats and simpletons. Don’t believe it? Don’t worry, Gingrich himself will tell you.

Gingrich’s mind indeed does churn. The problem is, he approaches ideas the way a gluttonous gourmand approaches food — with a rich, complex and subtle appetite, but also a hopeless weakness for corn dogs and Twinkies. If it’s edible — or, in his case, imaginable — he’s interested. This can be awkward, particularly when he steps outside of his comfort zone of history and public policy and starts to muck around with science. (Watch “10 Questions for Newt Gingrich.”)

Much has been made of some of Gingrich’s wackier ideas in the past few weeks, beginning with his oft-repeated worry that a rogue state with a nuclear weapon could shut down the U.S. power grid. To give Gingrich his due, there’s a grain of truth in his fears. Scientists agree — theoretically at least — that a missile detonated at the right altitude could trigger what’s known as an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) that could fry the circuits of whatever country lay below. The one experiential data point that supports this idea occurred in 1962, when an atmospheric test of an American atomic weapon caused street lights in Hawaii to go temporarily dark.

Of course, it’s a big step from there to shutting down an entire country, especially when the bad actors Gingrich imagines blacking out America are the Iranians and North Koreans, who have nowhere near the missile technology or targeting know-how to pull off such a stunt — at least without being detected — and in the case of Iran, don’t even have a bomb yet. What’s more, if either country did want to launch a strike, it would be a whole lot easier to go the point-and-shoot route — pick a city and try to take it out directly. Yet Gingrich has continued to sound the EMP alarm, arguing that preparing for an attack should be an important part of the country’s defense posture.

“In theory, a relatively small device detonated over Omaha would knock out about half the electricity generated in the United States,” he warned in Iowa last week, according to the New York Times.

Gingrich’s advocacy of space mirrors — albeit years ago, in a 1984 book — has provoked eye rolling too. The thinking is that scientists could position giant mirrors in space that would point toward Earth, reflecting sunlight downward and creating as much illumination as several full moons. This would eliminate the need for nighttime lighting on highways and brighten shadowy neighborhoods as a deterrent to crime. (Read “Newt Gingrich: Potential President, or Skilled Showman?”)

Put aside what this would also do to the day-night cycle under which all life on Earth is accustomed to operating; put aside what it would do to the simple business of looking up and trying to see a star. The technical obstacles are dizzying. The U.S. has already orbited one whopping big mirror — a slab of polished glass inside the Hubble Space telescope that measures close to 8 ft. (2.4 m) in diameter. But reflective space mirrors would have to be far bigger, perhaps the size of a football field. Even the massive International Space Station, which measures 357 ft. (109 m) across, appears to be little more than a moving star at the lowest point of its orbit, 234 mi. (376 km) above ground. To provide permanent illumination to a target area, you’d have to position your mirrors a whole lot farther away — in geosynchronous orbit, 22,236 mi. (37,786 km) above sea level, so that their rate of revolution matches the rotation of the globe.

The weight problem alone makes this impossible — at least if you were trying to fly a giant mirror made of glass, like the Hubble’s. While University of Arizona engineers have developed mirror material only .04 in (1 mm) thick, this doesn’t address other problems like the cost of launching and maintaining the mirrors, not to mention keeping so big a target safe from meteors and other space debris. All of this seems like an awful lot of trouble to go to for an illumination problem that highway lights and porch lamps already solve rather neatly.

It’s Gingrich’s advocacy of moon mining, however, that is getting the most attention — and drawing the most derision — partly because this is a drum he doesn’t seem willing to quit banging. For the most part, the moon is a pretty prosaic mix of very familiar materials — including silicon, iron, calcium, aluminum, potassium and phosphorous. There is, however, also helium-3. A light isotope of common helium, helium-3 streams toward Earth all the time as part of the storm of charged particles coming from the sun, but our planet’s magnetic field deflects most of it. This is not so on the moon, which has a magnetic field far weaker than Earth’s. What makes this important is that helium-3 also turns out to be a cracker jack fuel for fusion reactors — far more efficient than the deuterium currently used. But it’s not just a matter of going to the moon, scooping up what you need and powering the world on it. (Watch TIME’s video “Earth Is Running Out of Helium.”)

First of all, a practical fusion reactor has not yet been invented and there’s no realistic projection for when it might be — though scientists have been trying for decades. What’s more, the moon’s helium-3 is not just there for the taking. Apollo samples revealed that the isotope is present in lunar soil in concentrations no greater than 30 parts per billion. Harrison Schmitt, the lunar module pilot on Apollo 17 and the only geologist to walk on the moon, estimates that it would take 220 lbs (100 kg) of helium-3 to power one city the size of Dallas for one year, and to collect that much you’d have to dig a trench three quarters of a mile square by 9 ft. deep (1.9 sq km by 2.7 m).

That’s a lot of digging, and it doesn’t even touch the cost of getting the stuff home. Even aboard cheap rockets like the Russian Proton, it costs $2,200 to launch a pound of payload to low Earth orbit. The shuttle, nobody’s idea of a bargain ship, cost $8,100 per lb. Things are a lot cheaper on the moon, where lower gravity means everything weighs less, but that doesn’t mean every ounce doesn’t cost — a lot. There’s a reason the skin of the Apollo lunar module was no thicker than three sheets of aluminum foil and that its windows were triangular, a shape that shaved a few ounces off of the framing and sealant that would have been needed for round windows of approximately the same size.

In the last presidential debate, Gingrich responded to Mitt Romney’s criticism of the moon mining concept by not responding. “I’m happy to defend the idea that America should be in space and should be there in an aggressive, entrepreneurial way,” he said — which most people agree with and which is not what Romney was questioning at all.

Answering evasively, of course, is what politicians do, as is dreaming big dreams of New Frontiers and Great Societies and shining cities on hills. But dreams aren’t science — and politicians, for the most part, aren’t scientists. Newt Gingrich may play one on TV, but that doesn’t mean anyone is required to listen.

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/time/20111216/us_time/08599210247100

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Newt Gingrich Vows Not to Cheat on Wife if Elected President


Newt Gingrich, the newly-anointed frontrunner in the fluid Republican presidential race, is promising he will not cheat on his wife Calista if elected to the White House.

Seriously, this came up.

The former Speaker of the House of Representatives issued a statement to The Family Leader, an evangelical Iowa organization, pledging to sign its Marriage Vow.

The key points of Newt’s remarks on marriage – he’s on #3, having cheated on wife #2 with wife #3 in the 1990s, while he was pushing to impeach Bill Clinton – include:

Newt Gingrich Pic

  • He pledges to uphold the institution of marriage through fidelity to his spouse.
  • Gingrich will enforce the DOMA (Defense of Marriage Act), and will support a federal marriage amendment defining marriage as one man, one woman.
  • Gingrich believes life begins at conception, will reinstate Reagan’s Mexico City policy, repeal Obamacare and cut funding for Planned Parenthood.
  • He promotes the right of conscience for health care workers so they aren’t compelled to participate in abortions or procedures against their beliefs.

Newt has catapulted himself to the front of the GOP pack despite more baggage than the American Airlines flight Alec Baldwin was kicked off of last week.

His messy divorces are seen as a liability by some, but voters seem to care most about the economy, so it remains to be seen if it’d actually hurt Gingrich.

Fellow GOP contenders Michele Bachmann, Rick Perry and Rick Santorum already signed the pledge. Mitt Romney is currently focus grouping it to see if he should sign this week, then change his mind two hours after the Iowa caucuses. Just kidding. Sorta. Not really.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/newt-gingrich-vows-not-to-cheat-on-wife-if-elected-president/

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