< 
The Resurrection of Newt Gingrich

Don’t look now, but the bombastic ex-speaker has snuck into third  place in 
the polls. Howard Kurtz on how he is defying the obituary writers. 
by _Howard Kurtz_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/contributors/howard-kurtz.html)   | October 18, 
2011 1:02 AM  EDT  
 
 
_Newt  Gingrich_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/07/22/newt-gingrich-still-running-for-president-in-2012.html)
  summoned his remaining 
staff to the conference room of his K Street  office in June, shortly after 
much 
of his team had defected, and delivered an  old-fashioned pep talk.
 
“This is a football season,” he said. “You don’t just kick off the ball 
and  win. Someone’s going to come hit you. We got hit. Get up.”

 
Gingrich told the team that his challenge over the summer was survival,  
followed by the chance for a breakout in the fall. And as the Republican  
presidential contenders prepare for a _CNN  debate Tuesday night in Las Vegas_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/10/17/gop-debate-live-chat-cnn-wes
tern-republican-leadership-conference-host-in-las-vegas.html) , he has, at 
the very least, cleared the  first goal.
 
It would be too much to call it a surge, but the former House speaker has  
quietly slipped into third place in several recent polls. A Public Policy  
Polling survey (_PDF_ 
(http://www.publicpolicypolling.com/pdf/2011/PPP_Release_US_10121122.pdf) ), 
for instance, shows Herman Cain with 30 percent, Mitt  
Romney with 22 percent, and Gingrich with 15 percent, edging out Rick Perry 
by a  percentage point. And Gingrich’s favorable rating is up to 57 
percent, with 30  percent holding an unfavorable view—this for a battle-scarred 
contender who the  mainstream press has all but _written  off as a loser_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/cheats/2011/08/02/gingrich-s-twitter-followers-mostl
y-fake.html) .
 
“He’s restored himself to viability in the eyes of the elite press by  
ignoring their criticisms,” says Gingrich spokesman R.C. Hammond. As for the  
mass resignations by the campaign manager, top spokesman, and such 
strategists  as Dave Carney, now working for Perry, Hammond says of his boss: 
“The 
type of  campaign he wanted to run was fundamentally different than the type of 
campaign  the consultants wanted him to run. We’re not running the Perry  
campaign.”
 
Of course, these developments hardly amount to a soaring comeback. 
_Gingrich  raised_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/cheats/2011/10/16/money-gap-in-gop-field.html)  
just $800,000 in the third quarter, although insiders say the 
pace of  donations has greatly increased, and his staff of 15 is less than 
half the size  of a few months ago. He can still come off like a windbag with 
a know-it-all  air. But he has held his own on the debate stage and will 
have another  opportunity to score in the Vegas faceoff being moderated by 
Anderson  Cooper.
Republican presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich at the Values  Voter Summit 
on Oct. 7 in Washington., Evan Vucci / AP  Photo

 
“If they could have a debate a night, he’d be the nominee,” says former  
Gingrich strategist Rich Galen. “He thinks very quickly on his feet. He is by 
 training a college professor. He’s just good at it.”
 
But since the debate schedule is more infrequent, says Galen, “I don’t 
think  there’s a prayer” that he can win the nomination.
 
Still, the race is essentially coming down to Romney and a  
yet-to-be-determined conservative alternative, a role previously occupied by  
Michele 
Bachmann and Perry before the unlikely rise of Cain. So in a contest  this 
volatile, could Gingrich still seize his moment in the spotlight?
 
For an analysis of Gingrich’s prospects, let’s turn now to Newt  Gingrich.
 
Romney’s difficulty, the former speaker said Sunday on CNN’s State of the  
Union, is “he is a Massachusetts moderate Republican. It is the Nelson  
Rockefeller problem. I mean, there is a natural ceiling.”
 
Gingrich added that “Perry was the natural alternative to Romney,” but “he 
 stumbled enough in the debates that there was a vacuum created.” Which 
Newt,  naturally, is happy to fill.
 
His own challenge, said the man who has proposed a 21st-century  version of 
the Contract with America that helped the GOP seize control of  Congress in 
1994, is that “I am a very complicated candidate, right?” As he said  at a 
press breakfast last spring, “We live in a society in which gossip replaces 
 serious policy and everyone wrings their hands about how hard it is to 
have a  serious conversation.”
 
Unlike the governors and ex-governors seeking the nomination, Gingrich has  
been thinking seriously about national issues for a quarter-century. Unlike 
 Cain, who in recent interviews offered no plan on Afghanistan, was 
unfamiliar  with the Palestinian “right of return” issue, and had trouble 
pronouncing  Uzbekistan, Gingrich has been dealing with foreign policy since 
the 
Reagan  administration.
 
But he can drown listeners in facts, and by invoking his speakership  
sometimes sounds like a ’90s retread. Gingrich offers plenty of substantive  
proposals, from job training in exchange for jobless benefits to revamping the  
Environmental Protection Agency, but none with the catchy ring of _Cain’s  
9-9-9 tax plan_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/10/12/herman-cain-s-9-9-9-tax-plan-has-no-chance-of-passing-congress.html)
 .
 
Yet in an atmosphere in which the Romney and Perry campaigns are savaging  
each other, Gingrich rarely attacks his GOP rivals. When Candy Crowley asked 
 about the party’s latest frontrunner, the former Georgia congressman said: 
 “Herman Cain is a terrific person. He is a great, wonderful human story. 
He is a  very enthusiastic and very competent person.”
 
Instead, Gingrich often seems to be running against the press. Insiders say 
 there was significant boost in donations and volunteers after the Fox News 
 debate in August, at which he ripped moderator Chris Wallace for asking “
gotcha  questions” and playing “Mickey Mouse games.”
 
But can taking on the media, always a useful foil in Republican primaries,  
boost Gingrich into serious contention?
 
“Newt’s hope moving into the fall is a slow and steady climb,” Hammond 
says.  “He designed the most efficient campaign we can be with the resources we 
 have.”

“If they could have a debate a night, he’d be the nominee. He thinks very  
quickly on his feet,” says former Gingrich aide Rich Galen.
 
Of course, Gingrich may have benefited to some degree by being out of the  
harsh spotlight. His lack of discipline when he jumped into the race is what 
 caused his implosion in the first place. It was the Meet the Press  
interview last May, when Gingrich dismissed a GOP plan to overhaul Medicare as  
“
right-wing social engineering” and then seemed to reverse himself the next 
day,  that started his downward slide from top-tier status. And then there is 
the  personal baggage, as Galen points out: the extramarital affair when he 
was a  congressman, the three marriages, the huge Tiffany’s bills he ran up 
for gifts  to his wife Callista.
 
“If he ever popped up to No. 2 or No. 1,” Galen says, “all that stuff 
would  just crush him.”

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