Yeah, I know. Don't know what to  make of it, but I'll think of something 
eventually.  


I can hardly  wait.
 
 
 


David




 
"Anyone  who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than 
people do is a  swine."--P. J.  O’Rourke 


On 10/22/2011 1:34 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  

 

 


 
 

 
 







 
 

 
 
Newt on a Run: Gingrich Campaign on a Roll After Bumpy Start

by  _Human Events_ 
(http://www.humanevents.com/search.php?author_name=Human+Events)  
10/21/2011 

 
 
After stumbling out of the gate in his run for the GOP presidential  
nomination, former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich's campaign coffers are  
rising in direct proportion to his poll numbers.

“The campaign is  becoming really fun,” said Gingrich, who announced his 
candidacy for the  White House on May 11, only to have a half-dozen key and 
senior campaign  staffers resign within six weeks.

Not content with the  publicity from their walkout, former staffers hurt 
their former boss with  gossip about his spending, and the role of his wife in 
the  campaign.

The former speaker hurt himself with an awkwardly  public misunderstanding 
with Rep. Paul Ryan (R.-Minn.), the chairman of the  House Budget Committee. 
 Gingrich started it when he criticized Ryan’s  tactical decision to 
propose reforms to Medicare. The ensuing back-and-forth  became a distraction 
and 
sapped the campaign’s energy.

Now,  Gingrich said, the atmosphere is positive and the campaign has  
traction.

“I can't make it through the airport without a dozen  people pledging their 
support and clicking a quick photo,” he  said.

The former speaker said he is connecting with voters  because the American 
people need a leader to take the country in a new  direction.

“The country is in a lot of trouble.  I am  going to keep doing what I am 
doing.  Talking about big solutions and  how we can beat Obama next fall,” he 
said.

In his political  column for financial news site _Street.com_ 
(http://www.thestreet.com/story/11282494/1/newt-gingrich-upgraded-to-buy-from-hold.html])
 
, Joe Deaux wrote that Gingrich’s  debate performances have been key to his 
campaign’s new  life.

“Gingrich proved again that he understands the  legislative process more 
fully than any of the other candidates, and he used  his weighty House 
experience to rise above petty eruptions that  characterized the event,” Deaux 
wrote in his article titled, “Newt Gingrich  Upgraded to Buy From Hold.”

Erick Erickson, the leader of the  _RedState.com_ 
(http://www.redstate.com/)  blog, said Gingrich was the winner  of the Oct. 17 
GOP Debate in Las 
Vegas.

“He gave the most solid  answers throughout the night with only one stumble—
when he admitted his  prior support for an individual mandate,” he said.

Erickson,  who hosts a weeknight talk show on _Atlanta’s WSB-Radio_ 
(http://www.wsbradio.com/lsp/programs/erick-erickson/) , said he is not 
convinced  
Gingrich had turned the corner, but he is doing much better.

“I  think it is too soon to tell, he said.  "He is going up in the polling  
to be sure.”

“To find a path to victory, he is going to have to  exploit Herman Cain's 
fumbles and translate debate gains into fund-raising,”  Erickson said.

R.C. Hammond, the campaign’s press secretary,  said when he looks at every 
indicator, it is clear to him that Gingrich will  have the momentum through 
the fall to be the alternative to the  front-runner.

Fund-raising has been strong enough to support an  expansion of the playing 
field, he said.  “The campaign has raised more  money since the Western 
Republican debate than it did the entire month of  July.”

“Over $175,000 since Tuesday, average contribution of  $84, with three out 
of four donations from new donors.  The campaign is  currently on pace to 
raise more in October than it did over the entire FEC  [Federal Election 
Commission] third quarter,” Hammond  said.

“The average contribution during the FEC third quarter  was $76—and 50% of 
contributions in the third quarter came from new donors,”  he said.

The increased cash flow to the campaign is making it  possible for Gingrich 
to expand the states in play, and hire new key staff,  Hammond said.

The strategy is to concentrate on the first three  states, New Hampshire, 
South Carolina and Iowa, and then have people and  structure in place to 
leverage success into more success, he  said.

“In New Hampshire, the campaign has hired Andrew  Hemingway as its first 
paid staffer, to work with volunteer Team 10 Leader  Michelle McManus, a 912 
project organizer from Bow, N.H.,” he  said.

“_Hemingway_ 
(http://www.unionleader.com/article/20111019/NEWS0605/110609989)  was the most 
immediate chairman of the  NH Liberty Caucus, which helped 
elect 100 new conservative legislators to  the New Hampshire State House,” 
Hammond said.

“In South  Carolina, the campaign has deployed its National Coalitions 
Director Adam  Waldeck to organize the state,” he said.

“Adam is working with  volunteer Allen Olson," he said, "who was the 
founder and most recent  chairman of the Columbia Tea Party.”

“The campaign will soon  announce its Iowa team and open a Des Moines 
office,” he  said.

Hammond said he is seeing the resurgence in the size and  enthusiasm of the 
crowds.

“Newt has spoken to overflow  crowds at town halls in Phoenix on Wednesday 
and in Dallas today.  He  will campaign in Iowa over the weekend and on 
Monday, and New Hampshire the  middle of next week, then to South Carolina on 
the 28th,” he  said.

Hammond said people outside the campaign did not  understand what happened 
inside the campaign during its rocky first six  weeks.

“When the staffers quit there was a panic for maybe 10  minutes,” he said. 
 “Then, Newt talked to us and we were  fine.”

The former speaker told the remaining staff that it  would take the whole 
summer to work through the tough launch, but if they  stuck to his plan they 
would be ready in the fall to challenge the  front-runners.

The press secretary, who has been with the  campaign from the start, said 
Gingrich was liberated after the staffers  quit.  “It was like he no longer 
had to argue with his own staff about  what he wanted to do with his  
campaign.”




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Centroids: The  Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
<[email protected]>
Google Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
(http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism) 
Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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