Gingrich
on the Rocks
by
Christopher Manion
by Christopher Manion
DIGG THIS
By now even
Newt Gingrich realizes that conservatives will never recover until
they admit that Bush did his best to destroy the movement, the party,
and the country. So Newt’s latest
salvo on the future of the "conservative movement"
masquerades as a broadside on "the Bush-Obama big government,
big bureaucracy, politician-empowering, high-tax, high-inflation
and high-interest-rate system."
Sounds like
he’s taking a big risk, right? I mean, channeling Ron Paul and attacking
Bush and all that?
Well, as the
kids on campus say, "Not!" Sure, as usual, Newt spews
the buzz-words: he invokes "principles" nine times – but
never names one, except "telling the truth" (three times),
opposing "big government" (five times), and (the clincher),
invoking Ronald Reagan (four times).
As Lenin would
say, "really revolutionary."
Apparently,
Newt’s rhythmic mantras didn’t leave any space for the Constitution,
which he never mentions once. Nor does he mention Iraq or Israel.
Perhaps Newt can’t name any first principles because he doesn’t
stick to any for long. A one-time history professor, he would have
us believe today that the U.S. is over-committed in the Middle East:
"The next building boom ought to be in America instead of the
Middle East," he chirps. He conveniently forgets that he has
long advocated not only the Iraq War, but a broadened US war in
the Middle East against Iran and Syria on behalf of Israel. After
all, he
insists, this is "World War III"!
Nor does Newt
mention any family issues – abortion, euthanasia, education, the
courts, embryonic stem-cell research, and dozens more – that are
so important to millions of his one-time supporters on the "religious
right." (Maybe that because every time Newt tries to make a
comeback, he seems to have a new wife.)
Will Newt's
overture to "change" really work? I'm not so sure. Last November,
Michael Steele, then the head of Gingrich’s GOPAC organization,
complained
that Republicans in the fall elections "didn't have anything
to say to the American people other than, 'We're not Democrats.
We're not Obama. We're not Hillary.' Well, we know that. So what
else is new?"
Well, now Newt
has added something new, another strophe to Steele's chorus: "We’re
not Bush either." But I wonder, will Mr. Steele, who is now
Chairman of the Republican National Committee, sing along? Or will
he be bound in the Bush straitjacket? He must
know that, while Bush’s final approval rating nationally was
a historically low 22%, 57% of those still willing to call themselves
Republicans approved of him – and now they are supposedly Steele’s
constituency.
So has-beens
of a feather fly, but not together: "We’re not Bush,"
says Newt, because apparently he can now safely say that Bush had
no principles, that he didn’t tell the truth, and that he is no
different from Obama.
My goodness.
Next week we might see Newt shouting, "Bush lied! People Died!"
But don’t hold your breath.
"We’re
not Bush." Well, Newt, we knew that already. But for all the
hot air, I don’t think Newt’s trial balloon will fly until he tells
conservatives that "we’re not that World War III-mongering,
Middle East leveling, Iraq War cheerleader Newt Gingrich either."
February
14, 2009
Christopher
Manion [send him mail] is
president of Manion Music,
LLC, which produces copyrighted, royalty-free music collections
for telecommunications media and commercial and hospitality sites
that use background music or music-on-hold. He writes from the
Shenandoah Valley, where he is a volunteer Spanish translator for
local law enforcement.
Copyright
© Christopher Manion 2009. All Rights reserved.
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