Redstate...
Newt
Gingrich Wins. What It Means.
Mitt and
Newt will both have trouble beating Barack Obama. Mitt’s trouble will
come from
Obama. Newt’s trouble from himself. But right now, the base doesn’t
care.
Posted by
Erick Erickson (Diary)
Saturday,
January 21
“The base
is revolting because they swept the GOP back into relevance in
Washington just
under two years ago and they have been thanked with contempt ever
since.”
No
candidate has won the GOP nomination for President without winning
South
Carolina since Ronald Reagan in 1980. But every one of those candidates
who won
had also won either Iowa or New Hampshire.
We’re now
confronted with a designated front runner, Mitt Romney, who got less
votes in
Iowa in 2012 than he got in 2008 and who lost South Carolina. His
reason for
being somehow remains that he is “electable.”
If you read
a lot of the Republican commentary coming out of Washington even before
the
polls closed, suddenly South Carolina is irrelevant and the hick rubes
of the
Palmetto state are just petulant children.
Actually,
like with Iowa, it is a rather desperate scream to get another player
on the
field. It is a red flag. It is the giant “Danger” sign ahead for the
general
election.
Newt
Gingrich’s rise has a lot to do with Newt Gingrich’s debate
performance. But it
has just as much to do with a party base in revolt against its thought
and
party leaders in Washington, DC. The base is revolting because they
swept the
GOP back into relevance in Washington just under two years ago and they
have
been thanked with contempt ever since.
Adding
insult to injury, the party and thought leaders now try to foist on the
base a
milquetoast moderate from Massachusetts. Newt Gingrich can thank Mitt
Romney
and more for the second look he is getting. Base hostility will now be
exacerbated by Mitt Romney’s backers now undoubtedly making a conscious
effort
to prop up Rick Santorum to shut down Newt Gingrich.
Consider,
before going below the fold, that this is the first time non-Romney ads
against
Romney have been at parity with Mitt Romney. And that parity caused a
rapid
erosion of support for Mitt Romney. Parity in advertising, not
superiority to
Romney, was all it took to begin the end of his South Carolina
dominance.
People are
mad as hell they are about to be stuck with another boring, moderate,
uninspiring choice that has at best a 50/50 shot at losing to the worst
president since Carter. They are flocking to Newt not because they
think he’s a
great guy, but because right now, he’s the only one fighting for
conservatism
and GOP voters are looking for a vessel to channel their anger with
Obama and
their complete disappointment with the GOP establishment which is now
embodied
perfectly by Romney. They want a conservative fighter because most
conservatives look back at Ford, Reagan, Bush, Dole, Bush, and McCain
and see
only the ones taking a conservative path against the Democrats actually
winning.
Trump was a
flash in the pan last year, but it was because he took the fight to
Obama. And
all of the others (Bachmann, Perry, Cain, etc) got their rise because
at the
time voters sensed they would fight back with them. If nothing else, in
the
last year, Newt has proven he won’t wilt like Mitt did yesterday under
pretty
basic questioning from Laura Ingraham or a month ago under routine
questioning
from Brett Baier.
Newt has
taken the worst the media, Romney and the left can dish out, and he’s
still
standing and fighting with passion and eloquence. Sure, he’d probably
be an
erratic President, but right now Republican voters don’t care about his
Presidency. They care about the fight with the left both Mitt Romney,
and the
Washington Republican leaders like John Boehner and Mitch McConnell
don’t seem
inclined to engage in.
In every
way in the last two weeks, Romney has signaled he won’t fight for the
base. He
looks like a lost child when trying to answer the taxes issue. He
couldn’t
stand up to Santorum in the debate. He sounds every bit like Gordon
Gekko, not
Milton Friedman, when he talks Bain and free markets.
Basically,
today’s vote is about Republican grassroots giving the Washington
Republican
establishment the finger. The base is angry, and right now, only Newt
is left
to fight for them, as imperfect as he is. We may still end up with
Romney, but
voters aren’t going to let him have it easily.
Party
leaders who have invested so much in Mitt Romney might want now to ride
on to a
brokered convention and find someone acceptable to everyone. Because
this most
divisive and bitter primary in years is going to wipe out the GOP’s
chances to
win in November. And while few of the Romney advocates of the past four
years
will admit it, it is because they have tried to foist onto the base a
milquetoast moderate from Massachusetts as energizing to conservatives
as a
dead battery.
Read this
and other columns at Redstate
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