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The character issue and the fighters — 9 Comments

  1. Gingrich points at the bigger question. What are the character requirements for a President?

    Washington certainly had some baser vices, but he is the paragon of Presidential character. Lincoln had crippling personality flaws, but he is also a paragon.

    Newt has to put this character stuff into big-picture context in regard to the office. Because, yes, as a neighbor or suitor for one’s daughter, Newt’s character stinks.

    If Gingrich pulls off the nomination, he will present nice contrast to the cool-cold Obama. But then, Obama could make Romney appear zealous.

  2. I very strongly agree with Morrissey & neoneocon. His character, wiring, TEMPERAMENT, neediness, infantile defiance, dishonesty, whimsy, lousy impulse control…Shall I go on? Simply put, they are awaiting the full force of the MSM Lapdogs and the Obama Machine with its endless war chest.

    His fan, friend and talk-radio ally, Mike Gallagher, was in full Mikey Whine this a.m. Mitt is way ahead in the polling here in Central Florida and the Newties are shreiking that Mitt Romney has instituted a “Blood Bath” campaign against the delicate & well spoken Gingrich. God, I love to hear a Punk–and that’s what Gallagher is–cry and whimper in the morning.

  3. There is no way Romney will go after Obama with the same zeal he’s used against his Republican competitors. It’s McCain all over again. Ruthlessly attack conservatives; behave gentlemanly towards the Democrats.

  4. I was a little excited about Newt during the early debates. I thought that he had undergone some introspection, and was emerging with a new character to complement his impressive grasp of issues. He has seriously disappointed.

    Life is full of disappointments; but, we must shrug them off and move on.

    Despite the bleatings of Limbaugh, and like minded ideological hard liners, we are essentially left with one viable candidate. Despite some media efforts to spin otherwise, Santorum, an admirable fellow, isn’t going to cut it. For starters, he simply has no leadership credentials to point to. Being a nice guy; having well-informed, but theoretical knowledge of the issues; and wanting to be President just isn’t enough. Nor is the the mythical perfect candidate going to emerge from the mists.

    So, the competent, cool, “conservative enough”, Mitt is going to do battle with Obama. The sooner the “base” wakes up to the facts, the better.

  5. Yes, Newt shouldn’t bring up the subject of character. He looks pretty foolish doing so.

    But a Romney nomination will destroy the Republican Party.

  6. rickl..”..Romney nomination will destroy the Republican Party.”

    WHAT..? Alice is stuck in that darn Bunny Hole,’Yo.

  7. “a Romney nomination will destroy the Republican Party”

    You say that like it’s a bad thing…

    “we are essentially left with one viable candidate”

    You must be thinking of Ron Paul. Romney will lose to Obama, as Santorum has identified. Paul is the only other GOP prospect who polls within range of Obama.

    Nice that 3 of 4 GOP finalists actually do have sound personal character. And the other guy is the best fighter.

  8. I think that Paul would win more votes among independents, young people, and disaffected Democrats than the other three combined.

    I saw a comment somewhere recently that said if Paul ran as an independent, he could actually end up hurting Obama more than the Republican, for the above reasons. No way are young hipsters going to vote for Gingrich, Romney, or Santorum. They would end up defaulting to Obama or staying home. But if Paul was in the mix, it could be a different story.

  9. It’s my understanding that the reason Newt nearly lost in 1992 was because he was embroiled in some kind of check kiting scandal that took down a lot of house members (I was nine when that election happened, so I don’t remember it). It appears that he was also a redistricting victim that year.

    From Wikipedia: As a result of the 1990 United States Census, Georgia picked up an additional seat for the 1992 U.S. House elections. However, the Democratic-controlled Georgia General Assembly eliminated the district that Gingrich represented, splitting its territory among three neighboring districts. Much of the southern portion of Gingrich’s district, including his home in Carrollton, was drawn into the Columbus-based 3rd District, represented by five-term Democrat Richard Ray. At the same time, the Assembly created a new, heavily Republican 6th District in Fulton and Cobb counties in the wealthy northern suburbs of Atlanta–an area that Gingrich had never represented. However, Gingrich sold his home in Carrollton and moved to Marietta in the new 6th. His primary opponent, State Representative Herman Clark, made an issue out of Gingrich’s 22 kited checks in the House Bank Scandal and also criticized Gingrich for moving into the district. After a recount Gingrich prevailed by 980 votes, or a 51% to 49% result[34]–all but assuring him of election in November. He was reelected three times from this district against only nominal Democratic opposition.

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