• Comment (3)

What Newt Gingrich Can Do for Mitt Romney

May 3, 2012 RSS Feed Print

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich probably stayed in the race for the Republican presidential nomination a bit too long.

His campaign stands more than $4 million in debt, his outside enterprises crumbled while he was on the campaign trail, and he won only two of more than 40 primary contests and was falling behind even Rep. Ron Paul in the latter days. But of all the foes former Gov. Mitt Romney vanquished on his way to becoming the presumptive Republican nominee, he could have the most impact going forward.

[See a collection of political cartoons on Newt Gingrich.]

Gingrich has said he is eager to return to the campaign trail—not as a candidate but as a surrogate for Romney. That's why Romney and the Republican National Committee "have offered to be helpful" in retiring his campaign debt. They know he is a powerful speaker with a bevy of ideas and a loyal following who could help Romney break through with constituencies where the candidate doesn't currently have a strong foothold.

For instance, energy. "He drove the issue of energy more than any other candidate in the race," said Bill McCollum, former attorney general of Florida, former congressman, and director of Newt's Florida primary campaign. From his promise of a return to $2.50-per-gallon gas to his plans for dramatic increases in domestic production to his calls for burying hydroelectric power lines, Gingrich has had much to say on what could end up being the campaign's most crucial issue.

Going forward, he can be the attack dog Romney cannot on this issue. He can point out how we got to $4 gas, how much presidents can do to influence gas prices, and how little this president has chosen to do.

[Read the U.S. News debate: Is Obama to Blame for High Gas Prices?]

Then, there is Latino outreach—an area where Gingrich has made more progress than any other Republican who ran for president in this cycle. He was the only candidate to point out the impracticality of deporting 12 million Latinos living in this country. He founded a website, The Americano, to explain conservative policies to Latino readers.

After his conversion to Catholicism, another move that drew him closer to Latinos, he made a movie about Pope John Paul II, and then made sure it was translated into Spanish so Latinos could watch it. "I cannot imagine why a Latino would vote for any of the other candidates, who have done nothing to reach out to the Latino community," said Sylvia Garcia, his longtime director of Latino outreach, during the primary season.

Gingrich also has offered specific policy proposals on healthcare that could form the basis of a what-next package of proposals if the Supreme Court overturns Obamacare. He could speak on the space program, entitlement reform, college loans, campaign finance, banking reform, and a host of other issues from the perspective of someone who has studied these ideas as a lawmaker, a thinker, and a policy entrepreneur.

[See a collection of political cartoons on healthcare.]

But there's something more primal, more direct he could address far more easily than Romney—and that is the competing visions for America that Republicans and Democrats represent. He can directly attack the liberalism, anti-exceptionalism, internationalism, and collectivism implicit in President Obama's policy choices in a way that would sound inauthentic coming from Romney or even Romney's as-yet unselected running mate.

Romney will want to maintain his distance, of course, and Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus will want to keep Gingrich on a short leash. After all, Gingrich says the big reason he didn't prevail in the primaries is because he wasn't unconventional enough.

[See pictures of Newt Gingrich.]

But there is little question the former speaker is one of the best messengers on the right and one of the best in public life at boiling down complex policy questions to palatable Kool-Aid that average Americans can understand and rally around.

So don't be surprised if Newton Leroy Gingrich takes a few weeks to get himself tanned and rested—and then, when he's ready, hits the campaign trail hard and makes a big difference in how voters view Romney, President Obama, and the choices and visions of America they represent.

Surrogate, floater of big ideas, attack dog … these are not the roles Gingrich wanted to play in this campaign. But they probably are the roles that suit him best.

Tags:
Hispanic voters,
healthcare,
gas prices,
Newt Gingrich,
Barack Obama,
Mitt Romney

Reader Comments Read all comments (3)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

The only reason Newt held on so long is because of his narcissism. The reason Romney want to be president is because it is on his bucket list. Meanwhile...Obama is creating havoc in this country and doing damage to civil liberties just like Bush did and like Romney will (he also supports NDAA.)

Cam of MD 1:10PM May 03, 2012

THE REAL REASON NEWT HUNG ON...

He loves his country and knew he would be the best man for the job.

Further, he could have destroyed Obama during open debate, and so may have won the election, after exposing Obama for the egotistical lightweight he is.

R.L. Schaefer of CA 11:47AM May 03, 2012

The only reason Newt stayed in the race,long after it became evident that he had no shot at the nomination.was that he is a suprreme ego maniac.

Newt,long ago,had lost touch with reality.

bruce b of NV 11:12AM May 03, 2012

Ford O'Connell

Ford O'Connell

Ford O'Connell is a Republican strategist, conservative activist, and political analyst. A frequent commentator on Fox News, CNN, and other broadcast media, he worked on the 2008 McCain-Palin presidential campaign. He is the managing director of Civic Forum Strategies and the chairman of CivicForumPAC. In 2010, he was named a “Rising Star” by Campaigns & Elections magazine.

advertisement

Robert Schlesinger

Political Enemies: Good vs. Perfect

In politics the perfect is often the enemy of the good.

Latest Videos

advertisement

Mary Kate Cary

Washington’s Toxic Stew

President Obama's burgeoning problems affect more than this week’s three scandals.