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The Conservative Backlash Against Newt Gingrich
Tweet Share on Facebook January 27, 2012 Comment (16)In a political season known for its twists and turns, this week's twist was pretty amazing to watch: the conservative take-down of former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. In the wake of his big win in South Carolina, the backlash began this week. There are some who believe all of this was orchestrated by the Romney campaign, but I'm not so sure. It's not clear to me that the conservative movement likes former Gov. Mitt Romney, either. I don't buy into the conspiracy—former Gov. Sarah Palin says the "establishment" is trying to "crucify" Gingrich, as she defended the First Dude's endorsement of Newt—I just think that conservatives who have never liked Speaker Gingrich but have been holding their tongues suddenly realized that he might actually have a shot at the nomination. This week, there was a Speak-Now-or-Forever-Hold-Your-Peace moment. Forever holding one's peace didn't look like a good idea anymore.
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Why Newt Gingrich's 'Open Marriage' Request Matters
Tweet Share on Facebook January 20, 2012 Comment (40)Here's the problem with yet another men-behaving-badly story that came out Thursday, the one in which former House Speaker Newt Gingrich's second wife, Marianne Gingrich, told ABC and the Washington Post that he asked her for permission to have an affair, or as she put it, an "open marriage." When she refused, he divorced her and hasn't spoken to her since. And this was after he asked his first wife for a divorce when she was suffering from uterine cancer, in order to marry his second wife. Gingrich said at last night's debate that the "open marriage" story is false, but given his history of affairs and divorces, Marianne Gingrich's allegations strike me as credible. Who knows what the truth really is between two people, but if I had to pick, I'd believe Marianne Gingrich's version over Newt's version. Her allegations fits with the track record he's got: you just never know what's going to come out of his mouth—including asking for an "open marriage."
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Haley Barbour Was Right to Issue Those Pardons
Tweet Share on Facebook January 13, 2012 Comment (8)Back in the 1990s, I wrote many speeches for Gov. Haley Barbour when he was the head of the Republican National Committee. Now he's finishing his second term as governor of Mississippi and had a lot of people urging him to run for president this year. When you write a lot of speeches for someone, you get to know that person pretty well. Haley Barbour is an honorable, decent man. He's compassionate and treats the people who work for him well. He's also a lawyer, and is one of the smartest people I know in politics.













