It
appears that Newt Gingrich will suspend his campaign today.
Speaking to a Republican crowd in North Carolina this morning,
Gingrich
said, “It’s pretty clear Governor Romney is going to be the
nominee.”
Many words could be used to describe the Newt 2012 campaign.
Dull is not amongst them. Last summer, it appeared his campaign was
over before it started with key staff defecting once Rick Perry
entered the race. But following a series of impressive debate
performances in which he challenged President Obama to seven one on
one Lincoln-Douglas debates, Republican voters began to give Newt a
second look. After Herman Cain’s troubles began last November, Newt
shot to the top of the polls.
However, as the Iowa Caucuses approached, the remaining
candidates turned their attention to Newt and he did not whether
the scrutiny well. Most damaging were the ads put out by PACs
supporting Mitt Romney. Discontent from the Republican
establishment didn’t help his cause either. Gingrich finished a
distant fourth in both Iowa as the anti-Romney vote began to
coalesce around Rick Santorum. Gingrich fared no better in New
Hampshire with another fourth place finish.
Yet Newt found a new lease on life in the days leading up to the
South Carolina primary with two impressive debate performances
centering on exchanges with Juan Williams of Fox News and John King
of CNN. Both exchanges earned Newt standing ovations. As it turned
out, they were the only standing ovations any candidates received
during the GOP debates. What also worked for Newt was releasing his
tax returns while Romney hemmed and hawed. Palmetto voters awarded
him with a double digit victory over Mitt Romney.
But the Romney Super PACs replicated in Florida what they had
done in Iowa. Romney also outperformed Gingrich in two debates in
Tampa and Jacksonville and ended up besting him in the Florida
Primary by 15 points neutralizing Gingrich’s triumph in South
Carolina ten days earlier. Newt never recovered. The only other
contest he won was in his political base of Georgia on Super
Tuesday. If Newt could not withstand the scrutiny of the Romney
Super PACs then how could he possibly withstand the scrutiny of the
even better funded Obama Super PACs?
Since then, with campaign money running dry, Gingrich has been
going through the motions and visiting zoos around the country.
I think Newt will eventually endorse Romney but like Santorum I
don’t think he’ll be in any great hurry to do it.
Alas, Newt is not the
new Nixon. There will be no more Newt to kick around.
Scorpio51| 4.25.12 @ 11:47AM
Congratulations, you got what you wanted.
Casey Abell| 4.25.12 @ 1:11PM
"I think Newt will eventually endorse Romney but like Santorum I don't think he'll be in any great hurry to do it."
Like anybody cares about Santorum. Anyway, you're wrong about Gingrich taking his time to endorse Romney. Everybody's reporting that Gingrich will do the endorsement next week when he formally withdraws.
Dan| 4.25.12 @ 1:51PM
Gingrich is going to rapidly endorse Romney, because Gingrich always had his eye on the ball, which is defeating obama.
Gingrich will continue to try to influence the platform however.
Occam's Tool| 4.25.12 @ 3:46PM
He lost, now we have to beat the evil Marxist.