Newt's S.C. win propels GOP into longer campaign

But Gingrich will face continued questioning about his behavior that won't be so easy to dodge with media-baiting. The sooner GOP voters take the character questions seriously, the better.

Crosscut archive image.

Newt Gingrich at a conservative event in September 2011.

But Gingrich will face continued questioning about his behavior that won't be so easy to dodge with media-baiting. The sooner GOP voters take the character questions seriously, the better.

The most immediate effect of former House Speaker Newt Gingrich's victory in Saturday's South Carolina Republican presidential primary is that the GOP nominating race will go to Florida at the end of this month, and to other states beyond.

For the time being, all four competitors will remain in the field. Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum will be hard pressed to raise enough money to run a competitive Florida campaign and could be eliminated if he does poorly there. Texas Rep. Ron Paul has a core support group that will carry him all the way to the GOP summer convention, although not in contention for the nomination itself. Despite finishing No. 2 to Gingrich in South Carolina,  former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney remains the favorite.

Gingrich's upset victory can be laid to his shrewd attacks, in GOP debates this past week, against Fox News correspondent Juan Williams and CNN moderator John King, exploiting conservative-voter hostility toward the media in general. Romney did all right in the debates but hesitated and seemed unsure of himself in questioning regarding release of his tax returns.

Longer term, the tax-return issue is not likely to hurt Romney. Everyone knows he is rich. Former candidates — including Presidents Franklin Roosevelt and John Kennedy, New York Govs. Nelson Rockefeller and Averell Harriman, and Sen. John Kerry also were rich — either by marriage or inheritance.  President Ronald Reagan, as Romney, was self-made rich. Once he gets over his guilt about gilt, Romney is likely to get past the issue.

Gingrich, by contrast, made short-term hay from his media-baiting. But the questions posed by Williams and King are likely to plague him in later contests. Williams asked about racist overtones in Gingrich's references to Obama as "the food stamp president." King asked him to respond to his second wife's characterization of their marriage, in a network TV interview, and her assertion that Gingrich had asked for an "open marriage," in which he would be free to pursue an affair with the woman who is his present, third wife. You can be sure that media, and his opponents, will continue to pursue these and other subjects where a blame-it-on-the-media posture will not suffice.

Each of the four remaining Republicans fills a niche.

Romney is, as Gingrich says, "a Massachusetts moderate," who governed successfully in a heavily Democratic state. He is the most recent in a line of Republican national politicians, including New York Govs. Tom Dewey and Nelson Rockefeller, President Gerald Ford, Sen. Bob Dole, the Bushes Elder and Younger, and Sen. John McCain, who occupied that middle ground.

Though all the Republican aspirants claim lineage to former President Ronald Reagan, Romney can do so on the basis that he was elected and governed in a Democratic-majority state, is primarily concerned with economic growth, and has, of all the GOP candidates, been most reluctant to go on the attack against his competitors. Polling data continue to show him the most electable GOP candidate in a race against President Barack Obama.

Santorum is the standardbearer and favorite of Christian conservatives who place highest priority on issues such as abortion, school prayer, gay marriage, and "family values." (He also is benefiting from that group's antipathy toward Mormons, including Romney, whom they consider members of a non-Christian sect). Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee was this group's champion four years ago. Fully two-thirds of South Carolina Republicans characterize themselves as "born again" or "evangelicals."

Paul has a steadfast base among libertarians, isolationists, and those who see the Federal Reserve as the principal source of our recent economic distress. He cannot be nominated but, at the GOP national convention, will be able to leverage perhaps 10-15 percent of the delegates toward platform positions including some of his views. He is most similar to 1992 third-party candidate Ross Perot, who got 19 percent of total votes in the general election (after leading the major candidates, President George H.W. Bush and then-Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton, in three-way polling matchups prior to his own candidacy's implosion several weeks before election day).

Gingrich is the most recent "angry candidate," bristling not only at Democrats but at his own party's centrist establishment, his competitors for the nomination, and the national media. President Richard Nixon, Sen. Barry Goldwater, Vice President Spiro Agnew, former Alabama Gov. George Wallace (both an independent and Democratic candidate), and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin also traded on voters' resentments of what they characterized as the elitism of other leaders' alleged insensitivity to populist concerns.  

This weekend's edition of The Wall Street Journal carried the most recent of several studies examining recent-year changes in America which, in turn, are being reflected in current political discourse. This one was by Charles Murray, a conservative scholar currently at the American Enterprise Institute. But similar data have been developed by researchers of all outlooks.

Some of the highlights:

  • Among white Americans, ages 30-49, with a college education and working as professionals or managers, some 83 percent were married in 2010 compared to 94 percent in 1960.  Among the non-college-educated, ages 30-49, working in blue-collar, low-skill, or service jobs, 48 percent were married in 2010 compared to 84 percent in 1960.  Some of those married, of course, have been previously married.
  • Far more working-class males are working less than 40 hours a week than upper-middle-class males, reflecting instability in labor markets.
  • Secularists — that is, people without a professed religion or attending church no more than once a year — now amounted to 40 percent of upper-middle-class Americans, compared to 29 percent some 25 years ago, while they had increased from 38 percent to 59 percent among working-class Americans. A pastor recently told me he liked Seattle except that "nobody goes to church here."  Washington and Oregon go to church less than the other 48 states. Only evangelicals appear to be growing in number in most parts of the country.
  • Births by unmarried college-graduated women had in 40 years increased from 1 to 5.6 percent; among women with 13-15 years of education (some college), from 1 to about 15 percent; among women with high-school educations, from 5 to nearly 40 percent; and among women with less than 12 years of education, from 10 to 65 percent.
  • Income disparities also have increased between high-earning and low-earning Americans, with black and Latino Americans being hit hardest.  

The comfortable, stably employed, two-parent, Brady Bunch family model does not exist anymore for many in our society. One marriage for life. Children only out of marriage. Church every Sunday. Everyone aspiring to college. A nominally classless society in which everyone was "middle class." This is not anymore the America that would-be presidents face on the hustings. It is a country with far greater economic and social stresses than at any time over the past 60 years. It is a country in which anger is easier to come by and consensus harder to reach.

As said before, in these difficult times the big economic and national-security issues will overwhelm all else in November decision-making. But, between now and then, Tea Partiers, Occupiers, Christian conservatives, libertarians, isolationists, and many other mad-as-hell-and-not-going-to-take-it-anymore voters will be sending their message to candidates, to heed or ignore.

In his GOP nominating campaign, Gingrich will  continue to  portray himself as the angry man willing to stick it to Obama, the media, and the establishment. He will put a lot of poison into the air. I consider him to be a hopeless narcissist, unstable and incapable of governance. It may take a while, though, for Republican voters to fully get onto Gingrich. The sooner they do, the better it will be for their party and for the country.

  

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About the Authors & Contributors

Ted Van Dyk

Ted Van Dyk

Ted Van Dyk has been active in national policy and politics since 1961, serving in the White House and State Department and as policy director of several Democratic presidential campaigns. He is author of Heroes, Hacks and Fools and numerous essays in national publications. You can reach him in care of editor@crosscut.com.