Is red the new green?

Monday night, I am going to the book Launch for the latest Newt Gingrich book. A Contract with the Earth. I think this is a big deal. Once Newt takes a position, it becomes part of the mainstream in the GOP. Not in the sense that people will start to agree with you. But instead that it becomes hard for people to belittle you, like my friend Rob Bluey does on global warming. I have argued that our current position on global warming may be politically unsustainable. When business goes green, the churches go green, and Newt goes green, I am beginning to see a movement.

Next week, I will be flying to-and-from Ottawa, Canada. Hopefully, I can read this and have a review up.

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Gingrich candidacy or a movement or a vision?

Ralph Hallow’s Washington Times article from yesterday talked about the possibility of a Newt Gingrich candidacy.  There was an interesting paragraph:

"If this election is about money and structure, then we already know who our nominee is," said Mr. Evans, alluding to the well-organized and financed Giuliani and Romney campaigns. "If it’s about ideas and a movement, then we may not know who our nominee is for a long time to come, because nobody has yet tapped into the core coalition of Americans who have a vision of where they think America should go."

Amen. I have not heard an answer to that at all. There are a variety of issues that are important, but no cogent worldview.

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Live blogging the straw poll: Newt and Romney

For some good straw poll blogging, I recommend Marc Ambinder, The Fix, and Cyclone Conservative.

Well, first Newt started by pandering to the anti-immigration forces. Wasn’t he an open borders guy back in the day? Wasn’t he a hero of guest worker programs?

Mitt Romney started by confusing green beans and soybeans. Romney understands that we need change in Washington. He says that change is Washington is going to start "with the results today." Romney starts talking about "strength", a word that David Brooks notes is a bit of a strange fit.

Romney plays up Gitmo. The idea of children cheering for Gitmo turns my stomach.

Romney just said that he wants to cut dividend and capital gains taxes. Actually "zero" for the middle class.

Romney hits on immigration. "Stop illegal immigration." "Amnesty will not work."

Romney also talks about abortion. He says he is firmly pro-life. (whatever)

He talks about marriage. He says he "wants our kids to understand that before they have babies, they get married."

He just called for a button on every computer to cut off porn. DIdn’t Clinton propose that? The V-Chip or something.

Then Romney kicks into his good flag story. And then he ends with his family. I really detest this exhibitionism. But I am amused by the music, "a little less talk and a lot more action."

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Stoller’s conservative majority theory: A lesson for 2008

Open Left’s Matt Stoller  argues here and here that there is an operative "conservative majority" in Congress right now. His basic thesis is summarized here:

In particular, this comment by Paul Rosenberg is I think accurate, as he argues that we are facing a conservative but not right-wing Blue Dog/DLC bloc combined with an anti-progressive elite consensus in the form of a hostile media establishment, a hostile think tank and academic structure, a hostile regulatory structure, a hostile set of cultural leaders and a set of old world economic incentives for elites.

Most conservatives will roll their eyes at this. But I was struck by this when contrasted with something that Brian Faughn wrote at the Weekly Standard today. Brian breaks down the 56 bills that have passed into law since the Democrats took over:

Of those, ‘only’ 20 are measures that rename federal facilities. Of the other measures signed into law, four would be considered major legislation, while the other 32 would be ranked anywhere between minor and trivial. There’s also one major piece of legislation–the lobbying reform bill–that has been neither signed nor vetoed.

And those four laws are:

  • FY07 Omnibus
  • FISA
  • 9/11 Commission
  • War supplemental

There’s a pattern here. The GOP side prevailed on two of these (War Supplemental and FISA). A populist security proposal succeeded on another (9/11 Commission). And the FY07 Omnibus was just disgusting, but demonstrated that either the Democrats aren’t serious about cutting spending or no one is serious about cutting spending. My money is on the latter.

The point of all this is that there appears to be a pro-security majority, and — still — no willingness to control spending. Now, what’s the point of all this? This is exactly what Newt Gingrich predicted after the election:

First, the obvious outcome of a Democratic-controlled Congress and a Republican White House is the need for bipartisan cooperation in order to get anything done. The key question is: Which kind of bipartisanship will emerge? Will there be a Ronald Reagan approach to bipartisanship which appeals to the conservative majority of the House? Or will there be an establishment bipartisanship which cuts deals between liberals and the White House?

Newt describes what a bipartisan conservative majority would look like:

On the other hand, a conservative populist grassroots strategy would almost certainly make daily interactions with liberal leaders more confrontational as they found themselves nominally chairing committees but losing votes on the floor and having their initiatives rejected by a conservative grassroots coalition. With a conservative populist grassroots strategy it is the 44 Blue Dog Democrats who would find themselves cross-pressured. In the House, some 54 Democrats won by claiming they were much more conservative than Nancy Pelosi, and much more conservative than the San Francisco values she represents. Here, they would be forced to choose between their voters back home and the promises made to them during the campaign, and their leadership.

Sound like DiFi flipping on Southwick? Or 41 House Democrats voting for FISA? Or the President’s veto threats and framing over Iraq funding and timing issues? Or a whole series of Motions to Recommit in the House?

Now, spending is always popular. The real test on economic issues will come when we see the reconciliation bills, private equity, Korean FTA, etc., come up. Still unclear.

There’s a lesson for conservatives here about the popularity of national security as an issue. It still works. There may be an issue here about taxes, but we don’t know yet. Our framing is wining so far.  And the Dems can’t find a position that works for them, as Stoller’s anger indicates. If we really start communicating on taxes, we might be able to succeed there too. (stopping a tax increase is much, much easier than cutting spending, as everyone knows)

Just a thought for your non-Ames weekend.

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Gingrich and immigration

First, he puts out an ad. Second, someone drops oppo on him in South Carolina. Basically, he used to be sensible before he started pandering. Does anyone think he is running? Why is this happening?

Ryan Sager points out how misleading the ad is:

It’s worth noting just how misleading this ad is: 15 of the 19 9/11 hijackers were in America legally on visas. Punishing Mexican immigrants for Saudi terrorism is more than a non-sequitur — it’s a transparent fig leaf for pre-existing nativist sentiment.

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Morris: Walking dead conservatives getting in the way

Dick Morris in The Hill (good upgrade…. BTW, the unpublished RSS feeds have all the articles) argues that Romney and Gingrich, both "politically dead", are blocking the rise of a conservative:

Right-wingers who would pass the litmus test … face the need to climb over the political corpses of former Speaker New Gingrich (Ga.) and ex-Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney to make their case.

Now, I would argue that Mitt Romney’s money makes him more of a "Night of the Living Dead" kind of character than a "Dead Man Walking", but whatever.

You will all recall that people got excited about Frank Keating … who then endorsed John McCain. This is the thing that gives me pause about the Fred Thompson boomlet. Where will his money, support, staff, etc. come from?

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Prediction, Newt is getting in

How else do you explain Newt Gingrich’s radio appearance with Dobson yesterday. He, in essence, asked for absolution from America’s Protestant Pope. Conserviatves, especially conservative Christians, like a redemption story. I still contend that George W. Bush’s alcoholism is a fundamental part of his narrative for the Christian community. Jesus saved Bush. That’s why Newt uses this kind of language:

"The honest answer is yes," Gingrich, a potential 2008 Republican  presidential candidate, said in an interview with Focus on the Family founder James Dobson to be aired Friday, according to a transcript provided to The Associated Press. "There are times that I have fallen short of my own standards. There’s certainly times when I’ve fallen short of God’s standards."

Deal Hudson points out that that the solid conservatives in the race ought to be scared:

The solid social conservatives already in the race — especially Brownback and Huckabee — wouldn’t want to see Gingrich get in the ring.

Although I wonder if it is the social conservatives as opposed to the straight movement guys. The social conservatives never really trusted Newt. I would also note that Mitt Romney has a big problem with Gingrich entering the race, according to their senior strategist Alex Castellanos:

The document underscores Romney’s aim to become the "only electable choice" for socially conservative voters. But the plan anticipates that Romney could face a serious threat if Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker who is considered one of the GOP’s leading conservative intellectuals, decides to enter the race.

Newt’s only problem is that Republicans are afraid of him getting in the race. They are convinced he would lose. A recent Gallup Poll put his fav/unfav at 29/49. And I refer to an earlier CNN poll that found that 48% of Republicans do not want Newt to be their nominee.

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Newt, CPAC, and the conservative leader

Newt Gingrich just blasted out an email, reprinted here, and several things jumped out at me:

First, Newt is wrapping himself in the banner of a conservative movement based on ideas by invoking both Reagan and Goldwater. He says, "This may be the most important CPAC since Ronald Reagan helped launch the annual gathering in 1975", and "I just read Ambassador Bill Middendorf’s A Glorious Disaster: Barry Goldwater’s campaign and the Origins of the Conservative Movement (read my review here), and he reminded me of the ferocity of the 1964 Lyndon Johnson campaign."

Second, Newt is collecting contact information and communicating with attendees throughout the convention:

What is the Winning the Future Text Message Challenge? It’s a chance for College Republicans, state delegations, Facebook groups — anyone attending CPAC — to go head-to-head to see who knows the most about the ideas and principles that have shaped the conservative movement.

and:

To register your team, click here. Be certain to fill out all the required fields, and you’ll receive instructions on Thursday, the first day of CPAC.

In other words, Newt is going to be communicating about ideas to the attendees of the convention. But not just in his Saturday night speech, well after the straw poll closes, but throughout, starting when people register (and vote in the straw poll). I bet Newt is trying to win it.

Third, he is attacking the electability argument:

Running as a bland, business-as-usual Republican will be a dead loser. In 2006, the American people repudiated the GOP, because the idea of Republicans’ trying to manage the liberal welfare state they inherited from the Democrats was a dead loser.

The line about "trying to manage the liberal welfare state" is particularly devastating to Romney, I think. And:

Focusing on an anti-Hillary campaign will also be a dead loser. The Clintons are the most determined and intense politicians of our lifetime.

I think that Newt is trying to ride CPAC into a draft movement. Something similar to what Sam Brownback tried to do with the March for Life.

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Newt Gingrich, the other TR Republican?

This is from Draft Newt, where they have excerpts of a recent Gingrich speech on healthcare policy:

Calling himself a pro-regulation, "Theodore Roosevelt Republican," he outlined his plan for tackling child obesity: Annual school weigh-ins to identify "fat and lazy" kids. "This is very politically incorrect," he said, "but you’ve gotta get back to the moral component here."

I didn’t think I’d see anyone other than John McCain claiming to be a Teddy Roosevelt Republican.

And do you really need to weigh kids to figure out which is fat??

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Giuliani/Gingrich WSJ/Iraq op-ed

On Friday, Rudy Giulaini and Newt Gingrich published an op-ed on Iraq in the Wall Street Journal. This was very interesting from several perspectives.

First, Rudy misplayed the Iraq issue. He came out with a statement on the President’s surge proposal relatively late. And he has not demonstrated any particular opinions on the subject. Has he even publicly gone to Iraq?

Second, the lost binder and lackluster fundraising have made his campaign seem a little … weak. Is he genuinely serious about running?

Third, there has been some skepticism that a mayor is ready to be President. By showing the applicability of his experience as mayor to today’s most important policy questions, he begins to address this question in a serious way.

Fourth, Rudy does have the potential to be an "ideas" candidate. He has done a bunch of innovative things. With Newt co-authoring this piece, Rudy’s ideas — and not just the ones in the article — get an implicit endorsement from Newt, who is clearly the leading ideas man in the Republican Party.

All in all, smart.

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