Everything about Newt Gingrich totally explained
Newton Leroy Gingrich, (born
June 17,
1943), served as the
Speaker of the United States House of Representatives from 1995 to 1999. In 1995,
Time magazine selected him as the
Person of the Year for his role in leading the
Republican Revolution in the House, ending 40 years of
Democratic Party majorities in that body. During his tenure as Speaker he represented the public face of the
Republican opposition to
Bill Clinton.
A college history professor,
conservative political leader, and prolific author, Gingrich twice ran unsuccessfully for the House before first winning a seat in November 1978. He was re-elected 10 times, and his activism as a member of the House's Republican minority eventually enabled him to succeed
Dick Cheney as
House Minority Whip in 1989. As a co-author of the 1994
Contract with America, Gingrich was in the forefront of the Republican Party's dramatic success in the 1994 Congressional elections and subsequently was elected Speaker. Gingrich's leadership in Congress was marked by opposition to many of the policies of the
Clinton Administration, culminating in the impeachment of President Clinton. Shortly after the 1998 elections, where Republicans lost 5 seats in the House, Gingrich announced his resignation as Speaker.
After resigning his seat, Gingrich has maintained a career as a political analyst and consultant and continues to write works related to government and other subjects, such as
historical fiction. Recently he founded the non-partisan think tank American Solutions. The organization is active in working in areas it believes a majority of Americans agree upon, such as strong national defense, the revitalization of values, and the modernization and improvement of American government.
Early life and education
Newt Gingrich was born
Newton Leroy McPherson on
June 17,
1943 in
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, to nineteen-year-old Newton Searles McPherson and sixteen-year-old Kathleen Daugherty, who were married in September 1942. His mother raised him by herself until she married Robert Gingrich, who then
adopted Newt. Gingrich has a younger half-sister,
Candace Gingrich, a gay and lesbian rights activist who was born when Newt was already a young adult.
Gingrich was the child of a career military family, moving a number of times while growing up and attending school at various military installations. He ultimately graduated from Baker High School in
Columbus, Georgia in
1961. He received a
B.A. degree from
Emory University in
Atlanta in 1965. He received an
M.A. in 1968 and a
Ph.D in 1971 in Modern European History from
Tulane University in
New Orleans.
Gingrich taught history at
University of West Georgia in
Carrollton, Georgia from 1970 to 1978, although he was untenured. Newt also taught a class, Renewing American Civilization, at
Kennesaw State University in 1993.
Personal life
Newt Gingrich has been married three times. He married Jackie Battley, his former high school geometry teacher, when he was 19 years old (she was seven years his senior at 26 years old). After an alleged affair in 1977 with Ann Manning, then the wife of a West Georgia professor, Gingrich sought a divorce from Battley. That was finalized in 1981. Newt refused to pay both alimony and child support. The local First Baptist church took up collections for support of Jackie and their children.
In 1981, Gingrich wed Marianne Ginther, to whom he remained married until 2000, the same year Gingrich had an affair with a then 33-year-old Congressional staffer, Callista Bisek. He and Bisek were married in 2000 and currently reside in Virginia. Gingrich has two daughters, Kathy and Jackie from his marriage to Jackie Battley, two sons-in-law and two grandchildren.
Although college peers noted Gingrich's preference to discuss politics more than his personal life, Gingrich’s personal life has been the subject of much attention from both the media and his political opponents over the years. In 1992, his Democratic opponent, Tony Center, ran an ad claiming that Gingrich had "delivered divorce papers to his wife the day after her cancer operation," which wasn't strictly true, although friends have acknowledged that he discussed divorce terms with his estranged wife while visiting her in the hospital.
Positions
Illegal immigration
From Gingrich's five challenges:
"No serious nation in the age of terror can afford to have wide-open borders with millions of illegal aliens crossing at will."
Although a source of friction in the conservative wing of the GOP (and some pro-union "blue dog" democrats), Gingrich supports a "guest worker program" for Mexican citizens, meaning that an undetermined number of Mexican citizens would be allowed to come to the United States and work for a period of time, then return to Mexico. Gingrich also supports the idea of allowing some of these guest workers to become citizens. In his book
Winning the Future, he says:
"Along with total border control, we must make it easier for people who enter the United States legally, to work for a set period of time, obey the law, and return home. The requirements for participation in a worker visa program should be tough and uncompromising. The first is essential: Everyone currently working in the United States illegal must return to their home country to apply for the worker visa program. Anything less than requiring those who are here illegally to return home to apply for legal status is amnesty, plain and simple."
Global warming
In April 2007, Gingrich held an open debate on climate change with Senator
John Kerry. In this debate, he stated that he believes that global warming is indeed an occurring phenomenon: "My message, I think, is that the evidence is sufficient that we should move toward the most effective possible steps to reduce carbon loading in the atmosphere." Gingrich's environmental ideas were revealed in his book,
A Contract with the Earth. Gingrich supports tax breaks to mitigate carbon emissions instead of regulations such as
cap-and-trade.
United States Representative
Early elections
In
1974 and
1976, Gingrich made two unsuccessful runs for Congress in
Georgia's sixth congressional district, which stretched from the southern
Atlanta suburbs to the
Alabama border. Gingrich lost both times to incumbent Democrat
Jack Flynt. Flynt was a
conservative Democrat who had served in Congress since 1955 and never faced a serious challenge prior to Gingrich's two runs against him. However, Gingrich nearly defeated Flynt in 1974, a year that was otherwise a very bad year for Republicans due to
Watergate. A 1976 rematch was similarly close, despite the presence of favorite
Jimmy Carter on the presidential ballot.
Flynt chose not to run for re-election in
1978, and the Democrats fielded state senator Virginia Shapard in his place. Shapard's support of the
Equal Rights Amendment (External Link
) backfired against her in the socially conservative district, and Gingrich defeated her by almost 9 points.
Gingrich was reelected six times from this district, facing only one truly difficult race. In the
House elections of 1990, he defeated Democrat David Worley by only 974 votes.
(External Link
)
Pre-speakership congressional activities
In 1981, Gingrich co-founded the Congressional Military Reform Caucus (MRC) as well as the Congressional Aviation and Space Caucus. In 1983 he founded the Conservative Opportunity Society, a group that included young conservative House Republicans. In 1983, Gingrich demanded the expulsion of fellow representatives
Dan Crane and
Gerry Studds for their roles in the
Congressional Page sex scandal.
In May
1988, Gingrich (along with 77 other House members and
Common Cause) brought ethics charges against Democratic Speaker
Jim Wright, who was alleged to have used a book deal to circumvent campaign-finance laws and House ethics rules and eventually resigned as a result of the inquiry. Gingrich's success in forcing Wright's resignation was in part responsible for his rising influence in the Republican
caucus. In 1989, after
House Minority Whip Dick Cheney was appointed
Secretary of Defense, Gingrich was elected to succeed him. Gingrich and others in the house, especially the newly minted
Gang of Seven, railed against what they saw as ethical lapses in the House, an institution that had been under Democratic control for almost 40 years. The
House banking scandal and
Congressional Post Office Scandal were emblems of the corruption exposed.
Election of 1992
During the 1990s round of redistricting, Georgia picked up an additional seat as a result of the 1990 United States Census. However, the Democratic-controlled
General Assembly split Gingrich's old territory among three other districts. Gingrich's home in
Carrollton was drawn into the
Columbus-based 3rd District, represented by five-term Democrat
Richard Ray.
At the same time, they created a new 6th District in
Fulton and
Cobb counties in the wealthy northern suburbs of Atlanta — an area Gingrich had never represented. However, Gingrich sold his home in Carrollton, moved to
Marietta in the new 6th and won a very close Republican primary. The primary victory was tantamount to election in the new, heavily Republican district. Also, Ray narrowly lost to Republican state senator
Mac Collins.
Speaker of the House
The Contract with America and rise to Speaker
In the
1994 campaign season, in an effort to offer a concrete alternative to shifting Democratic policies and to unite distant wings of the Republican Party, Gingrich presented
Dick Armey's and his
Contract with America. The contract was signed by himself and other Republican candidates for the House of Representatives. The contract ranged from issues with broad popular support, including
welfare reform,
term limits, tougher
crime laws, and a
balanced budget law, to more specialized legislation such as restrictions on American military participation in U.N. missions. In the November 1994 elections, Republicans gained 54 seats and took control of the House for the first time since 1954.
Longtime
House Minority Leader Bob Michel of
Illinois hadn't run for re-election in 1994, giving Gingrich, as the highest-ranking Republican returning to Congress, the inside track to becoming Speaker. Legislation proposed by the
104th United States Congress included term limits for Congressional Representatives,
tax cuts,
welfare reform, and a
balanced budget amendment, as well as independent
auditing of the finances of the House of Representatives and elimination of non-essential services such as the House barbershop and shoe-shine concessions. Congress fulfilled Gingrich's Contract promise to bring all ten of the Contract's issues to a vote within the first 100 days of the session, even though most legislation was held up in the Senate, vetoed by President Bill Clinton, or substantially altered in negotiations with Clinton. The Contract was criticized by the
Sierra Club and by
Mother Jones magazine as a
Trojan horse tactic that, while deploying the rhetoric of reform, would have the real effect of allowing corporate polluters to profit at the expense of the environment; it was referred to by opponents, including President Clinton, as the "Contract on America".
However, most parts of the Contract eventually became law in some fashion and represented a dramatic departure from the legislative goals and priorities of previous Congresses. See
Implementation of the Contract for a detailed discussion of what was and wasn't enacted.
Government shutdown and the "snub"
The momentum of the
Republican Revolution stalled in late 1995 and early 1996 as a result of a budget fight between Congressional Republicans and President
Bill Clinton. Speaker Gingrich and the new Republican majority wanted deep cuts to government spending, which Clinton flatly rejected. Without enough votes to override President Clinton's
veto, Gingrich led the Republicans not to submit a revised budget, allowing the previously approved appropriations to expire on schedule, and causing parts of the Federal government to
shut down for lack of funds.
Gingrich inflicted a blow to his public image by seeming to suggest that the Republican hard-line stance over the budget was in part due to his feeling "snubbed" by the President the day before following his return from
Yitzhak Rabin's funeral in Israel. Gingrich was lampooned in the media as a petulant figure with an inflated self-image, and at least one editorial cartoon depicted him as having thrown a temper tantrum. Democratic leaders took the opportunity to attack Gingrich's motives for the budget standoff, and some say the shutdown might have contributed to Clinton's re-election in November 1996.
Tom DeLay recounts the event in his book,
No Retreat, No Surrender, that Gingrich "made the mistake of his life" and says the following of Gingrich's mis-step of the shutdown:
"He told a room full of reporters that he forced the shutdown because Clinton had rudely made him and Bob Dole sit at the back of Air Force One...Newt had been careless to say such a thing, and now the whole moral tone of the shutdown had been lost. What had been a noble battle for fiscal sanity began to look like the tirade of a spoiled child..The revolution, I can tell you, was never the same."
In her
autobiography,
Living History Hillary Rodham Clinton shows a picture of Bill Clinton, Dole, and Gingrich laughing on the plane. Gingrich claims in his book
Lessons Learned The Hard Way the picture was taken on the plane going to
Yitzhak Rabin's funeral in Israel rather than on the return trip from Israel, contradicting Clinton's claim.
Ethics sanctions
Eighty-four ethics charges were filed against Speaker Gingrich during his term, including claiming tax-exempt status for a college course run for political purposes. Following an investigation by the House Ethics Committee, Gingrich was sanctioned for US$300,000 after the House Ethics Committee concluded that inaccurate information supplied to investigators represented "intentional or ... reckless" disregard of House rules.
Special Counsel James M. Cole concluded that Gingrich violated federal tax law and had lied to the ethics panel in an effort to force the committee to dismiss the complaint against him. However, the full panel refused to reach a conclusion about whether Gingrich had violated federal tax law and instead decided to leave that finding up to the IRS. In 1999, the IRS cleared the organizations connected with the "Renewing American Civilization" courses under investigation for possible tax violations, which suggests that Gingrich didn't use tax-exempt money for political purposes.
Leadership challenge
In the summer of
1997, a few House Republicans had come to see Gingrich's public image as a liability and attempted to replace him as Speaker. According to
Time, the conspiracy was engineered by several Republican backbenchers, including
Steve Largent of
Oklahoma,
Lindsey Graham of
South Carolina and
Mark Souder of
Indiana. They soon gained the support of the four Republicans who ranked directly below Gingrich in the House leadership — Armey,
House Majority Whip Tom DeLay, Republican conference chairman
John Boehner of
Ohio, and Republican leadership chairman
Bill Paxon of
New York.
On
July 9, DeLay, Boehner and Paxon had the first of several secret meetings to discuss the rebellion. The next night, DeLay met with 20 of the plotters in Largent's office, and appeared to assure them that the leadership was with them.
Under the plan, Armey, DeLay, Boehner and Paxon were to present Gingrich with an ultimatum — resign or be voted out. Combined with the votes of the Democrats, there appeared to be enough votes to vacate the chair. However, the rebels decided that they wanted Paxon to be the new Speaker. At that point, Armey backed out, and told his chief of staff to warn Gingrich about the coup.
In response, Gingrich forced Paxon to resign his post, but backed off initial plans to force a vote of confidence in the rest of the Republican leadership.
Fall from speakership, resignation from the House
By 1998, Gingrich had become a highly visible and polarizing figure in the public's eye, making him an easy target for Democratic congressional candidates across the nation. In 1997 a strong majority of Americans believed Gingrich should have been replaced as Speaker of the House, and he held an all-time low job approval rating of 28%.
During this period, Gingrich focused on the perjury charges against Clinton as a unifying campaign theme in national Republican advertising. While Republicans believed this theme would ensure gains in the 1998 midterm elections, they instead lost five seats in the House — the worst performance in 64 years for a party that didn't hold the presidency. Polls showed that Gingrich and the Republican Party's attempt to remove President Clinton from office was widely unpopular among the American public.
Gingrich suffered much of the blame for the election loss. Facing another rebellion in the Republican caucus, he announced on November 6 that he wouldn't only stand down as Speaker, but would leave the House as well. He had been handily reelected to an 11th term in that election, but declined to take his seat. According to
Newsweek, he'd lost control over his caucus long before the election, and it was possible that he wouldn't have been reelected as Speaker in any case.
Post-congressional life
Gingrich has since remained involved in national politics and public policy debate. He is a senior fellow at the conservative
think tank American Enterprise Institute, focusing on
health care (he has founded the Center for Health Transformation),
information technology, the military, and politics. Gingrich is also a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the conservative think tank
Hoover Institute, focusing on U.S. politics, world history, national security policy, and environmental policy issues. He sometimes serves as a commentator, guest or panel member on television news shows, mostly on the Fox News Channel. He is listed as a contributor by
Fox News Channel, and frequently appears as a guest on the channel; he's also hosted occasional specials for the Fox News Channel.
In late September of 2007, Gingrich founded the non-partisan organization American Solutions. The stated mission of the group is to become the "leading grassroots movement to recruit, educate, and empower citizen activists and elected officials to develop solutions to transform all levels of government." Gingrich spoke of the group and its non-partisan objectives at the CPAC conference of 2008 and currently serves as its General Chairman.
In June
2006, Gingrich publicly called for Congressman
Jack Murtha to be censured by the United States Congress for what Gingrich claims was Murtha's statement that America was a greater threat to world stability than Iran or North Korea. The paper that originally printed the statement has recently backed away and admitted that Murtha had been misquoted and was merely citing a poll that showed the world believed the United States was a greater threat than either of those nations. Gingrich, however, has refused to apologize or retract his call for Murtha to be censured.
Besides politics Gingrich has written a book,
Rediscovering God in America. Since Gingrich has, "dedicated much of his time to calling America back to our Christian heritage", Jerry Falwell invited him to be the speaker, for the second time, at Liberty University's graduation, May 19, 2007.
Recently, he's responded to Geraldine Ferraro's comments about
Barack Obama's success by saying they're "childish" but "true".
Alternate history collaboration with William R. Forstchen
In
1995, Gingrich collaborated with
William R. Forstchen on the
alternate history novel
1945, describing a
World War II in which the US fought against (and defeated) Japan only, while
Nazi Germany defeated the
Soviet Union, and the two confront each other in a
cold war that swiftly turns hot.
Some years later, Gingrich and Forstchen turned to co-authoring an
alternate history trilogy of the
American Civil War, in which the
Confederacy wins the
battle of Gettysburg. The trilogy consists of (2003),
Grant Comes East (2004), and (2005).
In 2007 they published, the first of a new series. The next year he published the sequel
Days of Infamy, an alternate history with an identical title and similar basis as successful alternate history novelist
Harry Turtledove's own
Pacific War novel.
Possible 2008 presidential run
Between 2005 and 2007, Gingrich expressed interest in being a candidate for the 2008 Republican nomination for the Presidency. On
September 28,
2007, Gingrich announced that if his
supporters pledged $30 million to his
campaign (until October 21), he'd compete for the nomination.
However, on
September 29 spokesman Rick Tyler said that Gingrich wouldn't seek the presidency in 2008 because he couldn't continue to serve as chairman of American Solutions. "It is legally impermissible for him to continue on as chairman of American Solutions (for Winning the Future) and to explore a campaign for president," Tyler said.
Books authored
Nonfiction
- The Government's Role in Solving Societal Problems. Associated Faculty Press, Incorporated. January 1982 ISBN 0-86733-026-0
- Window of Opportunity. Tom Doherty Associates, December 1985. ISBN 0-312-93923-X
- Contract with America (co-editor). Times Books, December 1994. ISBN 0-8129-2586-6
- Restoring the Dream. Times Books, May 1995. ISBN 0-8129-2666-8
- Quotations from Speaker Newt. Workman Publishing Company, Inc., July 1995. ISBN 0-7611-0092-X
- To Renew America. Farrar Straus & Giroux, July 1996. ISBN 0-06-109539-7
- Lessons Learned The Hard Way. HarperCollins Publishers, May 1998 ISBN 0-06-019106-6
- Presidential Determination Regarding Certification of the Thirty-Two Major Illicit Narcotics Producing and Transit Countries. DIANE Publishing Company, September 1999. ISBN 0-7881-3186-9
- Saving Lives and Saving Money. Alexis de Tocqueville Institution, April 2003. ISBN 0-9705485-4-0
- Winning the Future. Regnery Publishing, January 2005. ISBN 0-89526-042-5
- Rediscovering God in America: Reflections on the Role of Faith in Our Nation's History and Future. Integrity Publishers, October 2006. ISBN 1-59145-482-4
- A Contract with the Earth, (Newt on the environment) Johns Hopkins Press, October 1, 2007. ISBN 0-8018-8780-2
- Real Change: From the World That Fails to the World That Works. Regnery Publishing, January 2008. ISBN 978-1596980532
Alternate History
Alternate history is a
subgenre of
speculative fiction that's set in a world in which
history has
diverged from history as it's generally known. Gingrich co-wrote the following alternate history novels and series of novels with
William R. Forstchen.
1945 Baen Books, August 1995 ISBN 978-0671877392
Civil War Series
Thomas Dunne Books, June 2003 ISBN 978-0312309350
Grant Comes East Thomas Dunne Books, June 2004 ISBN 0-312-30937-6
Thomas Dunne Books, June 2005 ISBN 0-312-34298-5
Pacific War Series
Thomas Dunne Books, May 2007 ISBN 0-312-36350-8Further Information
Get more info on 'Newt Gingrich'.
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