Video: Gingrich: Romney’s the Anti-Reagan Republican

Saturday, January 28th, 2012

Republican presidential candidate, Newt Gingrich, defends his conservative credentials, saying, the recent attacks against him are once again painting a falsehood, that Romney’s campaign is trying to smear him and distort his entire history.

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/46156328/

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Gingrich wins SC primary, upsets Romney (AP)

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012

Newt Gingrich has stormed to an upset victory over Mitt Romney in the South Carolina GOP primary with a pair of strong debate performances that most voters said was important to their choice.

Within minutes, the former speaker of the House was looking ahead to the next contest Jan. 31.

“Thank you South Carolina!,” he tweeted. “Help me deliver the knockout punch in Florida.”

In exit polls, most voters said they made up their minds in the last few days of the campaign. Two-thirds said the debates were an important factor in their vote.

Gingrich led among the state’s conservatives, tea party supporters and born-again Christians. Romney held a small advantage among moderate and liberal voters, and those who are not born-again Christians.

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120122/ap_on_el_pr/us_gop_campaign_vote_returns

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Romney: Gingrich activity ‘potentially wrongful’

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney holds a discussion on housing and foreclosure, Monday, Jan. 23, 2012, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney holds a discussion on housing and foreclosure, Monday, Jan. 23, 2012, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks to reporters after a discussion on housing and foreclosure, Monday, Jan. 23, 2012, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, sits with Mary Pinion of Tampa, Fla., as he holds a discussion on housing and foreclosure, Monday, Jan. 23, 2012, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

(AP) ? Mitt Romney launched a multipronged attack Monday on rival Newt Gingrich, including a scathing TV ad and personally accusing the former House speaker of engaging in “potentially wrongful activity” in his consulting work over the past decade.

Romney called on Gingrich to release his client list for that period. He offered no proof that Gingrich had engaged in wrongful behavior when, after leaving Congress, he worked with former colleagues to push for a prescription drug benefit for Medicare. Gingrich has never been a registered lobbyist.

“Was he working or were his entities working with any health care companies that could’ve benefited from that? That could represent not just evidence of lobbying but potentially wrongful activity of some kind,” Romney told reporters after a campaign appearance.

When asked if he was suggesting that Gingrich committed a crime, Romney said: “We just need to understand what his activity’s been over the last 15 years, and make sure that it’s conformed with all the regulations that might exist.”

The attacks, combined with the campaign’s first negative ad and a conference call in which top surrogates criticized Gingrich, showed a newfound aggressiveness for Romney and set the stage for a presidential debate later Monday. Romney lost big to Gingrich in Saturday’s South Carolina primary and has adopted a newly aggressive tone in an effort to try to regain the momentum from Gingrich.

“While Florida families lost everything in the housing crisis, Newt Gingrich cashed in,” the TV ad says, noting that the former speaker made more than $1.6 million working for Freddie Mac. “Gingrich resigned from Congress in disgrace and then cashed in as a D.C. insider.”

Gingrich has said he was a consultant for Freddie Mac, the federally backed mortgage company that played a significant role in the housing crisis.

Romney said Gingrich should return the more than $1.6 million he made from the company.

While Romney criticized Gingrich, Romney also profited from investments in Freddie Mac.

His most recent financial disclosure forms show he had a direct investment in Freddie Mac worth between $100,000 and $250,000. He made between $5,000 and $15,000 in interest income on it between February 2010 and February 2011.

Romney aide Eric Fehrnstrom noted that, even though the former Massachusetts governor profited from the investment, he did not work for Freddie Mac as Gingrich did.

“Newt Gingrich said anybody who profited from Freddie Mac while defending their failed model ought to give the money back,” Fehrnstrom said.

While Romney’s allies have been attacking Gingrich in television commercials for weeks, the Romney campaign’s new commercial marked the first time it has directly attacked any of his opponents.

Romney answered questions from the media after an event Monday that made clear he intends to focus on housing in a state particularly hard hit by home foreclosures and the struggling economy.

But Romney didn’t suggest he intends to change his own prescription for fixing the housing crisis. He told the Las Vegas Review-Journal’s editorial board last year that the housing market should be allowed to hit bottom.

Still, the attacks set the stage for Monday’s debate, a forum in which Gingrich has thrived.

To improve his own performance, Romney was spending much of the day preparing for the two-hour debate with Brett O’Donnell, who advised President George W. Bush and 2008 nominee John McCain.

___

Associated Press writer Brian Bakst contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-01-23-Romney/id-ae453f0e9fdf470b886e483804366a8d

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The Gingrich Dive (talking-points-memo)

Sunday, January 1st, 2012
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Attacks hurt Gingrich in Iowa, no letup pre-caucus

Sunday, January 1st, 2012

Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich speaks during a campaign stop Global Security Services in Davenport, Iowa, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich speaks during a campaign stop Global Security Services in Davenport, Iowa, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

Republican presidential hopeful U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., second from right, walks past an ornament on a Christmas tree as she speaks to local residents during a campaign stop at the Merry Bees coffee shop, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011, in Hampton, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Republican presidential candidate and former Massachussetts Gov. Mitt Romney, left, is interviewed by Bill O’Reilly, right, for his Fox News program “The O’Reilly Factor,” in New York, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011. Romney told O’Reilly he’s the candidate who can best fend off Democratic attacks and defeat President Barack Obama in the election next November. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Republican presidential candidate former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum speaks at a town hall meeting at Redman’s Pizza in Osceola, Iowa, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Republican presidential hopeful and Texas Gov. Rick Perry speaks to local residents during a campaign stop at the Pizza Ranch restaurant, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011, in Manchester, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

(AP) ? More than $1 million in negative advertising ? much of it bankrolled by Mitt Romney’s allies ? has eroded Newt Gingrich’s standing in Iowa and thrown the Republican presidential race here wide open two weeks before the first votes.

The former House speaker’s Iowa slide mirrors his newfound troubles nationally, and it has boosted Romney’s confidence while fueling talk that libertarian-leaning Texas Rep. Ron Paul could pull off a win in the leadoff caucus state on Jan. 3.

“The only person who profits from Republican ads attacking other Republicans is Barack Obama and I think it is pretty reprehensible behavior on the part of some of the candidates,” Gingrich said Monday as he arrived in Davenport, jabbing his opponents even as he insisted he was running an upbeat campaign.

Later, at an appearance in Hiawatha, Gingrich encouraged voters to demand that Romney and others take down the tough spots, saying that they “ought to be ashamed of themselves.”

“If you see Romney, tell him to take them off the air,’” he told several hundred supporters.

Despite his chiding, attacks against him are all but certain to continue. For one, the Restore Our Future political action committee, made up of former Romney staffers from his failed 2008 bid, plans to spend $1.4 million more over the next two weeks, including on a new ad beginning Tuesday that’s expected to be aimed at Gingrich. That would bring to roughly $3 million the amount spent by the group against Gingrich.

Aides for several campaigns competing against Gingrich as well as outside independent groups aligned with the candidates say their internal polls find that he has fallen over the last week from the top slot in Iowa. And a national Gallup poll released Monday found Gingrich’s support plummeting: He had the backing of 26 percent of Republican voters nationally, down from 37 percent on Dec. 8. Romney’s support was largely unchanged at 24 percent.

Gingrich’s weakened position follows a barrage of advertising that cast him as a longtime Washington, D.C., power-broker. The ads, primarily financed by so-called super PACs, underscore the power of independent groups following a Supreme Court decision last year that allowed people, unions and corporations to donate unlimited amounts of money to outfits advocating the election or defeat of candidates. Since the ruling, groups have popped up to work on behalf of every serious Republican presidential candidate.

Gingrich said while campaigning in Iowa that any candidate faced with such a concentrated an attack will slip.

“You get enough negative ads without answering them, your numbers go down for a while,” said Gingrich, who has tried to refrain from attacking his fellow Republicans. “I think the average Republican’s going to be very unhappy with Republicans whose entire campaign is negative.”

With the caucuses looming in two weeks, the race in Iowa is arguably anyone’s to win. And the results here will shape the rest of the state-by-state march to the GOP nomination.

Gingrich has acknowledged that the onslaught has tested his pledge to keep his criticism focused on Democratic President Barack Obama.

The Republican rushed back to Iowa on Monday after a three-day absence for three days of campaigning before voters tune out this weekend for the Christmas holiday.

He told about 200 people in the garage of a security company in Davenport that he would launch a 44-stop Jobs and Prosperity tour before the caucuses, and use those events to answer any charges put out there. Gingrich, whose campaign nearly collapsed last summer, also acknowledged his Iowa organization lags behind. “There’s no question, some candidates have been running for five or six years and have raised millions of dollars and they’re better organized than I am.”

But Gingrich has also been trying to catch up, and got some good news upon his return to Iowa.

Gingrich planned to announce Wednesday during a campaign stop in Des Moines the endorsement of Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen and New Hampshire House Speaker Bill O’Brien.

Gingrich has also redoubled his appeals to conservatives, who make up the base of the GOP, with sharp criticism of the judiciary, saying he would have the Justice Department instruct the U.S. Marshal service to arrest judges who ignore subpoenas to testify in Congress about their decisions. And he tried anew to end accusations he lobbied on behalf of troubled Freddie Mac or other organizations.

“We should have had a much more coherent answer,” he said about charges that he earned a windfall from the federally backed mortgage giant.

He then offered his latest explanation, saying that his consulting firm, the Gingrich Group, was hired over a period of six years for strategic advice and he earned about $35,000 a year ? “less than I got per speech.” Gingrich said that when Freddie Mac was seeking a bailout in 2008, he told House Republicans “my position was to not give them money.” Altogether, Gingrich’s firm earned some $1.6 million from Freddie Mac.

As Gingrich tried to answer the criticism, Romney, his chief rival, was increasingly expressing optimism as he reveled in a series of endorsements from establishment GOP figures such as Bob Dole, the 1996 GOP nominee, early-state leaders like South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, and newspapers including The Des Moines Register.

Romney joined those criticizing Gingrich’s comments on judges, telling Fox News in an interview Monday that Gingrich’s idea of sending authorities after judges was neither constitutional nor practical.

“Let me tell you, there are a lot of decisions by judges I vehemently disagree with,” Romney said. “The solution to judges out of control is not to tear up the Constitution and say that the Congress of the United States becomes the now ultimate power in this country. … In the Constitution, there is a method for removing a justice. There’s also a method for reversing their decisions.”

Paul, who has built arguably the largest get-out-the-vote organization in Iowa and has steadily been inching up in Iowa polls, spent the day in New Hampshire before returning to Iowa for a packed schedule later in the week. He’s been on the air here with ads assailing Gingrich.

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum was among several conservatives canvassing Iowa in hopes of taking advantage of Gingrich’s slide and mounting a late-game surge.

Another, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, was in the midst of a bus tour when he slapped at two strong-running candidates Monday over their past support of the $700 billion Wall Street bailout while visiting a pizza buffet in Manchester.

“This Wall Street bailout is the single biggest act of theft in American history,” he said. “And, you know, Newt and Mitt, they both were for it. That’s one of the reasons I say that if you really want an individual who is an outsider, someone who has not been engaged in part of that process, I hope you’ll take a look at me.”

Most of the money lent to the financial institutions has been repaid.

On her own bus tour of the state, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, looking to peel off Paul supporters, sought to sow doubt about Paul’s opposition to pre-emptive military action in nations such as Iran and North Korea.

“Ron Paul would be a dangerous president,” Bachmann said in Grundy Center. “He would have us ignore all of the warning signs of another brutal dictator who wants to wipe Israel off the face of the Earth. I won’t…The death of Kim Jung Il reminds us that we live in a dangerous world.”

Gingrich, indirectly but unmistakably, went after Paul, too, for wanting to close U.S. military bases abroad and bring all or nearly troops home. “I stand apart from some of our candidates in believing we need a strong defense,” Gingrich asserted.

That criticism aside, the vast majority of attacks over the past week have been against Gingrich, and not limited to television advertising.

An anonymous independent group calling itself Iowans for Christian Leadership is urging conservatives not to back Gingrich, in light of his two divorces and past marital infidelity. The group has issued fliers and posted a scathing online video aimed at Gingrich, but has not begun showing TV ads.

The pro-Romney group, meantime, has spent $1.1 million on Iowa advertising over the past two weeks with a spot referring to Gingrich’s “baggage,” including ethics charges that led to his departure from Congress.

Paul’s campaign has also run an ad pointedly attacking Gingrich’s work for Freddie Mac and his former support for a health care mandate, a position unpopular with conservatives. And Perry also has started to run ads against Gingrich.

All have painted Gingrich as a Washington insider who profited from his stature after leaving Congress more than a decade ago.

Paul is scaling back his advertising to $55,000 or so over the next two weeks but the pro-Romney super PAC is filling the void with roughly $1.4 million in ad time reserved for the rest of the Iowa campaign.

The group also is advertising in Florida, spending a modest amount, roughly $143,000 over two weeks. But the ad buy is significant because Florida, which holds its primary Jan. 31, is seen as a potential showdown for Romney and Gingrich.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-19-US-Wide-Open-Iowa/id-b894058b62f64fc698271efa524c9688

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Newt Gingrich says he’d defy Supreme Court rulings he opposed (Los Angeles Times)

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011
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Bachmann says Gingrich has ‘memory challenge’ (AP)

Sunday, December 4th, 2011

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. ? Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann is pushing back after rival Newt Gingrich called her “factually challenged.”

Campaigning Thursday in Florida, the congresswoman from Minnesota said both Gingrich and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney are guilty of changing positions when it’s politically convenient. And she said Gingrich has a “memory challenge.”

On Wednesday, the former House speaker and college professor said of Bachmann: “In the eyes of a teacher, occasionally I’d have a student who couldn’t figure out where things were, or what things were, or what the right date was. When that happens, you feel sorry that they’re so factually challenged.”

Gingrich’s criticism apparently refers to several instances in which Bachmann has flubbed some facts, such as when she said she would close the U.S. Embassy in Iran ? even though the U.S. hasn’t had an embassy there for decades.

Bachmann said of Gingrich: “I think that a professor doesn’t like to be challenged, but I think that his real challenge is a memory challenge.”

Gingrich and Romney are at the top of some national polls in the race for the Republican nomination while Bachmann often appears in single digits.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111202/ap_on_el_pr/us_bachmann_gingrich

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