In recent months, media figures and
reports have frequently labeled Fox News contributor and former House Speaker
Newt Gingrich the Republican Party's "ideas man" and suggested that his ideas will rejuvenate the
GOP. For instance, a March 1 New York Times
Magazine feature asserted that Gingrich is
"at the zenith of influence in conservative Washington" and "has always been considered a
prospector in bold and counterintuitive thinking -- floating ideas, throughout
his career." However, in touting
Gingrich's ingenuity, the media often ignore Gingrich's
frequent falsehoods about progressive politics and policy.
Falsehoods offered by Gingrich
include:
- During the May 10
edition of Fox Broadcasting Co.'s Fox News Sunday, Gingrich
claimed that Democrats have "had control since January of 2007. They haven't
passed a law making waterboarding illegal. They haven't gone into any of these
things and changed law." However, the Democratically controlled
Congress did pass a bill in 2008 that would have
banned the use of waterboarding, had President
Bush not subsequently vetoed the measure. Gingrich further
suggested that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), who according to a recently
released CIA document was first briefed about harsh
interrogation techniques in September 2002, could have
threatened "to pass a law cutting off the money" for the techniques if she
objected to them. But Democrats were not in power until January 2007; Pelosi was
the ranking member of the House intelligence
committee and a senior minority member of the House
appropriations committee in 2002, and House minority leader from 2003 to
2006.
- During a March 25
appearance on Fox News' Hannity,
Gingrich falsely claimed that Treasury
Secretary Tim Geithner proposed to "take over non-bank, non-financial system
assets" and that "Congress had passed the authorization in the stimulus bill" to
pay bonuses to AIG executives. According to Gingrich, those policies "absolutely
moves you towards a political dictatorship."
- In a March 3 Twitter post, Gingrich wrote that
his wife, Callista, "pointed out flying into [S]anta [B]arbara you can see the
oil rigs off shore," and asserted, "Ironically they have had no spill since
1969." In fact, in just the few
months preceding Gingrich's post, there had been at
least two oil spills reported in or near the Santa Barbara
Channel, according to the U.S. Coast Guard, including one spill in mid-February
and another in December 2008 that required a coordinated cleanup effort by the
Coast Guard, the California Department of Fish and Game Office of Spill
Prevention and Response (OSPR), and the company responsible for the
spill.
- In a February 22
New York
Times article, reporter Sheryl Gay
Stolberg wrote that Gingrich "sees the
stimulus bill as his party's ticket to a revival in 2010, as Republicans decry
what they see as pork-barrel spending for projects like marsh-mouse
preservation. 'You can imagine the fun people will have with that,' he said." In
fact, the bill does not contain any language directing funds to the salt marsh
harvest mouse, or its San
Francisco wetlands habitat, a fact that the House
Republican leadership aide who reportedly originated the claim has reportedly
acknowledged.
- During the January 22
edition of Fox News' On
the Record, Gingrich
referred to a Congressional Budget
Office (CBO) initial "analysis" of the recovery package and purported that it
analyzed the entire bill, stating: "Look, the Congressional Budget Office has
reported that less than 10 percent of the bill will be spent the first year.
Some of it would not be spent for 10 years. This is a bill -- this is not a
stimulus package, this is a bigger government, more bureaucracy, more powerful
politician package in the guise of a stimulus." In fact, as the initial Associated Press report on the CBO "analysis" noted, it did not take into account all aspects of the recovery
plan. While the CBO
write-up found that
"only $26 billion out of $274 billion in infrastructure spending would be
delivered into the economy by the Sept. 30 end of the budget year," it did not
"cover tax cuts or efforts by Democrats to provide relief to cash-strapped state
governments to help with their Medicaid bills," among other
provisions.
- On the January 19
edition of Fox News' Happening Now, referring to
President Obama's support for the Employee Free Choice
Act, Gingrich claimed that Obama was "going to be for the
labor unions taking away your right to a secret-ballot vote before being forced
to join a union," echoing a common distortion employed by
opponents of the legislation.
- Gingrich has repeatedly
criticized Pelosi for using a
military jet to travel to and from her congressional district, and
has also falsely
claimed that former Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL) "did not get a private plane"
following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. In fact, as Media Matters for America has noted, following 9-11, the House
sergeant-at-arms, the Defense Department, and the White House agreed that
military planes should be made available to the speaker of the House for
national security reasons, and Hastert was the first speaker to use
one.
- During the November 16,
2008, broadcast of CBS' Face the Nation, Gingrich said that Republicans "who are about
to face this question of, how do you get the economy growing again" should ask
Republican governors Mitch Daniels of Indiana and Jon Huntsman of Utah, "[H]ow
did they get to the lowest unemployment rate in their respective regions?"
However, the most recent Bureau of Labor Statistics records at the time showed that Gingrich's claim
was false. In fact,
neither Utah nor Indiana had the lowest unemployment
rate in its region, and several states with lower unemployment rates were governed by
Democrats.
- During the July 31,
2008, edition of Fox News' Hannity &
Colmes, Gingrich
repeatedly mischaracterized Obama's
energy policy, falsely suggesting that Obama's only "energy strategy" was to
encourage people to keep the tires on their vehicles properly inflated and
asserting that Obama "suggested if we all inflated our tires, that we would
solve the problem."
- On the October 10,
2006, edition of Hannity &
Colmes, Gingrich falsely claimed that Rep. Charlie
Rangel (D-NY) "promise[d] to raise taxes" if Democrats were to take over the House of Representatives
in that year's midterm
elections. In fact, as Media
Matters noted, during a September 26, 2006, interview with host
Neil Cavuto on Fox News' Your
World, Rangel, who was in line to become chairman of the House
Ways and Means Committee if Democrats gained a majority in the House, stated that a
House controlled by Democrats "would not raise taxes" and "would not roll back"
Bush's tax cuts enacted by Congress and set to expire in 2010.
- During Fox Broadcasting
Co.'s January 31, 2006, special coverage of the State of the Union address,
Gingrich falsely accused Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) of
taking money from former lobbyist Jack Abramoff and asserted that this
would compromise the ability of the Democrats to charge Republicans with a
"culture of corruption." As Media
Matters noted, a Center for Responsive
Politics breakdown of Abramoff's donations
shows that Abramoff made contributions only to Republicans, not Democrats.
Touting Gingrich as an
intellectual force in the GOP, the media, including the following, overlook
his frequent falsehoods:
- During the May 7
edition of CNN Newsroom, A.B.
Stoddard, associate editor
of The Hill, commented that Gingrich
"still sees himself as a real leader, as a problem-solver"
and that "[h]e's an
ideas man."
- On the April 12 edition
of the NBC-syndicated Chris Matthews
Show, HDNet global correspondent Dan Rather said of
Gingrich: "Whether you like him or not like him, he is an ideas person." CNN
political analyst Gloria Borger responded: "Yep."
- An April 14 Associated
Press article stated, "With Gingrich, a former college history
professor, the ideas sometimes come so fast and furious that even supporters say
they can feel overwhelmed by a conversation with him." The article also quoted
claims by Republican
strategist and former Gingrich aide Rich Galen that Gingrich is the GOP's
"intellect-in-chief" and "the
idea man." The article continued: "If Gingrich has his way, those ideas will
spawn a movement, something akin to what Barack Obama found himself leading in
2008 as he ran to replace President Bush."
- During the February 26
edition of MSNBC's Hardball, host
Chris Matthews described Gingrich as "the
somewhat intellectual
-- you know, the commissar of the right, you know, the
intellectual idea man."
- During CNN's
January 4 post-New Year's special
After Party,
Christian Broadcasting
Network's David Brody commented: "I think Newt
Gingrich will be an interesting player to
watch in the next year or two. He seems like the idea man. Or, at least, you know, he's
positioning himself that way."
- A November 18, 2008,
Washington Times article on the contest for chairman
of the Republican Party reported that Gingrich is "considered a one-man idea
factory."
- Similarly, a November
6, 2008, Washington Times article referred to Gingrich as
"widely regarded as the best combination of idea man and successful insurgency leader
in modern Republican history."
From the 3 p.m. ET hour of CNN Newsroom on May 7:
STODDARD: I thought it was amazing. He's bringing his
greatest critic -- Newt Gingrich is doing everything that he can to
prepare -- everything you need to do to prepare for a run in 2012, positioning
himself as the face and voice of the party, blasting Barack Obama, as you mentioned, on TV day in and day out, on his domestic policy
or, "He's a reckless deficit spender," on his foreign policy, saying he's
endangering Israel and his, you know, effort to engage with Iran is a fantasy,
day in, day out.
So, to bring him into a conversation
and say, "Let's work together," and then put him next to Al Sharpton and someone who's, you know, an effective, independent leader like
Michael Bloomberg, is the perfect -- it's just the perfect way to draw Gingrich in because Gingrich still sees himself, though he's a
fierce partisan, he still sees himself as a real leader, as a problem-solver. He
still loves to govern, if you know -- even though he might not be so talented at
it. He's an ideas
man.
So, it was sort of the perfect -- I think it was
really a great
trio, actually, and a good idea.
From the April 12 edition of
The Chris Matthews Show,
syndicated by NBC:
MATTHEWS: What about just -- Dan, you were suggesting if the Republicans
just bet on failure, if they just assume Barack Obama's
going to be a bollocks, that something's going to go really wrong
--
RATHER:
Right.
MATTHEWS: --
between now and the next election, bring in somebody who
seems simply credible
-- you know, a could-be-president type, like Romney -- and bet on
him?
RATHER: Well, or
Newt Gingrich. And I know that's going to get some
laughter around because he's considered yesterday's man in the Republican Party.
But this we knew about Newt Gingrich: Whether you like
him or not like him, he is an ideas person --
BORGER:
Yep.
RATHER: -- with a good sense of history. And again, I
wouldn't rule it out if the Republicans are looking for -- saying, "Look, what we need is just somebody that can be fairly steady in
case things go down and we have a real opportunity the next time around." And Gingrich will have the
ideas to hold what's left of the Republican coalition
together.
From the April 14 Associated Press article:
With Gingrich, a former college history professor, the ideas
sometimes come so fast and furious that even supporters say they can feel
overwhelmed by a conversation with him.
Rich Galen, a Washington-based
Republican strategist and former Gingrich aide, called
him the GOP's "intellect-in-chief."
"He's always been the idea man," Galen
said.
If Gingrich has his way, those ideas will
spawn a movement, something akin to what Barack Obama found himself leading in
2008 as he ran to replace President Bush. There are no signs that Gingrich has such
a movement building yet. But some point to his history of rallying the
Republican revolt in the mid 1990s.
From the March 1 New York Times Magazine
article:
Now, as Republicans on the Hill
begin to awaken from a November beating that left them semiconscious, Gingrich
finds himself, once again, at the zenith of influence in conservative Washington. It is a
fortuitous collision of man and moment. Having ceded the agenda to a Republican
president for the past eight years (and having mostly obsessed over White House
scandals for much of the decade before that), Republicans now find that they
have strikingly little to say that isn't entirely reactive -- or reactionary.
"It was like 'The Matrix,' when Keanu Reeves wakes up and his eyes hurt
because he hasn't used them," David Winston, a pollster for House Republicans,
told me recently, talking about the 2006 election that relegated Republicans to
the minority for the first time since 1994. "We just didn't know how to do ideas
anymore." Whatever else you think of Gingrich, he has always been considered a
prospector in bold and counterintuitive thinking -- floating ideas, throughout
his career, that have ranged from giving every poor child a laptop to abolishing
the entire concept of adolescence.
[...]
Another frequent recipient is Paul
Ryan, a young Wisconsin congressman and
Gingrich protégé known for burrowing into budget issues. Ryan told me he was
opening presents with his children on Christmas when his BlackBerry buzzed
with a question about
the tax code. "He's a total idea factory," Ryan said. "The man will have 10
ideas in an hour. Six of them will be brilliant, two of them are in the
stratosphere and two of them I'll just flat-out disagree with. And then you'll
get 10 more ideas in the next hour."
From the February 26 edition of
MSNBC's Hardball with Chris
Matthews:
MATTHEWS: This party includes
obviously people on the foreign policy right, the so-called neoconservatives,
who have been somewhat -- Richard Perle's denying the other -- there is such a thing as
neoconservative. Joe
the Plumber, sort of
the populist, angry anti-taxer. Huckabee, the Christian right -- modified form in his
case. But it is all -- and then Gingrich, the somewhat
intellectual -- you
know, the commissar of the right, you know, the intellectual idea man -- all
coming together. Is
this an electoral force or just a
--
[laughter]
MATTHEWS: -- a complaint group, a complaint desk?
From the January 4 CNN post-New
Year's special After Party: Where We Go From
Here:
BRODY: I
think Newt Gingrich will be an interesting player to
watch in the next year or two. He seems like the idea man. Or, at least, you know, he's
positioning himself that way. It'll be interesting to watch
him.
From the November 18, 2008, Washington Times
article:
Mr.
Gingrich, considered a
one-man idea factory who had wanted to be
drafted for the top party post, would not give up his leadership of two other
organizations he already heads, and that pretty much took him out of the
running, interviews with Mississippi Gov. Haley
Barbour, his fellow GOP
governors and several influential state GOP chairmen indicated.
From the November 6, 2008, Washington Times
article:
"We are
looking for energy innovation and someone who can win the argument," said former
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, widely regarded as the best
combination of idea
man and successful insurgency leader in
modern Republican history.
&mdash T.A.
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