Matt Yglesias

Nov 17th, 2008 at 3:41 pm

Pansy Division

Newt Gingrich warns that “gay and secular fascism” is a “very serious threat”:

I can’t believe this joke is making a political comeback. But I suppose if Liberal Fascism can be a best-seller, more and more conservatives are going to hop on the “let’s call everyone fascists” bandwagon.




Nov 13th, 2008 at 11:42 am

Newt’s New Ideas

I think I’ve made this point before, but for added conservocredibility take note of Ross Douthat’s post on the scant grounds for thinking that Newt Gingrich has any “new ideas” to offer:

If you find Newt’s manifesto – which urged Republicans to “overhaul the census and cut its budget radically,” to “implement a space-based, GPS-style air traffic control system,” and to double down on porkbusting, among other ideas – to be a plausible blueprint for a Republican revival, then he’s your man.

At his best, Gingrich is good at dressing up an interest-group agenda (let us drill more places) as something somewhat more ennobling. Which is, in the right circumstances, a useful skill for a politician to have. But it’s not where actual new ideas come from.

Filed under: 2012, Gingrich,



Nov 8th, 2008 at 10:47 am

New Leadership for the Past

newtgingrich.jpg

I’ve heard some rumbling in progressive circles that Newt Gingrich was seriously attempting a comeback as a presidential candidate. I didn’t really believe it. But somebody got Robert Novak to write a column touting the former Speaker who resigned in disgrace over his stupendous leadership failures as the man the GOP needs.

Apparently he has “dynamism.” More seriously, the view is that Gingrich offers a “constant stream of ideas, an important commodity in a party that appears to have run short of ideas during the Bush years.”

I’m not really sure how key ideas are to conservative political revival. But what Gingrich offers doesn’t really qualify as ideas. Instead, call them “ideas.” Instead of thinking about ways to solve problems in people’s lives, Gingrich is good at offering ways to package predetermined special-interest priorities as solutions to things that arise. As an opposition gambit, I think this probably works fine. It’s good for raising money, so it ensures that you can stay in the game. And it gives you talking points to go on TV with. Eventually the governing party will screw up, and in you’ll come. But at the same time, the considerable shortcomings to this approach as a governing philosophy is precisely what brought the GOP to this point — it leads to catastrophic screw-ups that prompt massive public disapproval.

Filed under: 2012, Gingrich,



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