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Newt Gingrich Faces Uncertain Future After Failed Presidential Run

By RAY HENRY   04/26/12 01:30 AM ET  AP

ATLANTA -- As he winds down his presidential campaign, Newt Gingrich faces a new challenge: reinventing himself politically yet again.

Gingrich reinvented the Republican Party in the House in 1994, leading the GOP to its first majority in 40 years and becoming speaker. Four years later, after Republicans pushed him out of House leadership and he resigned, he reinvented himself as a Republican elder focused on what he termed "big ideas" – health care, energy and space exploration – and as an able fundraiser for his political advocacy group.

What could follow a run for president that saw Gingrich leading at times in national opinion polls?

"I would think that this will be his last run for president," said Sue Everhart, chairwoman of Georgia's Republican Party, a state Gingrich represented in Congress and where he won one of his two primary victories. "There are plenty of other places that he could be helpful."

Several other Republican leaders said they expected this race to be Gingrich's last for the presidency. He had contemplated a run in 2008 but eventually decided against it. However, Gingrich spokesman R.C. Hammond said it was too early to discuss what Gingrich might do in the future.

"Politics is one of those funny businesses where people end up deciding at the end, not the pundits," Hammond said. "Newt Gingrich has spent his entire career proving pundits wrong. I'm sure he'll be happy to do so again."

A second campaign could prove even more daunting, especially when potential supporters compare his shaky campaign performance with the advantages he enjoyed at the beginning – national political experience, fundraising clout and a deep network of political contacts.

Gingrich needed to court social conservatives but was weighed down with baggage that includes three marriages and an acknowledgement of infidelity. He had been reprimanded by Congress after an ethics probe. A consummate insider, he tried to run as an anti-establishment candidate.

The campaign was rocky from the start. After a confusing is-he-in-or-not campaign announcement, Gingrich went on national TV and criticized Republican Rep. Paul Ryan's Medicare proposal, which was popular among the party's conservative base. Not long after, many of Gingrich's top campaign staffers quit over disagreements on strategy and finances, a period that Gingrich later described as "painful."

And yet the former Georgia congressman bounced back with the help of strong debate performances, winning the South Carolina primary and Georgia's a few weeks later. He hoped to win other states in the Deep South, but it never happened. Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum drew away conservative support and front-runner Mitt Romney continued to rack up victories.

On Wednesday, the day he acknowledged his campaign was nearly over, Gingrich kept his campaign appearances in North Carolina. Among those attending the events was Mike Anderson, who said Gingrich was smart to drop out.

"Was Newt the best candidate? Yes. Would he have won? Yes," said Anderson, 47. "I'm not a Romney fan .... but I know he's better than the alternative."

Several GOP strategists and leaders suggested that Gingrich could still play a political role by reviving organizations he previously led that fought President Barack Obama's health care overhaul and raised millions of dollars for conservative causes. He also could return to his work as a commentator for conservative media outlets or perhaps accept a post in a Republican administration.

Politicians have made comebacks after suffering big losses before. In perhaps the most famous example, Republican Richard Nixon lost the race for president in 1960 and was defeated in his bid for California governor two years later.

"You don't have Nixon to kick around anymore," a bitter Nixon famously told reporters during what he called his last news conference. It wasn't. Six years later, Nixon was elected president.

A major difference: Nixon turned 55 during the 1968 campaign. In 2016, Gingrich would turn 73.

Tom Perdue, a Republican strategist in Georgia, has long been skeptical of Gingrich's candidacy and believes Gingrich is effectively finished in politics.

"I sure don't see how he could be a contender for anything in the future," Perdue said.

Dan Schnur, the communications director for Republican John McCain's 2000 presidential campaign, said Gingrich has improved his popularity ratings compared with when he was forced out as House speaker. Gingrich should have left the race a month ago, Schnur said, when he could have exited on a better note.

"A string of fourth-place finishes tends to take the shine off," said Schnur. Still, he cautioned against writing off Gingrich from the political scene.

"Each time," Schnur said, "he's managed to climb back."

___

Associated Press reporter Mitch Weiss in Kings Mountain, N.C., contributed to this report.

___

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CT Lady
I owe, I owe. It's off to work I go
10:36 AM on 04/27/2012
I wonder if Calista will stay with him?
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theMightyT v3
saving wingers from themselves since 2008
12:40 PM on 04/26/2012
flossophy
I'm talking about his life's work in challenging the Washington establishment... the think tanks were only vehicles for him to learn and promote ideas. And when he moved on to the next stage, they became unnecessary and closed.

=============

challenging the Washington establishment, eh?

How?

By becoming the ultimate washington insider / lobbyist?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
flossophy
the unfamous anti-establishment classical liberal
04:36 PM on 04/26/2012
No, by being a policy geek... and developing ideas and solutions to fix the myriad problems in government, health care, etc. The Washington establishment Ioathes him because he exp0ses their inept!tude and wrongheaded decisions.
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theMightyT v3
saving wingers from themselves since 2008
05:00 PM on 04/26/2012
ya, that whole "fire janitors and put kids to work" idea was a real winner.
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maslin
At 6 bn km, it's mostly small stuff.
09:54 PM on 04/27/2012
Yes, the Washington establishment loathes Gingrich so much that they hire him and his two floors of pet lobbyists in his K-Street firm, the Gingrich Group, to lobby and keep him fed, housed, and with the opportunity to rack up debt.

Pure loathing.
12:38 PM on 04/26/2012
Newt has no future in the Republican Party now that he loss what credibility he still had left by endorsing Mitt Romney over a real conservative like Republican Presidential candidate Ron Paul. The only future I see for Newt is snitching on other establishment Republicans in order to avoid any type of prosecution once Ron Paul is elected President and starts cleaning up the corruption we have in Washington today. Any clout Newt might of had in Washington is history I'm afraid just as it will be any other politician who has been feeding off the corrupt under belly of the political world.
Divine thought
hate knows that love's the cure
12:22 PM on 04/26/2012
Like the terminator, he'll be back.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Grace Hulbert
Get your Bichon!
12:13 PM on 04/26/2012
Newt has a future as the guy in the elephant suit on Callista's book tours.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Grace Hulbert
Get your Bichon!
12:10 PM on 04/26/2012
“I’m going to be the nominee, It’s very hard not to look at the recent polls and think that the odds are very high I’m going to be the nominee.” Newt Gingrich

Hahahahaha Still laughing
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Gestas
Mountain Man
12:05 PM on 04/26/2012
Newt never had a chance it just wasen't his turn..besides he was dead the day Sarah Palin endorsed him..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
white mende man
Ask me if I care about your prejudice
11:59 AM on 04/26/2012
what future? he went all in and lost. wanna bet No.4 will be serving d.i.v.o.r.c.e. papers soon?
11:38 AM on 04/26/2012
He can continue teach his bogus on-line courses, close Callista's Tiffany account, pawn that French Horn so blows in, have her write another idiotic Ellis book, try lower level lobbying by donning a sandwich-poster board and standing on any DC street corner (see who walks by). It's amazing that he even had a future after being disgraced back in the 90's. Go home Professor Pompous, the political world moved beyond you months ago.
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realsurfin
Pardon me, can you help out a fellow American
11:34 AM on 04/26/2012
If Newt wants history to remember him and be kind... he would bow out and take up fishing for a long while. He has a way of rewriting history that does not fair well under close scrutiny of the microscope.

I am sure he can scrape and eek out a good living being a consultant or some director of the board where he does not really have to do anything but shake hands. Maybe write a book... on how to reinvent yourself like a chameleon...

the rest of us actually have to work for a living.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Decipherer
Objects may be closer than they appear
11:24 AM on 04/26/2012
Does Newt have a future in politics? Depends.
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Bogey907
Overfed, long-haired, leaping gnome
11:28 AM on 04/26/2012
What do his undergarments have to do with it?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nancestef
Remember the Lost of Sandy Hook Elementary
11:58 AM on 04/26/2012
fanned & faved.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Decipherer
Objects may be closer than they appear
12:04 PM on 04/26/2012
[sound of crickets chirping]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
joeinknoxville
a TRUE christian would oppose guns
11:24 AM on 04/26/2012
Newtered.
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Bogey907
Overfed, long-haired, leaping gnome
11:17 AM on 04/26/2012
He's like a tu/rd that just won't stay flushed.
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luzville
People always get the government they deserve
11:15 AM on 04/26/2012
One thing for sure: his creditors don't care about his future, they want their money back now!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
freedomsxm
11:13 AM on 04/26/2012
He is a "Hypocrite", always talking about wasetful government spending yet he had no problem using the Secret Service for his failed campaign and guarding him at Walmarts while he sold his stupid books....Newt it's time to just go away....