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Vicky Ward

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Marianne Gingrich Gave Newt Gingrich the Best Sound Bite of His Campaign

Posted: 01/21/12 01:05 PM ET

As I write this Newt Gingrich is surging in the polls in South Carolina.

Yesterday the country watched or read about his ex-wife Marianne's railings both against her ex-husband's treatment of her. After 18 years of marriage he suddenly called her and said he wanted an "open marriage" so he could pursue his affair with then congressional aide Callista Bisek, now his third wife. Further, Marianne Gingrich claims, Newt was a hypocrite: He had no qualms giving speeches on the merits of family values while seeking a rather less conventional situation for himself.

How have the South Carolina voters reacted? Well, they appear to support Newt Gingrich who called the interview "trash" and obvious "despicable" exploitation on the part of ABC and the rest of the media to air it two days before a primary. His most touching and resonant line, to my thinking, is "Every person in here knows personal pain... "

Well, he is right.

The end result of this is not that the world feels sorry for Marianne Gingrich -- because her story, unfortunately, is familiar. Men leave women for younger women all the time. But because she tried to attack Newt at an obviously vulnerable and crucial moment for him the tactic has backfired. The world -- or the world in South Carolina -- pities him. They understand his upset and angry words. I repeat: "Every person in here knows personal pain... " Marianne Gingrich just gave him the best sound bite of his campaign.

I knew this would happen the moment I read about her tell-all because the biggest regret of my life is ever talking about my marriage and my divorce in print. I did so because, at the time, I was still at the end of my mental rope after an exhaustively acrimonious divorce. A British newspaper had offered me a lot of money at the exact moment I was terrified about money -- that the ex hadn't and wouldn't pay a court-ordered monthly payment -- and in a thoughtless panic, I bashed out an article I would forever wish I could take back. The moment the copy left my printer I was in mental turmoil, for myself, for my children and actually for the ex-husband and his nice girlfriend. I didn't want to do this. And it was too late. I still have nightmares about it.

The fallout from the piece has been very simple. Suddenly where mutual friends had tried to be -- well mutual -- they were all his. The ex-husband had won the publicity battle. It didn't matter that in the article I took a lot of the blame for the marriage not working, that I was nice about him -- and his girlfriend, for whom he had left me. The fact of the matter was as one very old friend put it: "We don't want to know. We don't want to know that he was paying or not paying, we don't want to know about your marriage or your divorce, period."

At first I was a little shell-shocked by this. Would my friends really not care if I found myself in a homeless shelter with the kids as a result of the stress, the financial struggles, illness brought on by what had happened? Then I remembered a close friend -- who did care, actually -- saying remember "When people ask you, 'How are you?' don't ever tell them the truth because 90 percent do not care, and the other 10 percent hope you aren't doing so well."

Recently I re-read F. Scott Fitzgerald's last novel, Tender Is the Night, which is the story of a failed marriage: of how one person destroys the other. In many ways it is the ultimate guide to divorce because it shows how one of the parties, Dr. Dick Diver who starts out so promisingly is left broken and dissipated, forgotten, while Nicole his rich wife, at first mentally broken, gets stronger, goes on and survives.

Fitzgerald took nine years to write the book and it is, like so many of his works, autobiographical. The demons faced by Dick Diver are Fitzgerald's. Drink, dissipation, trying to keep up with a rich crowd, trying to live with a mentally ill wife. What was the upshot? Tender Is the Night met with a mixed reaction by the critics and two years later Fitzgerald died, aged 44, of a heart attack.

I have wondered over and over: Was it worth it for Fitzgerald? Was it worth it to take nine years wrestling with so personal a story, have it bomb and then die?

Neither I nor, I suspect, Marianne Gingrich would claim to be F. Scott Fitzgerald, but the point is the same really. Where does telling the nitty gritty details of your personal turmoil with a man who has let you down get you, except into a painful, spot where no one really empathizes with you and you are left roiling in the pain? Newt Gingrich said it right: "Every person in here has felt personal pain." In other words, he is saying: "We know what happened. We understand. Move on." That's what the world does -- and is doing in South Carolina. F. Scott Fitzgerald, being, well, F. Scott Fitzgerald, said it better.

"You've made a failure of your life and you want to blame it on me," Nicole Diver says to the husband who once saved her and now she is throwing off. He does not answer and with a neat precision a few sentences later Fitzgerald writes: "The case was finished."

Vicky Ward is a contributing editor to "Vanity Fair" magazine.

 
 
 

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As I write this Newt Gingrich is surging in the polls in South Carolina. Yesterday the country watched or read about his ex-wife Marianne's railings both against her ex-husband's treatment of her. A...
As I write this Newt Gingrich is surging in the polls in South Carolina. Yesterday the country watched or read about his ex-wife Marianne's railings both against her ex-husband's treatment of her. A...
 
 
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lakat
Haiti lives.
09:14 PM on 01/29/2012
Imagine that, women coming out of the woodwork to speak of what they know of a man who wants to run for the highest office in the world! Like speaking of sexual harrassment when a man is up for Supreme Court, a position of immense power and may I remind, a lifetime position. While these men remain in regular life, they may keep their secrets, what can be done about them anyway? You have given up getting justice for yourself, just let it go. But now, here he is poised to do something you have every confidencce, he would muck up, meaning the country would suffer, not just you. You tell and get slammed for it. What a bunch of yahoos, sticking up for Newt, he of the lowest character (ask Bob Dole).

As for me, I thank Marianne for coming out and trying to inform the public about the poor family values in THE family values candidate! Those kinds of republicans turn my stomach. If a Democratic candidate did those things they would want him castrated. And they don't even get that this is the height of hypocrisy
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french queen13
my beloved is mine and I am his
03:43 AM on 01/27/2012
::sound of world's smallest violin playing for poor wittle Newty::
08:34 AM on 01/26/2012
If what she said was true, and if it could possibly be information that the voters could use to evaluate the candidate, why not share it? She's no fool. I'm sure she, or her advisors, saw the backlash coming. Just about every woman who ever stands up and fights back gets accused of being bitter, hysterical, or scorned. Sexist attitudes that forgive male promiscuity, punish women for aging, and make women pay for fighting back/speaking up usually prevail.
So what if she went public because she was angry. She had a right to be. Dontcha think? But....oh yeah...she's a woman....and if she gets angry, she will pay.She barely finished her interview before the "bitter woman" and "scorned woman left for a younger one" were flooding the internet. So predictable. I'm sure she saw it coming, but felt it worth the fight.
12:11 PM on 01/26/2012
Male promiscuity is never forgiven. Now, females, especially those that have sex with minors, is another story.
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french queen13
my beloved is mine and I am his
03:43 AM on 01/27/2012
Codswallop. A woman politician would never get into this candidacy if she'd had one affair, let alone been a serial adulterer. It's a joke saying men's promiscuity is never forgiven. Men have written the rules on that for millennia.
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thepill
My micro-bio is half-full.
04:01 PM on 01/24/2012
Not all ex-wive are bitter ... some are just honest.
03:28 PM on 01/24/2012
Does America want a First Lady who was a mistress to a married man for 6 years?
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01:39 AM on 01/26/2012
Why not. We had one who never really loved her husband but loved the power from 1993-2001
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lakat
Haiti lives.
09:17 PM on 01/29/2012
Oh and you know this for a fact? You DO know what a fact is, don't you
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10:26 AM on 01/24/2012
I don't "pity" Newt. I thought the info his ex-wife had to share, when added to the fact he had to pay $300K in fines after being investigated for ethics violations-- simply confirmed that Newt is pretty amorale and lacking in a basic sense of honesty, fair play and value judgement. I personally am tired of "leaders" that lie and cheat-- on anyone. Sorry-- the fact he is "only human"-- doesn't really qualify him for Presidency in my mind. I want our leaders to be a notch above the rest of us-- setting a positive example. LEADING.
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01:40 AM on 01/26/2012
Do you mean like Bush I and Bush II?
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12:01 PM on 01/28/2012
I hope that was a joke.
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lakat
Haiti lives.
09:20 PM on 01/29/2012
I think you are trying to chastise a person who voted for President Obama, who, in my opinion does all he can to lead by example. He is working with poor material, I'm afraid.
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janmB
INSPIRED
05:48 PM on 01/23/2012
Gingrich leading the pack has nothing to do with his sexcapades.or what his former wives have to say about his "group-marriage " ideas or adultry. The Republican base often aren't the brightest people on the planet and they like his snotty way of answering and avoiding questions. Some would vote republican cause they lead a sorry--poor existence themselves, but in hanging onto the coat-tails of the rich republicans, then they feel part of something they think is better then themselves.
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lovely09
I don't comment much, but when I do...
03:03 PM on 01/23/2012
Marianne is not the only one who isn't getting support. It actually happens in other cases such as the young victims of Penn State. You had most of the student body rallying behind the coaching staff as if to say they did not believe the accusations. It is sad.

Not to say that what Marianne said is the 100% truth but let's say it is true. Why would a party so gung-ho about family values, Christianity, and such would side with an adulterer? They did the same with John McCain.

It's even more interesting that Newt would be excused from his transgressions yet called for the impeachment of Clinton for his. The GOP: Party of hypocrites.
02:47 PM on 01/23/2012
For sure..bad press can take you a long way
09:38 AM on 01/23/2012
This is a very real phenomenon, but I don't get it. Why sympathize with someone who has done everything to hurt another person and then isn't sorry and wants them to shut up?

Anyhow, I think people who don't want to hear about your problems aren't really friends, just friendly aquaintances.
01:44 AM on 01/23/2012
This article was basically written so the women who wrote it could tell her own story which is odd because it's regretted telling the story she regretted telling in the first place. I think women could learn something from men who are not used to getting sympathy so they have learned not to expect it. Don't expect the world to hate your man for him not liking you anymore, anymore than the world would hate you for not liking him. It's pretty much that simple and that equal. Your sense of entitlement needs to take a back seat to reality. The only two people this story really matters two are the ones that were in the marriage and perhaps in some way the kids who need to learn how to avoid being as screwed up as their parents.
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lakat
Haiti lives.
09:27 PM on 01/29/2012
Perhaps if he had been with one woman for 35 years and then left her for a younger woman you might have a point. But our Newt is a serial sick-wife-leaver. And if it turns out that Calista gets a terminal illness due to her excessive use of hairspray, he will leave her too. He has always been known as a philanderer and one who does not grasp the concept of "in sickness and in health". Not many republicans who have served with him have anything nice to say about him. This is a pattern of behavior, the adultry thing, just as his other ethical problems are. Good information for discerning voters. Do republicans understand "discerning"?
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zmanusmc
Against all enemies, foreign and domestic
11:51 PM on 01/22/2012
Much ado about nothing. Those who were not going to vote for Gingrich still are not going to vote for him and those who were going to vote for Gingrich will still vote for him. Not one voter changed their mind with regards to the interview or her comments. It is a matter between them, true or not. Jobs, unemployment, credit ratings, home foreclosures, deficit, debt, inflation, illegal immigration, wars and increased taxes are much more important to the American voter, particularly the independent voter. These are the real issues that will mark this election.
08:13 AM on 01/23/2012
I agree that the story will not sway votes.

However, I disagree that it is irrelevant, 'nothing'.

Character counts. And Gingrich has a lot of character. All of it bad (at least that he has ever exposed in thirty long, ugly years in the public sphere).

That is relevant.

If elected, we should expect more of it.
12:29 PM on 01/24/2012
Don't be silly. He lost some votes for the "open marriage" interview and he gained some votes for acting self righteous towards debate moderators. All the factors you mention gained or lost him votes too. But let's not pretend no one cares about morality and would never change their vote based on Newton's personal attributes. That's ridiculous.
10:00 PM on 01/22/2012
It's an interesting theory, but I believe it has more to do with the fact that people have not had time to process it. I believe sometime it takes a while for a fact to really sink in and change your beliefs in something. I think it may take 3 days to a week sometimes for things to change. That's why we have the saying that you have to get back on the horse right after you fall. If you wait a week the fear will have sunken in. It's also why when Joe Paterno was fired there were riots, but now that people have had a chance to think about it, most of those same people will admit it was the right thing. I believe we will see a dip in his numbers soon.
joyz41
Standing for Fairness for All
09:14 PM on 01/22/2012
Insight from experience is invaluable. The timing of Marianne's interview was not good.

The fact that Newt could talk about personal pain and yet never apologize to Marianne shows heartless narcisism.
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