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Joseph Farah
Joseph Farah
23 May 2012
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Newt Shows His True Colors, Again

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I should have known better. Despite all I have witnessed watching Newt Gingrich during the many years he has led a public life, I started softening to him — largely on the basis of his debate performances.

I began to think I could live with this guy as president, which is almost understandable given the current squatter in the White House. I even said in a recent television appearance that Gingrich would be an acceptable nominee for the Republican Party. Let me do a very public mea culpa here.

The news that the former speaker's firm accepted between $1.6 million and $1.8 million from Freddie Mac suggests strongly that Gingrich is not the changed man he's claimed to be. In a recent debate, you might recall hearing him say that he was paid $300,000 to be a "historian" for the government-controlled lender. That was, to put it mildly, a lie. He told the American people a blatant falsehood in an effort to deflect a tough question and make it appear to be an unwarranted attack from a hostile media.

In fact, what former Freddie Mac officials say about the lucrative contract is that it was part of a full-court press by the company to develop an argument for the questionable public-private structure it enjoyed. An argument they could sell to Republicans and Democrats, conservatives and liberals. Gingrich's job with Freddie Mac was to sell the monstrosity that was going broke making bad housing loans to conservatives — the one constituency that should have seen through the smoke and mirrors.

While Gingrich claims he wasn't a "lobbyist" for Freddie Mac, two executives at the company said he provided written material that could be circulated among conservatives on Capitol Hill and elsewhere. They also dispute Gingrich's contention that he ever warned the lender about the dangers of the housing bubble.

What Freddie Mac was doing when they bought Gingrich was part of an overall effort to buy Democrats, Republicans and all kinds of lobbyists to ensure there was no opposition to the company's shenanigans — no oversight, no opposition, no calls for privatization, no change in policy.

Thus, Gingrich bears some personal responsibility for the financial disaster that resulted. But that's not all, not by a long shot. Gingrich's firm was also paid $312,500 in 2009 by an ethanol lobby. Does that commercial he did with Nancy Pelosi on "global warming" make a little more sense now? But it gets worse still.

Let's go back to May 11 and his appearance on NBCs "Meet the Press" where he said he supports having individual mandates requiring Americans to buy health insurance, post a bond to pay for health care "or in some way indicate you're going to be held accountable" — a position even he recognized was just a "variation" on the most unconstitutional and objectionable component of Obamacare.

This is the fairly recent stuff. Do you want a look back on Gingrich's history? One of the reasons Republicans didn't have the stomach to convict Bill Clinton after impeaching him for lying under oath is because Gingrich decided to have an affair in the middle of the scandal. He apologized to Jesse Jackson after Rep. J.C. Watts called him a "poverty pimp," which is exactly what was and continues to be.

Anyone and everyone who has had any personal contact with Newt Gingrich knows what he is in real life — away from the TV cameras and around people he doesn't think can help him much. He's the illustration you see in the dictionary next to the word "arrogant."

Having said all this, we all know the GOP candidates are wearing targets on their backs. As soon as a new top-tier candidate emerges, the media somehow discovers something despairing about him or her. This has occurred with almost all of the potential Republican presidential candidates with one notable exception —Mitt Romney. Why?

He's the one the Democrat-dominated media want to get the nomination because they know he is the closest thing to John McCain in the GOP field with the possible exception of nowhere man Jon Huntsman.

Who does that leave as viable choices for us? Herman Cain, Michele Bachmann, Rick Santorum, self-destructive Rick Perry and Ron Paul. The race has narrowed. It's time for Republicans to get very serious about finding a replacement for Barack Obama.

To find out more about Joseph Farah and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


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