Gingrich or the Missed Bullet

Published in El Tiempo
(Colombia) on 16 May 2011
by Sergio Muñoz Bata (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Yanina Weingast. Edited by Gheanna Emelia.
Among prayers and an intolerant air of superiority, Newt Gingrich has launched his bid to become the Republicans’ candidate against President Barack Obama in the 2012 presidential election.

The grave problem with Gingrich is that he is not a man to trust.

Newt Gingrich, who was Speaker of the United States House of Representatives from 1995 to 1999, has recently announced he will seek the Republican nomination to run in the 2012 presidential election; he is doing this because he believes that “the United States of America is in trouble and it needs every possible citizen to come to its aid if we are to remain the great center of freedom, the great developer of prosperity, and the provider of safety to our citizens and friends around the world.” Gingrich is convinced that the United States is an exceptional nation — that it is not similar to the rest of the countries — and it has certain inalienable and exclusive rights. Currently, it is experiencing tough times.

In order to gain back the recently lost American exceptionalism, Gingrich has an electoral platform that combines his fiscal and social conservatism with his religious values. After being a Lutheran from birth, he became a Southern Baptist when he entered politics. Two years ago, he converted to Catholicism.

The formal launch of his electoral campaign came as no surprise since Gingrich has never left political activism, even though after he departed Congress he was repudiated by both his enemies and friends. He has written many books about politics. Nowadays, he serves as a commentator in radio and cable news shows. He has also set up a communications agency and formed several political organizations, among them a website that has a section of news, comments and propaganda of conservative ideology addressed to Latin Americans.

According to Gingrich, it is a contradiction that most Latin Americans vote for Democratic candidates, because the Democratic Party is extremely conservative. And it is not only for that reason. During one of his rhetoric excesses, he said that first-generation immigrants are precisely those who agree most with his firm defense of American exceptionalism, even though he does not clarify on what grounds he stands to defend such a rash statement. Regarding the immigration issue, Gingrich´s political position has so many shades of meaning that is difficult to understand it. On the one hand, he repeats the Republicans’ chorus by demanding the strengthening of the Southern border. On the other hand, he complains that it is not right to deport 11 million people who illegally live in the country, but he does not dare plead for their legalization that would lead towards the end of this situation.

If we compare Gingrich’s political position on this issue with the positions of possible Republican candidates, it is true that — though they do seem vague — Gingrich’s positions seem more reasonable. The problem with this is his lack of specificity. And if we use his past to try to predict the future, once again we come across contradiction and uncertainty. The law that allows thousands of illegal Central American refugees to obtain legal residency would not have been possible without his support. But we also have to remember that not so long ago, he described bilingual education as teaching “the language of living in a ghetto,” and later on he called Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor a racist.

The problem with Gingrich is that he is a missed bullet. He is always making alarming and inflammatory generalizations against Muslim people; he questions President Obama’s patriotism; he is intolerant to those who defend homosexuals’ rights; and behaves with extreme arrogance. Take into account that this man sets himself up as a defender of traditional values, shows off his religiosity, cheated on his first wife with his second, and cheated on his second with his third wife while denouncing President Clinton’s infidelity. The grave problem with Gingrich is that he is not a man to trust.


Entre rezos e intolerables aires de superioridad, Newt Gingrich empieza su campaña para convertirse en el candidato republicano que contenderá contra Barack Obama por la presidencia de EE. UU. en el 2012.

El grave problema con Gingrich es que no se puede confiar en él.

Newt Gingrich, quien fuera líder de la Cámara Baja de 1995 a 1999, recién anunció que buscará la candidatura del Partido Republicano a la presidencia en el 2012 y lo hace, dijo, porque piensa que la patria está en dificultades y lo necesita para recuperar su posición como "el gran centro de la libertad, el gran generador de prosperidad, el garante de la seguridad de sus ciudadanos y de sus amigos en el resto del mundo". Gingrich está convencido de que Estados Unidos es una nación excepcional, no ordinaria como el resto, dotada por el creador de ciertos derechos inalienables y exclusivos, que hoy atraviesa por un mal momento.

Para recuperar el excepcionalismo recién extraviado, Gingrich propone una plataforma política que combina su conservadurismo fiscal y social con sus valores religiosos. Luterano de nacimiento, al entrar en la política se hizo miembro de la Convención Bautista del Sur y hace dos años se convirtió al catolicismo.

El lanzamiento formal de su campaña electoral no ha sido una sorpresa, pues Gingrich no ha dejado de hacer política desde que salió del Congreso repudiado por sus enemigos y por sus amigos también. Ha escrito varios libros de contenido político y aparece continuamente en programas de radio y televisión como comentarista. También tiene una agencia de comunicaciones y varias organizaciones políticas, entre ellas un sitio en la Red con noticias, comentarios y propaganda de corte conservador dirigido a los hispanos.

Según Gingrich, es un contrasentido que la inmensa mayoría de los hispanos voten por los candidatos del Partido Demócrata, dado que son fundamentalmente conservadores. Y no solo eso. En uno de sus acostumbrados excesos retóricos, ha llegado a decir que son precisamente los inmigrantes de primera generación quienes más concuerdan con su firme defensa del excepcionalismo estadounidense, aunque no aclara en qué se basa para sostener tan temeraria afirmación. Respecto al tema migratorio, la postura de Gingrich tiene tantos matices que resulta imposible entender cuál es su posición. Por un lado, repite el estribillo de los republicanos exigiendo el reforzamiento de la frontera sur; por el otro, sugiere que no se puede deportar a 11 millones de personas que están ilegalmente en el país, pero no se atreve a abogar por su legalización para que se termine el problema.

Si comparamos las posiciones de Gingrich sobre el tema con las de los otros posibles candidatos del Partido Republicano, es cierto que, aunque vagas, suenan mucho más razonables. El problema es su falta de especificidad. Y si acudimos a su pasado para intentar predecir el futuro, otra vez nos topamos con la contradicción y la incertidumbre. Debe reconocérsele que, sin su apoyo, la ley que permitió a miles de refugiados centroamericanos obtener la residencia legal no habría sido posible. Pero también hay que recordar que no hace mucho tiempo equiparó la educación bilingüe a un "aprendizaje del lenguaje del gueto" y más tarde acusó de racista a la magistrada de la Suprema Corte de Justicia Sonia Sotomayor.

El problema con Gingrich es que es una bala perdida, que lo mismo hace alarmantes e inflamatorias generalizaciones contra los musulmanes que cuestiona el patriotismo del presidente Obama, se muestra intolerante con los defensores de los derechos de los homosexuales y exhibe una arrogancia que no tiene par. Considere, por ejemplo, que este hombre que hoy se erige en defensor de los valores tradicionales y pregona su religiosidad engañó a su primera mujer con la que se convirtió en su segunda esposa y a esta con la tercera, al mismo tiempo que denunciaba la infidelidad del presidente Clinton. El grave problema con Gingrich es que no se puede confiar en él.

This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

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