Newt Gingrich cries when asked about his mom
UPDATED 2:45 p.m. ET
DES MOINES -- Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich broke down in tears when asked about his mother at a campaign stop at a coffee shop here Friday.
Asked by pollster and Republican consultant Frank Luntz talk about a "special moment" he remembers about his late mother, Gingrich first responded, "first of all, you're going to get me all teary-eyed - Callista will tell you, I get teary-eyed every time we send Christmas cards."
He then started crying, prompting many in the audience - made up mostly of mothers - to say, "awww." Luntz is known for asking questions to get answers based on emotion, telling PBS' Frontline in 2003 that 80 percent of life is emotion to intellect's 20 percent.
"But, uh -- excuse me - my mother sang in the choir," he said, speaking over a crying baby in the audience. "And loved singing in the choir. And I don't know if I should admit this, but when I was very young, she made me sing in the choir."
He went on to discuss how his mother, Kathleen Gingrich, is someone who he remembers "loving life" and "having a sense of joy in her friends." He then talked about how she lived in a long-term care facility toward the end of her life, which led him to emphasize brain science and other issues in his public life.
As he talked about what he called "the real problems of real people in my family," he began crying again. Gingrich's comments prompted enthusiastic applause from the audience. Later, one of his daughters brought him a tissue to wipe his eyes.
Gingrich went on to discuss how his mother spent "27 years as an army wife" as part of a culture that valued patriotism and duty. He said that if his mother were here today he would tell her he would "do everything I can as a candidate to be worthy of ourselves."
Newt Gingrich wipes away a tear while speaking about his deceased mother during a question and answer forum put together by Moms Matter 2012 at Java Joe's, a coffee shop, on December 30, 2011 in Des Moines, Iowa.
/ Photo by Andrew Burton/Getty ImagesGingrich's remarks came at the end of an hour long question and answer session with about 150 Iowa mothers at Java Joe's coffeeshop in Des Moines. It was his second stop of the day on his campaign tour around Iowa ahead of the January 3 caucuses.
Earlier in the question and answer session with Iowa mothers, Gingrich was asked to convince the audience that his claimed personality change after two divorces and a history of infidelity reflect a "fundamental change of the heart and not just political talk."
"I don't know that I can convince you," he replied. "I can be a witness and you have to decide whether you're convinced."
"I would say that I am a sadder and slower person than I was 25 years ago," he continued, saying he used to believe that if he moved fast enough things would work out the way he wanted.
"I've learned a lot of limitations of life, and that in fact sometimes it doesn't work, and sometimes it's very painful, and sometimes you have to go to God for forgiveness and you have to seek reconciliation."
"I don't ask people to vote on whether or not they approve of my entire life," he added, saying he wants them to instead consider whether they want to support a "68-year-old grandfather" who has spent over half a century studying what the country needs "and how to get it done."
He said his "willingness to endure the beating" he's taking in terms of negative ads in Iowa speaks to his character, noting a finding that nearly half the ads in Iowa have been attacks on him.
"Just the willingness to stand there and take that, because I think the future's that important, that says something about which of the candidates has character, and which of the candidates doesn't," he said. "Now I'll let you decide if the person who has been honest and straightforward and positive has more character than the person that hired guns to go out and run ads that are false and misleading."
Of the negative ads, he added, "I wouldn't vote for the person they're describing."
Gingrich was also asked how he would attract Democrats and independents in a general election. He responded he will run on "big issues," saying, "I'm not running to be the Republican president, I'm running to be the American president."
Asked about polls suggesting Mitt Romney is seen as the more electable candidate, Gingrich said his performances in the Republican debates demonstrate that he is more likely to defeat President Obama in a general election.
"Almost everybody seems to think I'm a more effective debater than Mitt Romney," he said. "He's not a bad guy, I'm just saying - I'm a more effective debater." He went on to say he can debate Mr. Obama "and defeat him decisively by simply telling the truth."
"It's October of next year, Obama has a billion dollars to spend on the kind of negative advertising you've been watching here over the last few days. It comes down to a series of debates," he said. "Who do you think could go on that platform against Barack Obama and effectively articulate your values, defend your beliefs and communicate his failures to the country?"
At another point, Gingrich was asked if a "bold leader" can compromise after having described himself as precisely that.
"You don't necessarily have to compromise but you have to have a way to have a win-win system," he responded, pointing to his efforts to get House Republicans to pass a bill from Virginia Senate Democrats to expand offshore drilling.
Gingrich was also asked if he would ask former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher to be his running mate if she were "here today" and 30 years younger.
"If Margaret Thatcher were here today and 30 years younger, I would ask her to consider me as her running mate," he replied.
Popular in Politics
- IRS' Lerner: "I have not done anything wrong" 473 Comments
- Officials on Benghazi: "We made mistakes, but without malice"
- Anthony Weiner comeback try begins: Running for NYC mayor
- Obama to view Oklahoma tornado damage Sunday
- Christie: Keep politics out of Oklahoma disaster relief
- Major immigration overhaul passes first big test 68 Comments
- Will tornado relief funding escape politics? 47 Comments
- Top IRS official to invoke 5th Amendment at congressional testimony 220 Comments















My mother has been gone 23 years and I still cry for her sometimes and still mourn her! Anyone who loves their mother will cry for her and mourn her when she's gone! There is nothing wrong with that!
Newt Exposed
http://www.newtexposed.com/
The Real Newt Gingrich
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jWPz1Qdq1uI
Newt Gingrich's Voting Record Can't Compare to Ron Paul's
http://www.hithimagain.com/2011/11/13/newt-gingrichs-voting-record-cant-compare-to-ron-pauls/
Let's Set The Record Straight (On Newt's Horrible Voting Record)
http://www.notonewt.com/
Newt Tried to Install Internal Passports on Us in 1998 - Guess Who Stopped Him?
http://therepublicanmother.blogspot.com/2011/12/newt-tried-to-install-internal.html
http://articles.latimes.com/1994-12-25/opinion/op-12904_1_family-values
As reported by L.H. Carter, his campaign treasurer, Newt said of Jacqueline: "She's not young enough or pretty enough to be the wife of the President. And besides, she has cancer."
(Newt said this about his own wife while she was sick. He was having an affair and criticizing Bill Clinton for his affair with Monica Lewinski at the same time. The question is: Is there a conscious residing in this man or is he a sociopath?)
Is Newt's Pal Pelosi Holding The Bag To Finish Him Off ? (I'd bet my bottom dollar on it)
http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/197173-pelosi-plans-to-reveal-information-about-gingrich-when-the-time-is-right
Gingrich = Batshit Crazy
http://www.dailypaul.com/192059/gingrichs-moon-base