January 20, 2012 12:32 PM

Gingrich nails "open marriage" question, bests a flustered Romney

By
John Dickerson
Topics
Campaign 2012
Republican presidential candidate former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (Credit: AP Photo/David Goldman)

This post originally appeared on Slate.

CHARLESTON, S.C.-- Newt Gingrich said "No." Mitt Romney said "Maybe." And Rick Santorum said everything better than he has in any other debate. The last Republican debate before Saturday's South Carolina primary--and the first with just four candidates--was perhaps the most lively of the 17 that have come during this campaign.

It was a battle on two fronts: Front-runner Romney was attacked by his rivals, and Gingrich and Santorum skirmished repeatedly in order to emerge as the sole alternative to Romney. There were sharp exchanges over health care and temperament, over open marriages and closed borders.

The South Carolina primary is hours away, and the debate capped one of the nuttiest campaign days in recent memory. Mitt Romney's lead is slipping, but we don't know by how much. Iowa Republicans declared Santorum the new winner of their caucuses, overturning Romney's eight-vote victory. Rick Perry quit his campaign (perhaps just to avoid another debate) and endorsed Gingrich. Gingrich, the candidate of the moment, suddenly faced accusations from his ex-wife, who claimed he had advocated for an "open marriage," when he was having an affair with the woman who sat in the debate audience as his current wife.

Debates never live up to the opening montage networks play before the candidates are introduced. CNN called this one "The Fight for the South," making it sound like the four contenders would go at it with dull knives. But this debate's opening exchange surpassed the hype. CNN moderator John King asked Newt Gingrich if he would like to address his ex-wife's report earlier in the evening on ABC that he had asked for an "open marriage." His answer: "No." He then went on to denounce CNN and John King at length with barely restrained anger. He denied his ex-wife's charge and offered only brass-knuckle contrition. Talking about how everyone in the audience had known personal pain, he concluded: "To take an ex-wife and make it two days before the primary a significant question for a presidential campaign is as close to despicable as anything I can imagine." (For a historian, he has a low bar for despicable.)

South Carolina GOP debate: Winners and Losers
Gingrich slams CNN for asking about ex-wife

It was Gingrich's second debate in which he received a standing ovation. After the first five minutes, it looked like it would once again be Gingrich's night. Republican voters in South Carolina want to beat Barack Obama badly. When they've seen Gingrich advocating for conservative principles, battling with rivals and moderators, they can imagine him taking on the president just as forcefully.

Rick Santorum, overshadowed in the first South Carolina debate, wasn't going to let that happen again. He launched into a sustained attack on Romney and Gingrich over their support of the individual mandate. "Governor Romney tells a very nice story about what his plan is now. It wasn't his plan when he was in a position to do a plan," he said. Ending Obama's health care plan will be a signature fight of the fall campaign and Santorum was the only one of the three who was not compromised on that issue: "These are two folks who don't present the clear contrast that I do."

Santorum so flustered Romney that in a response, the front-runner used the perjorative "Romneycare" to refer to the health care plan passed when he was governor of Massachusetts, the political equivalent of getting Mister Mxyzptlk to say his name backward.

Santorum gave a series of other strong answers advocating for middle-class voters "paddling alone" in the economy, and nailed a question on China by pushing for his tax plan, which would zero out corporate taxes for companies that manufacture products in America. Of each candidate's closing remarks his, identifying himself as a conservative who had not compromised, were the strongest.

Romney: I'll release my tax returns in April
Romney defends tenure at Bain

And Santorum and Gingrich slugged it out all night. They traded blows over whether Gingrich was too arrogant to lead. Gingrich said Santorum's accomplishments were too small. Santorum said Gingrich was "grandiose," which made him unpredictable. He portrayed himself as an unflashy Steady Eddie, whereas with Gingrich voters would always have to worry that "something's going to pop." Romney joined in, puncturing Gingrich's claims about helping Ronald Reagan. "I looked at the Reagan diary, you're mentioned once," he said, pointing out that the reference was Reagan saying Gingrich had an idea that wasn't a particularly good one. Romney's campaign sent a press release out listing all of Gingrich's grand claims about himself--comparing himself to everyone from William Wallace to Pericles.

Gingrich responded grandiosely, listing his accomplishments, from creating a Republican majority in 1994 to passing welfare reform to balancing the budget. "You're right. I think grandiose thoughts. This is a grandiose country of big people doing big things. And we need leadership prepared to take on big projects."

Romney did not have a great night. He clearly decided that he would show a more forceful side than he did in the last debate. He was at his best when he defended the free-market system behind his career at Bain. He said that he found it "strange" that the attacks were coming from Republicans, saying he expected them to come from Obama. When Gingrich suggested that Romney had profited because of the laws that Gingrich had passed in Washington, Romney turned it against him--saying that when he was in the private sector he didn't wring his hands wondering how Washington could help him.

He ignored one question about Bain and attacked Obama as a crony capitalist. The point was to show that Newt Gingrich wasn't the only one who could take it to Obama in the fall. "I know we're going to get hit hard from President Obama," Romney said, "But we're going to stuff it down his throat and point out it is capitalism and freedom that makes America strong." (Ashley Parker of the New York Times dubbed this the foie gras strategy).

Romney's weakest moment once again came when talking about his tax returns. Asked if he would follow his father's example of releasing 12 years of tax returns when he ran for president, Romney said "maybe." He seemed unprepared for the question. Gingrich said releasing the returns would let voters know if there was anything they should worry about before the general election. If there was nothing to worry about, why not release them? Santorum amused the audience when he said he could not release his taxes at the moment, saying: "I do my own taxes. They're on my computer and I'm not home." (Oddly, he also chose this moment to go into a sort of Southern accent.)

South Carolina Republicans like to boast that they pick presidents. Every GOP nominee since 1980 has won the South Carolina primary. That was what had once led Newt Gingrich to say if Romney won it would pretty much be all over. But after the debate , he said he would continue no matter what the result. Romney may win on Saturday, but it won't be the death-blow many expected. It has been a bruising week for the front-runner. He'll be happy to stand on the winner's platform no matter what the margin, but it looks like he's going to have to keep fighting on.

More from Slate:

Why Iraq Must Fix Its Own Problems
The Final 24 Hours of Rick Perry's Misbegotten Presidential Campaign
Why Is San Francisco So Liberal?


Add a Comment See all 61 Comments
by Eli_of_Cincy January 21, 2012 11:37 AM EST
So the best the GOP can do is a career politician convicted of ethics violations while speaker of the house; impeached Clinton while he is hypocritically sleeping with his mistress while his wife is out of town; and gets paid $3 million of tax money as a "historian" for Freddie Mac and Fanny Mae. A liar and a philanderer and an obnoxious elitist...what are you really thinking. As an Independent, Obama is looking better.
Reply to this comment
by UomoDelGhiaccio January 21, 2012 11:03 AM EST
Newt Gingrich didn't nail the answer to the "Open Marriage" question. Mark my words. Newt Gingrich will fall precipitously, specifically with women who he already has a problem with. He didn't answer the question, but redirected it and attacked a "Straw Man".

He claims that it is false, however he has admitted to adultery over a long period of time and broken his marriage vows with two wives. The vast majority of women will not trust Newt Gingrich because of his admitted behavior. The "Open Marriage" claim is just bringing his hypocrisy back to the forefront.
Reply to this comment
by PatriotMark January 21, 2012 3:25 AM EST
I am so scaired about what is happening to my country, we must get this abomionation out of the white house, but all the good men are being smeared and drop out..Governer Perry, Cain, Michele Bachman. I cannot vote for cult member Romney and I find Gingrich distasteful, but I still question why an ex wife would say such lies unless she was being payed off as a secret Democrat plant. Even Fox News and Hannity and Mark Levin are on non stop smear campaign against Dr. Paul.
Reply to this comment
by Eli_of_Cincy January 21, 2012 11:27 AM EST
Abomination...give it a rest.
by Americathefreee January 21, 2012 11:07 PM EST
"cult member Romney?" hah! The ignorance of people like yourself is what scares me. You believe media and things you read, but seems you don't know much first hand, or from actual research....politically or religiously. Do America a favor....educate yourself.
by Kimbakat January 20, 2012 11:20 PM EST
Why do these two people even EXIST in this decade??? or even the last one??

When we ALREADY KNEW how CRAPPY the GOP has been since the 80s?

George Carlin knew it in 1988!!!

http://youtu.be/l5szw_kSYzw
Reply to this comment
by johnsmith9875 January 20, 2012 10:26 PM EST
Ron Paul won the debate. He gave clear and cogent ideas on how to fix our economy. All Gingrich did was get angry that the truth was told about his serial adultery.
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti January 20, 2012 9:50 PM EST
Oh come on, Paul is a nut case with no ideas that are not looney tunes. Putting that wacko in charge of anything would be like putting a 3 year old inside a backhoe. And beside he is a Republicon and there is no such thing as a sane one. SO get over it.
Reply to this comment
by johnsmith9875 January 20, 2012 10:27 PM EST
So adhering to the constitution is in your view "wacko"?
by Samlv January 20, 2012 10:48 PM EST
No, Mr. Smith, it is not. His core ideas have merit. They may become planks in major campaigns, but long after he's dead.

He may be an ideologue, and a good one, but he's too old and too crazy to lead.

The fact that he has so much support is good evidence that we've failed to teach critical thinking in secondary schools.
by BrotherWitch January 20, 2012 9:33 PM EST
Why does this article only mention 3 of the 4 participants. I watched the debate and from what I saw Ron Paul, the 4th contestant, not only held his own but got the most from the crowd gathered. The media is afraid of him and the fact that he represents the people in this country who are sick of things that don't make sense. His ideas, for the most part, make sense and those that don't will of course be in that 30-40 percent of things that the president is unable to get done anyway.

I say quit take such a bias against him and what he is saying and start reporting the news even if you don't like it.
Reply to this comment
by CindiTeaParty January 20, 2012 7:55 PM EST
When Clinton was governer of Arkansas he used to pick out a woman and give a signal to the state troopers to abduct her and hold her down while he raped her. Why did the mainstream media cover this up. You cant tell me Obong has not done equally bad things, but again the main stream media is siding with a lieing ex wife. Why didnt she go to the people 18 years ago if this was true? Some say Speaker Gingrich's ex wife is a gold digger, she may have been payed off to lie, perhaps by George Soros
Reply to this comment
by H_Ali_Tosis January 20, 2012 8:19 PM EST
When W was President he dressed up as a Catholic priest and........how shall we say, "invaded Iraq". Now why wont Rush Limpbaugh talk about that, huh??
by noloyalisti January 20, 2012 9:49 PM EST
Wow what planet in the next solar system is Cindi from? Woo woo woooooo.......................Yikes.
by P0STING_AWAY January 20, 2012 6:35 PM EST
by xxixpines January 20, 2012 5:57 PM EST
whats sad is the polls indicate that any of them could beat Obama.
========================================================
Which poll would that be, Sparky ???
The Faux Noise poll ????
Reply to this comment
by DebbieCorona January 20, 2012 5:23 PM EST
Don't know if Newt really nailed it but I'm thrilled that Romney has a challenge as I'm sick of the GOP shoving Romney down our throats.
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