NOWist Jimmy Williams is an msnbc Contributor and former Senate staffer
Stuck in the Minneapolis airport yesterday, I punched out a post on how Rick Santorum (and tangentially Rick Perry) were going to deny Newt Gingrich a badly-needed win in my home state of South Carolina. Then all hell broke loose this morning with Perry dropping out and endorsing Gingrich. Add ABC’s bombshell tease of Gingrich’s second wife, Marianne, declaring on national tv that Newt wanted to have his cake and eat it too by having an “open marriage” with both her and his mistress-now-wife Callista. That’s a lot of fireworks for a Thursday morning so let’s clear the smoke away from these incendiary political bombs and look at what’s happening down in the Palmetto state over the next 48 hours.
Governor Perry finally saw the writing on the wall and ended his embarrassing and poorly-run campaign. He reminds me of those on-line dating websites where they guy’s literally perfect on paper and looks great but when you meet him in person, you can’t wait to get the check and leave. With Perry’s exit, we have to wonder whether his endorsement of Gingrich will translate into his SC primary votes. Gingrich is running a strong second down in Dixie and closing in on Mitt Romney and today’s NBC/Marist poll shows him only five points behind. But wait not so fast.
ABC will air tonight the two-hour interview with the former Mrs. Gingrich Number Two. Today’s AM tease of the interview contains the remarkable bombshell the Gingrich campaign knew was coming. And in true SC style, we always save the best (meaning the dirtiest) stuff for the end. While this revelation may be a bombshell, the conventional wisdom doesn’t hold water. There isn’t a single person in politics that thinks the Tea Party movement contingent down in SC will ever vote for Romney. It’s simply anathema to them to vote for the former “progressive” governor of Massachusetts. So in the end, the Perry voters have to make a choice: do they go with the man who’s had three wives and can possibly beat President Barack Obama or do they swing those votes to the man that won Iowa and holds their values closer to their hearts? To answer these questions, we have to look at how South Carolina voters think, especially conservatives.
“Intruding into family things”?Yesterday, Gingrich said he didn’t think “intruding into family things” was proper for a political campaign and his two daughters have now sent a letter to the president of ABC asking him not to run the interview. This is a man that impeached former President Bill Clinton over lying about “a family thing” i.e. his extramarital affair with Monica Lewinsky. This is a man that thinks gay men and women across the country shouldn’t have the same equal rights as he does and frankly as a gay man, I’m offended I can’t get married (three times) yet he can. An overwhelming number of South Carolina voters are self-professed Christians and believe strongly in the redemption of the sinner. Remember that whole sinner, stones, glass houses metaphor? It works down there. But here’s the rub in the Palmetto state. We don’t like hypocrites and most certainly don’t like serial hypocrites either. And on this issue, Newt Gingrich’s hypocrisy goes unmatched. That’s not lost on South Carolinians, especially moderate to conservative women who will decide this primary race. In the end though, I don’t think it’s a deal breaker and here’s why.









