Okay, everybody bring it in for a minute and take a knee. It’s not halftime. I’m calling this one on account of lack of funding and self-awareness. Last night, Newt Gingrich finished in last place with less than 6 percent of the vote in Wisconsin and didn’t get above 11 percent in either the D.C. or Maryland primaries.
Sheldon Adelson has stopped writing checks and Newt has cut back on half of his campaign staff. Ladies and gentlemen, it pains me to say this, but the 2012 presidential campaign of Newton Leroy Gingrich is over. I know a lot of us were hoping he’d go out in a blaze of glitter and glory at a brokered convention in Tampa, but it just doesn’t seem like that’s going to happen. Let’s not dwell on what could have been, but instead remember the good times that this campaign has given all of us this year. I really mean it when I say that this has been one of the most fascinating, weird and enjoyable campaigns to watch.
Make no mistake, I don’t think Newt Gingrich would make a good president. His statements range from the outrageously offensive (like when he said Barack Obama was the “food stamp president“) to the hilariously wacky (like saying EMP is the greatest strategic threat we face). That said, I can’t imagine this primary without him.
Without Newt Gingrich in the race (at least up until the rise of Santorum), this would have been one of the most boring political campaign seasons ever. No other candidate is louder, more boisterous and, dare I say, grandiose than Newt Gingrich. He’s made claims that he wants to put an American base on the moon by the end of his second term along with statements that child labor laws are, “truly stupid.” One can’t look at Newt Gingrich as a serious contender in this election anymore, but over the past year Gingrich’s campaign has gone from crisis to crisis making this campaign particularly compelling to watch.








