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from the dole institute of politics at the university of kansas keep your prisons former speaker of the house newt gingrich gingrich was considered one of the more polarizing forces in national politics at the end of the twentieth century first elected to congress in nineteen seventy eight the georgia republican co authored the contract with america a series of political platforms credited with leading the republican party to victory in nineteen ninety four and regaining control of the house of representatives for the first time in forty years time magazine named gingrich their man of the year in nineteen ninety five the same year he became speaker of the house he resigned the post in nineteen ninety nine following the nineteen ninety eight midterm elections when republicans lost five seats gingrich has written twenty best selling books including eleven works of historical fiction favorites both at the royal institute of politics on november fourth two thousand nine and now here is a former speaker of the house
first off thank you very much all of you for coming out the ceiling and i'm on a delighted to have the scanner turn around i realize it is partially a sign that the world series is not quite as important as a basketball game and therefore she wasn't as bad as it could've been but i'm still blighted to be here i'm glad to be here on behalf of the dole institute because i work a bubble for many many years and so it's a great honor for me to be alive because the lacey and the light of the jobs and those doing although i have to confess when they design my visited a part of it was exactly what i like to do because you and to your extraordinary natural history museum which if you have not been doing recently i really recommend you go to it because it may be that the best university natural history museum united states and its extraordinary facility and i think here is just a tremendously fun time relaxing i'm looking at fossils of paleontology and
talking to write decisions of staff i'm talking about big ideas and then we left the paleontology collection of one across to politics in pizza and that was fun as a student gathering the students commonly get far as the middle institute doesn't visiting her people and you get to chat with the students directly and answer questions and have a real dialogue and then i went to this truly bizarre course on conspiracies and paranoid now i was her report all of you if you come from washington the harlem you do not need to spend part of your day and conspiracies and paranoid an eleven just left the city which is the largest single generator of conspiracies of paranoia michael but we had a great time with the students in and of those only a very recent classes students were very engaged and as a former history teacher was a great great years the
top of them so i really enjoyed it but i've now got into conversation which i can close a close close links with you you get some you know sure of that and this review has something you can't figure as saul saw it i need a little help i'm hoping that somewhere either in this room or in the other room we have a genuine serious student of today you host ally says background the way that i'm i'm glad to be back as a young kid i spent years of war rally with my father and so i had a fair amount of time growing up in kansas and my dad came back and served eleven words of the command staff college and for a number of years out of baghdad and teach the year that plan stefan's i'm thrilled of chairs come back and be with you and also to say that very few of the like are traditional where she's a former congresswoman jan meyers is here and jan i wish you'd disturb would take about an is an
example of america's best because when we were in the middle of trying to think through welfare reform which is the most successful conservative reform in the last seventy years sixty five percent of people on welfare either went to work you went to school english or michigan where we're trying to think it through and about the jam was adamant that in her experiences state legislature she was convinced you could not marginally change they had to fundamentally rethink it from the ground up and because of her tenacity and her willingness to get in a really intense arguments ah oui you ended up ultimately bringing in government other than governor thompson governor in here and their staffs and for one of the very few times in history we actually had the governors state level staffers in the room with the various congressional staffers jointly writing the bill to make sure that it was practical that was implemented will and that would really work and jan deserves a great deal of credit
from the most successful asset to say i i can't come to kansas that coming a couple of the woodwork with i don't know of any member of congress who showed more consistent courage and pat roberts when he worked with me for the contract with america and the entire process of agriculture reform and he works so hard and he personifies a marine corps tradition of always being faithful courageously doing what he thinks is right are and i know from nice france over the years both of my wife used to work for him and some of our very dear friends a jacket that rovers abortion right now and ugh pat literally bounces service to kansas and service to the nation with as much intensity as anybody i know and you see him you know to say thank you for the quality of service that he
gives a state a remarkable day i also say that that i'm honored to serve with sam brownback and without getting any way partisan one anyway political of the fact that he may someday of govern from his name's tracy is a good thing but that's a personal observation in passing and should not be taken in many ways a little comment nor will the fact that i have to report to the jerry moran called me last night and that is you know he's fairly busily engaged in crisscrossing the state and we had a great conversation and i was also a picture of running it a different attack tonight i am not getting into primaries i just want to know do you have a good delegation of hardworking people who care deeply about the state and cared deeply about the country and other some even bigger problem now i go back to my problem so we will have this afternoon i have several people with me cristina martin who's over here somewhere steve everley who were graduates ok you have the appropriate level of
passion fanaticism intense belief of living the dream all and so we were we were working our way through rock shop jerry and we were trying to make sure that i could learn those but i'm a historian says her sole wanna know you know as somebody who used to live in the state one that it replaces raul roger brought and then to turn out was eighty nine establish yourself on some point down the road and so on the state of the rotary club or we use that as a sign that i know something about kansas mr myers as opposed to say that the struggle or to be a civil war although some people you talk about are but that wound stays as i'm passing because you know he's a very good student he's an honors graduate in the nose of her among all that theodore roosevelt once said that rob trump jr was the best champion any college and right now
crude always good applause for teddy with those comic world and i thought i got to help him out a little bit here but i didn't because i didn't you know some level to work with me forget occasion i actually once upon a time got a phd in history and it occasionally used to teach history so i said innocently so when the theodore roosevelt's it and why did he said i will report you without in any way embarrassing see that for two hours has been on in the finances are so earnest putting out here many of your next few days find somebody who knows when theodore roosevelt said this unwise interview of the ways you know you'll get me the information so that summit an element television you are doing interviews sometime i can drop the sort of thing that makes people think he really know because it's inconceivable that anybody would know and so now i like your help with that point and then i could say well you know when you think of a great great college like
rock shot jr when you think about theodore roosevelt talking about it as the best chant the country would one really shine in his eyes will glaze over totally you have no idea why i'm doing it everybody in this room will know where star chris so whenever a couple messages outline a way of thinking about the future and then just toss it open one of a conversation i like coming to academic settings because i think we actually need a very serious conversation about america's future and i think we need a conversation which transcends negative advertising thirty second commercials flop and press conferences debates and television and gets into a serious underlying dialogue where people over a third of time really ask you know what we doing in and how insolvent i think the combination of having the current economic problems having challenges
the run from buzzer to south eleven on to a rack to iran to afghanistan the pakistan india to sell thailand indonesia to the philippines to north korea to recently arrested in denver detroit and new york for terrorists and the fact that we have a very radical regime and in the white house and congress which are trying to pass a very very large scale change as rapidly as they can and with his little public involved as they can that whole combination of things i think has lead the american people to a greater willingness to have a fundamental conversation that we've had in a long time and i think in that sense we may be at the edge of one of the great learning period is the really get us to come together as a country was very instinct if you look at the election results last night which suddenly became very decisive the last weekend with other republican bob mcdonnell winning the governor's race in virginia by fifty nine to forty one which is the
largest margin for republican history and a swing of about twenty five points from where obama was a nun one year ago and looking at chris christie winning the governor's race in new jersey by four times the margin that christie whitman won it by nineteen ninety three the last time this genocide and doing so despite the fact that the incumbent governor expand all over twenty four million dollars of the money into goldman sachs to work or try to buy the cd get the us from pursuing for you although what you saw happening is people were engaged in dialogue for for months and suddenly got time to make a decision and you could see them close up and you could see them think it's true and suddenly both states begin to clap once and i think for the country we need that kind of conversation and i think we actually have i think there are three large
questions that are going to fundamentally beside the future the first is who are we the second is how do you create prosperity we're competing with china india and the third is who wants to hurt us and how we keep america and i was safe i think those three questions are so fundamental to our future the jeff to start there because how you answer those three actually chose to a whole range of second variant we totally down and the weeds return to be arguing over this bill or that bill was a memo that a man who really matters is actually appear so fundamental vision of the values that define us and the things we try to achieve so like me walking through those three for government the most important question
my daughter jackie cushman writes a column couple weeks ago she wrote we thought we were voting for change you could you could believe in and discover a voting for someone who wanted to change what we believe there was actually a very profound insight only show the one that we just wrote a new novel called to try men's souls which is about the american revolution and about george washington crossing the delaware on christmas day seventy seventy six with ice in the river and one pharaoh's army without boots are wearing having wrapped their feet in burlap bags of a lonely would march on an icy road from nine miles to trim leaving a trail of blood behind and in studying in researching and developing the novel and looking at the founding fathers were really comes through is they actually meant that that question of hundreds and i think we don't teach this enough in our schools we don't talk about this in the declaration of this is a political bludgeon and yet it
says we are endowed by our creator with certain animal rights along with her life liberty and the pursuit of that because a lot of the others are to most first of all we are the only society in history that says power comes from god to each one of you personally your personally sovereign and then you long power to the government which is why we begin our constitution we the people in and say it's not the lawyers not the bureaucrats not the politicians not the judges power resides in america in the sovereignty of the people jefferson was fanatic about this which is where we get the tenements that define our rights well it's a very big decision and yet many of our modern schools layman teacher kids with the words we
had ebola modern school and say let me explain why the founding fathers wrote and then you have to remember this you usually so you know other seizure activity has to give states and you wonder what is the nobility in states in illinois louisiana writes when in fact we have no basis for defending our right to if all we are is randomly other product was who could have been an auspices but got lucky then there's no protection against the state and we are creatures of the state sold one orwell's nineteen eighty four the second part of this event is essential we are endowed with the right to pursue happiness this was a scottish enlightenment turn the men wisdom and portugal did not mean hedonism it did not mean acquisition and we know this because jefferson owned a copy of
this with the scottish philosopher wrote in neighboring jefferson underline the phrase in his book but those words has pursued as a fundamental choice priscilla applies you know endowed by god with rights but by the way you have some obligations you do you have to have the work ethic you have to be prepared to pursue you have to be willing to learn to not do so is to deny god's unknown migrant pretty think about it pretty heavy stuff these people were playing games <unk> implication to pursue not entitlement know places a year in total to be happy no place to say it doesn't say you have a right to litigate if you're unhappy no prices and say we need a federal department of happiness
we should issue happiness means for the unhappy you need to redistribute happiness because the happiest people were unfairly happy union have these people and how this cultural question who are we is central to everything else the files i personally believe the most important single political slogan and the next twenty years is the phrase too close to it was for i was going to sell me as a couple of yearly you're saying exactly what does that mean but i thought they were the poorest people began repelling after pope john paul the second nine day visit in nineteen seventy nine which we've gotten into this group was they're making a movie about it called nineties achieves world they really began to rise against the soviet state and they began printing posters that
said two plus two it was for and in a situation of the state chose to poland doesn't have a history if the state tells you have the right to direct across the line the state tells you were not allowed to work in key parties the line and park a matter come out of orwell who in nineteen eighty four as the torture saying to the innocent citizens whose tortured if we tell you two plus two equals fifteen equals fifteen and we try to close to closely at grocery because where the state usually does and the citizens thinking what that eagles for camo road and the play there are times when a man can be killed for saying too close to eagles for because the authorities can't stand the truth very think captures prices were a median american example you'll understand why i think there's cultural question
is at the heart of our current problem a lady half of the equation that fits american analyst if you open the other way if you can't afford to buy a house built by a rant haven't you generally agree if you can afford to buy a house though but says the rays interviewed me who can afford it while still by the very important signal you suddenly for twenty five years with the line twenty five years you say that people who can afford to buy a house only eighty one with no down payment no credit you have to pay any principal for three years of previous of the low crime and history it is perhaps they can afford to buy homes so they can't they go broke the event happens to one person it's a personal tragedy covers two million people to national crisis yet have you heard anybody in nashville fourteen either party
suggestive that maybe the core problems cultural economic financial not political the leaders' different communities that if you don't learn you shouldn't get a diploma every time we get a student we cheat them for life we totally misleading you know through twenty things you can fix the health system unless you reset irresponsible individuals you can't deal with diabetes asthma arthritis inquiry rest of disease unless the individual singing you can get women for breast cancer diagnostics unless they want to so many of the whole different it's a question of financing to question of the whole major the whole system to either turned over a salute the trend shift around who pays for systems broke all right advisors the thing through fiction says two so this
whole question of who are we how honest can we be no don't tell me to have transparency and passed a seven hundred and eighty seven billion dollars bill that no one has read this is blatantly it insults the intelligence of every american but if the slowdown and actually of all the bills printed in russia are other big asian was going on and wrong and have actually responsible unless you have to study and learn and i said to save enough to buy a house he actually earned it this will be a different country and very wrenching changes in that process and that's a big decision but if the court says we have become country endowed by its creator with certain animal rights which are life liberty and the pursuit of happiness or we become a secular socialist european state with a big government and small people you hear you have responsible people and a limited government
not a weak government a limited time over here you have a huge government as incompetent bureaucratic in tiny people were toward says the court decision limerick his feature everything else was sucked out how to compete with china need a nominee writer china and india are not a problem shine in your affect what we do about it is a problem there are a billion chinese who have every right to pursue happiness a billion indians who have every right to pursue happiness there are rolling up the sleaze know a convoy and for the first time in about a hundred and seventy years women have real competitors of our scale first reason the sad boy the best single descriptions there's a movie called two million minutes which i recommend all of you you get a to eminence dot com
and it's a brilliant film to my missus for years a high school as shows you two indians to chinese into americans and four years old and the only rule was that we're a country aggressively preparing for the nineteen fifty six olympics an oracle in any metals into the world during the nineteen thirty six olympics and so it really challenges you think about the scale of change in our judgment we created american solutions or on a very simple model i have two grandchildren maggie's ten robertson my deepest goal is for them and their forties and fifties to be safe prosperous and free to do that i believe they have to be in the most productive most creative society in the world because only by being the most productive most korea society and sustain a family and sustain a
national security system now i believe to do that if you're really honest and you always benchmark your competitors annually say what's authentic i believe that requires us to fundamentally rethink litigation regulation taxation education health energy infrastructure then you're going to also and that's going to be a huge fight huge chunk of unmistakable quoted and i wrote two novels a world war to pearl harbor and days of infamy from december seventh nineteen forty one to victory over japan in august of nineteen forty five this forty four months ago and three years and eight months mobile was fifteen at nine
people in uniform we build the b twenty four b twenty nine b seventeen we build into ocean at the build for cities in twenty nine facilities for them and for the atomic bomb we put the pentagon in eighteen months we sweep across north africa sicily italy france luxembourg holland belgium germany while simultaneously sweeping across the pacific you know in forty four months the reason it took twenty three years to head a fifth runway the leonard that's absurd eighty years after nine eleven we still will not rebuild the world trade center and world war two we will rebuild it in eighteen months using exactly the same plans to build exactly the same buildings to save your enemies you cannot knock us down were back with a difference and so that requires
very fundamental rethinking about who we are awarded five in national security we are un substantial danger there were substantial danger because we refused to be honest about how complicated and how hard this is going to be one of the reasons that though fortune steve and i decided right to try men's souls was we were sitting around here half of those are you know people are worried about the economy and the word about four majors and the word about the congressman white house and they need to have an example of america when our back was to the war and we did what it took and that particular day christmas day seventy seventy six is one of the most extraordinary war the most wrote in american history to start with honesty washington and been beaten awful needy had
thirty thousand men in brooklyn they were almost wiped out by the british and they only get across the east river because huge fog a man and a little of the royal navy which was sitting the block and couldn't see them and so they really had robots will get across the river thirty thousand not orson sos america and then driven from manhattan they're driven from white plains driven from power says this effort to a humiliating defeats were thousands of men surrender they're driven across new jersey by mid december they've shrunk from thirty thousand to twenty five hundred and as i said earlier one third twenty five hundred don't have boots now washington who has as sophisticated a student of democracy freedom and leadership as anybody right i understood that for a free society to succeed you have to marry the pen and the sword and we had a great pamphleteer thomas paine who had written common sense which is the
best description of the declaration of the names widely read very popular and pain was serving as a rifleman and was gone to him and said i don't need to use a rifle a major write another panther because we're all the press to warrant and someone has to explain to us why are we doing this why we're going through this cain agonizes couple months can't quite figure finally one has the inspiration goes to vote and it begins these are the times are trying themselves the sunshine patriot and the social order annie talks are being down to the last hard core member less than one of every thousand americans still in washington was less than one hundred thousand and he explains
the victory over tyranny like victory over how it's horrible but the fight will be difficult the opening couple parents are magnificent and we recount the opening chapter at the back of our now washington thought so highly of it but when the men were boarding the boats that might motivate you to do a night crossing of a river with ice in the middle of a snowstorm in order to march nine miles at night when i see one paved road in order to surprise a professional german unit which they're going to force to surrender sleeping when a decisive victory in this was pretty daring stuff and as they get onboard the boats washington has the officers read to them from payne's new band because watch understands that a free people has to understand what they're doing an enormous courage once they understand it's right and what's a sense of the world now
sharing that with you because we are now in arguably the thirtieth year of a difficult struggle at a minimum were in the eighth you're reading this fundamentally wrong with that there's a book called guess to the ayatollah by mark bowden wrote black hawk down was a great reporter and where black hawk down became a movie about somalia and he actually went to somalia to interview somalis blood and guest hurtle was about the iranians taking over the american embassy in nineteen seventy nine which was totally legal fundamentally against international law and they held hostages reform and forty four days which was totally legal the subtitle about his book is iran's first shots in the war against america and i would argue that the nineteen eighty three killing of the marines in baghdad the bombing a crowbar towers the bombing of the two embassies in
east africa the bombing in new york and washington in the downing of the airplane in near pittsburgh that this is all a continuum as a continuum which as i said we recently arrested people in denver detroit in new york and you know we can even talk honestly about this we don't have a thomas paine because of thomas paine wrote the truth would be so politically correct me to really drive them out of the public life so ask yourself what's the one common characteristic of the people it is picked up in new york detroit and then it has all the characteristics what's the one common characteristic now there's so many more are all muslims and all committed to destroy an instant no no there's no confusion
were the two leading centres of paying people were out a distress that saudi arabia which funds the sunni version and iran which forms the shivered how expresses that under percent the question really no rational seriously doubts that sort of strategy and a national energy policy which is bowing to the saudi king utterly irrational than a great country thirty years into a conflict like this one of being tethered totally energy free policy won't produce enough american energy we laugh at them legal or we don't because we can even talk about as a country we will go where the fact that you have two fundamentally different friends' faces with a very real threat of an immediate danger from people one of the stories i have the long term threat of chinese civilization rapidly building such momentum in science and technology that we're not competitive
lose all the advantages we've had less than seventy years so the chinese for it requires us to rethink our own education system or industrial base our tax policy to recognize that we don't rebuild our capacity compete we will not be leaving country the world can have a competitor with two trillion dollars of your bonds i mean that's a letter to close to a close for who you think has greater impact right now the chinese central bank or the federal reserve now as the chinese came over tuesday's an education are two trillion dollars return to the dollar would collapse that day in frustration over thirty percent but this is the scale with that i think about so we need a national conversation could release be honest about your opponents are an end here for tract illnesses while in his conversation with you know i am grateful to have those digital indie coming
we're setting or you over afghanistan which is like arguing over la canal and if you're gonna frighten a number of them said you know we need a serious national they weren't the world war two like to focus in and walk in he said i'm fighting a global war on one of the massive jimmy fresh as an imperial japan walk and out as a skirmish in the war to describe afghanistan without having a grand national strategy without being described honestly your opponents are without being a lay out what the campaign is and it doesn't have to be military both both anomaly and ronald reagan and a new movie were making wine on pope john paul the second visiting poland and i consider them both cases what his credit one of the great strategy of history which is overwhelmingly non violent as a priest who's being the death or a handful of people were killed as demonstrators
and poland on rivals because the polish people refuse to be conquered by the state czechoslovakia unravels romania unravels ukraine on rambles the selenium disappears and christmas day nineteen ninety one so appropriate gift to the human race but was a fundamentally not the berlin wall comes down with no one else will he still has a grand strategy may remember reagan is at a time when everybody in the elites believe the soviet union was powerful it was inevitable it was dangerous you have to do it carefully where jimmy carter was basically trying to appease the moderators asked our reporter what's your vision a cold war uses four words the changes we win they lose much like you're ok you the time we win would resume their name and go that makes sense where we wish it when i was in there than they
should lose your all of you understand this whether it's in sports or the right there's a weird a patient lives and why they came to visit dr wen is silly you want to become a dozen moves into much redder party after the game if they lose so why don't they cooperated right now is in the heart of the american mob ok the second part i but i did a paper in a speech at the amount of presents about you know twenty fifth anniversary of the evil empire speech and the strategic defense <unk> only thirteen days and it's fast and easy it is example red shirted to compare it with the total absence this is a bipartisan problem is as much a bush promises album from the total absence of grand strategic thinking in the last eight years in both parties now the speech i gave was that was designed to outline his and in march over two thousand at what's weighing in trying to accomplish and why these visas are very densely if you go back and we know they're
astonishingly full details as reagan believe that he was actually not a great communicator is a great educator he wanted people to understand the world he understood and he wanted to share with them the facts he understood so that they would actually be preparing their own to reach the same conclusion because they had the facts not because they believed him so users which is an enormous shock here here is a true story about religion they knew they would have an enormous fight to get the state department and the national security council to ever approve using attorney volunteer some is pretty strong language so they picked a speech to evangelical preachers in florida golden as a political speech the first is there is a speech is really dull when i got over the national security council and will get through the speech to win certainly got the masters
because they want to sell a political speech florida evangelical ministers not our problem they gave it to an injury you already have we lose a zillion dollar they get to florida reagan throws away the first two thirds of speech which were not designed to be read that they were designed to get through the bureaucracy and the speech he actually gives is just devastating there's a great moment where when i move in a conference we who at the time was a prisoner's in the gulag in siberia and sharansky said he later became that is really convinced enjoying of the recess probably not really get solved seven evil empire that they thought they had entered and of course to answer then displayed senate he said the morning
they printed reagan says evil empire terrible speeches over a warmonger reagan they said the morale of the guards collapsed because it was the first time a western politician had told the truth about the soviet empire and the more our prisoners rose so dramatically that they were actually sending morse code messages to prisoners who were in solitary confinement for everybody's morale go up because of america's a western leader if i told the truth at some point you won lessons and values than what it's like heavily russia's invasion of success is repaired the fall envisioned well we don't have a national security day reagan in nineteen sixty seven as governor went to berlin him throwing on the water is only going to tear down nineteen eighty seven back in the nineties when the presidents he's been reelected in a landslide there
a speech which goes over the state but it has one very famous sons mr gorbachev tear down this wall the state department takes about because they don't often goes back to way that reagan writes of backing it goes back over the state department they take it back out secretary george show some of the stories it goes back unless it's a call three says georgie you need to explain to your speech are high and the president he is not it stays in now the nervous person or willpower to reach down and the bureaucracy and say you know i want the entire world to know that from we when they lose to the evil empire to tear down this wall there's a
continuity of pressure it is i want to be morally break people in nineteen eighty thought he was crazy but christmas of nineteen ninety one the soviet union disappeared for we need national security the grand national strategy that is honest about our opponents clear about the threats and outlines a coherent strategy meaning those words if we're going to be safe and her children grandchildren and you say for him for his brains as we question who are we going to create jobs and what do you do while protecting american's allies win world stage when they toss opened for questions a common sense of some fun and ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ah ok so does anybody want to ask questions or rolling like an
approach you hear is a really my cup here and i didn't hear the word diplomacy and in your presentation how does that fit into your three ideas that diplomacy is why at the diplomacy threats in many ways i remember this country was founded in part because brilliant deployment site adams franklin were able to convince the french to support a woman's the dutch to help finance is normally a welcome as the spanish to swear so i think there are many thais an american tradition and while diplomacy are we have sustained through the cold war an enormous worldwide diplomatic system which we should continue to sustain the great achievement over communism was a large part of a diplomatic psychological economic victory was a military victory ago the military was to block the soviets from attacking long enough for them to collapse and then the goal of diplomacy was to surround them with opportunities and if you look at the continuing pressure
that we brought together was entirely diplomat now in dealing with china for example inevitable much better diplomatic system solar us trade representative can be as clever as aggressive as the chinese economy are trying to exploit the various opportunities the world trade organization and if we want the chinese to be engaged in a world rating system where to another be very very good at negotiating at least as good as they are so i think diplomacy is ramp or not i'm probably the only conservative in the country who has been actively say we need a much bigger state department budget we need a much more professional foreign service nears substantially bigger capital investment and communications for the state department only after the state department which is capable of operating at a tempo and then i had a achievement level which is totally unattainable day and a second and i'm not blaming the state department says it made this is an institution which is under funded under trained under equipped and i think you're the diplomacy is a very significant part of this and i think that's a great question then
i knew i'd like to get your advice on a local issue and that's the third congressional district and as you may know in two thousand to that district was redesigned which makes it very difficult for republican whip to win these days and just wanted to get you your input on how they brush you have on that my love having having helped create the georgia republican party at a time when you had to gerrymander anything goes was very difficult for republicans everywhere and so it's a pill women wear eurozone fell on my first devices the warrant the german wherever people bob mcdonnell had over forty meetings with asian americans over a hundred meetings of hispanic americans had a very active campaign with african americans out campaigned in the suburbs of northern virginia a way that no republican in history ever done he carried the largest county in the state which is a fairly liberal county it carried all sorts of groups that no republican ever carried it is so cozy
one out of the messaging you know i have the third district of running next summer a nation that has too many unemployed people a nation that isn't growing economically a nation with a massive deficit a major nation faced with huge tax increases animation that as a series of policies though be relatively unpopular for seventy or eighty percent of people the district and relax i would consciously try to build a very broad campaign went when i read for the first time and i was a republican in georgia running during watergate which was actually pretty rational then it was i as the dean of the delegation who was the fourth ranking member of the appropriations committee and people guessing you can't win in the right ah i have forty five forty in a half percent below the reasons i got forty eight have which was enough to survive one was there for nearly half percent as we said from day one we don't concede that my opponent his immediate family i will
campaign everywhere well give you a real true life example were out campaigning around labor day i get this phone call it turned out his next door neighbor had been a bitter property disputes and hated him and his neighbors said i want the largest yard signs have now ha because i want him to have to drive home past your name every night and i'll embassy at first thing when he leaves every morning now i had a very inexpensive campaign that year we raised twenty five thousand dollars as a college teacher no real money what it was a really bad time to raise monies republican we are lots of college didn't help and so when someone out back and they we got some plywood and we painted this huge silence for waivers allie took over there and put it and i don't know that i got as many votes were raised the morale of our team so much and the
news media covered because it was so strange and surely carried the votes letter to russell so we're splitting his time at what i think if you feel you know listen below me about a base mobilization i'm figuring out clever with a voter if you decide you're going to compete for every possible vote in the third district the lesson of last night is in new jersey and in virginia you maybe shock week we had four democratic congressional district of virginia where were the republican who took out a gap between fifty nine and sixty five percent now those four democrats today have been rethinking really hard about whether or not they will propose is gigantic socialized medicine and i have a hunch that they're all sort of you know this may not be very clever and how disabled reply opportunities and next year for the third district his idol with kansas river but the boat with san francisco at the prices you might be shocked at how many votes are available if you if you go after
all of them and don't assume any of my not available way in the back from all the unknown people in the other room i lived in germany for a number of years as well as their it i developed this idea that america has certain policies and in politics to make sure that the fuel food commodities are affordable that we buy from other countries but there are also affordable for everybody else for example europe which didn't invest any money into making it affordable so they have all those extra money they can spend on government which allows him to create a socialist world that gets repackaged and sold us and in a roundabout way us doing oh what for us is in our best interest comes back to haunt the spreading socialism dropped on her doorstep as a perfect utopian model of how do we get it avoid doing something for yourself and having come back to bite you well for sawgrass of us a very
interesting analytical base which is not not totally accurate as a visit and the two leaders' all along the main draw the center for second we came out of the second world war with fifty percent of the world's economy because everyone else and bob mason so people the number one reason we have driven being competitive in nineteen forty six as we had bomb toyota mercedes and so it's not a strategy you can use random him is not and i'm i've got to get over to figure out how to get a deal that while they still have their fathers' eyes it's probably funny was probably will so when you look at the great generation which fought world war one study and prepare for one or two for world war two and then created the framework for the cold war is all the same people they were operating from basis such an enormous relative
wealth that we could be stunningly generous and we were the marshall plan was generous and human history no surprise exactly right thing to do that well now in a different world now actually i think they're there to partially said not clauses that that is the thing about being a professor of mine i really urge all of you know if you get a chance to read a book by claire berlin city her last name is the city of berlin sky clare berlin's he's an american novelist she lives in istanbul but she was a grad student at cambridge when thatcher was damaged the book is called when margaret thatcher matters what is says is that that's her when she became a leader of the opposition in nineteen seventy five came to the conclusion that socialism is an ideology and the coal miner union power as sheer brute power system were destroying report and that of great britain was going to survive you had to be
prepared to break sociology to break the whole concept of socialism as an ideology and you had referred to break the organizational power the coal miners and that this should be the equivalent of a cultural war genuine listener by nine hundred dollars gizmo a nineteen seventy nine thatcher had become a warrior and that the normal politician of nineteen seventy five had thought so deeply and so profoundly what will be needed that she was prepared to take the beating will be involved there is no doubt that she fundamentally changed forever it is a different country today there was a night of severe as a much more productive country a much wealthier country place to see this is a second book by sarkozy called testimony before he ran for president of france sarkozy the soviet the nation will change and that awkwardness of my book will change and so he wrote this book and he says in the book the fourth letter
the french economy was twenty five percent bigger than the british economy today is just this of the two thousand seven the british economy's ten percent bigger than the french economy and four hundred thousand french men women work in london there's even a better living in the camp and he says to a terrorist if you want us to go pay your pension and you are still sustain your health care you had better favor economic growth is we don't grow economically we're not going to be my it's a very profound but it was a startling look for french politician to reagan i share with you because i believe the three questions i ask you are as profound as that if you believe as i do that we are endowed by our creator the seminal riot and that every one of us has an obligation to be responsible citizens to pursue happiness to be honest about two plus two equals four to insist on policies that are
transparent accountable and honest you're a different world than if you think politics is about a secular socialist bureaucracy taking care of this will the country because and visit family about that if you believe as i do that the key to shining is not to hide the kitchen and he has to figure out what we need to do to get our act together so our children grandchildren of the best educated best prepared have the best equipment and on the most optimal the world and you're very different ways that you think the real job we have is to avoid reality probably king institutions and pay off the bureaucracies you know they don't deliver and fire if you think there are real threats to us threats that could fundamentally change or civilization by the pain that would cause then we have to design a grand national strategy with devon on this national conversation and we as a free people have to make the commitments that we will sustain so that our
children grandchildren are free i'm an optimist we've done this now for over two hundred years were actually pre don't get it and i suspect a generation from now will be doing just fine thank you over and if you've been listening to former speaker of the house newt gingrich the georgia republican was first elected to congress in nineteen seventy eight but rose to prominence in nineteen eighty four when he co authored the republican contract with america that contract is widely credited with republican victories in the nineteen ninety four midterm elections when republicans took control of the house for the first time since the nineteen fifties and gingrich was elected their speaker in nineteen ninety five time magazine named gingrich their man of the year gingrich spoke at the dole institute of politics at the university of kansas on november fourth two thousand nine as the inaugural robert j gold distinguished visiting fellow recording for today's event like a pr
statehouse bureau chief stephen koranda and j mcintyre katie our presence is a production of kansas public radio at the university of kansas why aren't we transfix on this day a tragedy where is the outbreak identified with harry truman for many reasons the pundits always told him during his first time that he was sent the law can educate a boy you had to take an individual that if we educate a girl who had to take a community one of the great myths of american history is actually kids that is like that celebrated his humble origins that is you spent a lifetime at the toughest decision than somebody else's son or daughter and we're hearing from presidents to grow its authors two ambassadors at our prisons as a way to listen in on some of the most interesting speakers come to northeast and essentially cancers
macintyre join me every sunday night for a pr press that's here on kansas public radio
Program
An hour with Newt Gingrich
Producing Organization
KPR
Contributing Organization
KPR (Lawrence, Kansas)
AAPB ID
cpb-aacip-4b15df6d723
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Description
Program Description
Newt Gingrich served as Speaker of the House from 1995 to 1999, the first Republican to do so since 1954. First elected to Congress in 1978, Gingrich authored the Contract with America, which was widely credited with ushering in Republican victories in the 1994 midterm elections. He has written 20 best-selling books, including 11 works of historical fiction. Gingrich spoke at the Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas as the inaugural Robert J. Dole Distinguished Visiting Fellow.
Broadcast Date
2010-07-11
Created Date
2009-11-04
Asset type
Program
Genres
Talk Show
Topics
Politics and Government
Public Affairs
Social Issues
Subjects
Inaugural Robert J. Dole Distinguished Visiting Fellow
Media type
Sound
Duration
00:58:58.964
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Credits
Producing Organization: KPR
AAPB Contributor Holdings
Kansas Public Radio
Identifier: cpb-aacip-fc6943b740f (Filename)
Format: Zip drive
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Citations
Chicago: “An hour with Newt Gingrich,” 2010-07-11, KPR, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed September 19, 2024, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-4b15df6d723.
MLA: “An hour with Newt Gingrich.” 2010-07-11. KPR, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. September 19, 2024. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-4b15df6d723>.
APA: An hour with Newt Gingrich. Boston, MA: KPR, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Retrieved from http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-4b15df6d723