By Dana Milbank
It says much about the transformation of the Republican Party that even Newt Gingrich is now carrying the cross. When Gingrich came to power 15 years ago, his Contract With America was a document of fiscal conservatism that mentioned God only in passing. When he led the impeachment of Bill Clinton a decade ago over the Monica Lewinsky affair, Gingrich was involved in his own longtime extramarital relationship with a former aide, who is now his third wife.
“Newt,” Christopher DeMuth put it gently as he introduced the former House speaker Monday to a forum at the American Enterprise Institute, is “a politician who in his private life is a seriously religious man but who does not make religious belief an upfront part of his political platform.”
His first two wives might have quibbled with the description of Gingrich as a seriously religious man in private. But after Monday’s performance, nobody will ever again say that he “does not make religious belief an upfront part of his political platform.” His talk was titled “The Victory of the Cross: How Spiritual Renewal Helped Topple the Berlin Wall.”
The former speaker, his eye on a 2012 presidential run, said that as he thought more about the felling of the Wall 20 years ago Monday, he began “to understand a message of faith, a message of salvation, the centrality of the cross in this whole fight.”
And it wasn’t just about 20th-century Europe. “I am tired of secular fanatics trying to redesign America in their image,” he announced. Further, he said, “I believe the most important question in the United States for the next decade is: ‘Who are we?’
For full story, read here.
Subscribe to Free “Top 10 Stories” Email
Get the top 10 stories from The Aquila Report in your inbox every Tuesday morning.