Newt Gingrich has dropped like a rock in Iowa polls, but with GOP voters there so unsettled it's premature to count him out. Forty-one percent of likely caucusgoers still might change their minds, a recent poll finds.
There?s a festive atmosphere at LJ?s Neighborhood Bar and Grill in Waterloo, Iowa, as Newt Gingrich and his wife, Callista, wade through the crowd to take their spot for brief remarks and questions.
Skip to next paragraphAfter all, it?s the evening of New Year?s Day, and the Jan. 3 caucuses are finally at hand. Mr. Gingrich, the former House speaker, expresses surprise at the size of the crowd ? maybe 200 people packed into the cozy sports bar in the hometown of another GOP presidential competitor, Michele Bachmann.
?Our schedule said there would be 50 people here. You have really disrupted the schedule," Gingrich deadpans.
But Gingrich may in fact have been a tad taken aback, given that the pundits have given him up for politically dead. According to the latest polls, he?s now in fourth place, on the downside of a once-surging campaign ? from a commanding lead with 31 percent among likely Iowa caucusgoers three weeks ago to under 14 percent. Mitt Romney, Ron Paul, and Rick Santorum have passed him by.
Still, Iowans ? and a few out-of-towners visiting family for the holidays ? flock to see Gingrich. There are Democrats in the house, out for an autograph and a look-see at a historical figure; a college student home on break who plans to caucus with the Republicans on Tuesday, but may still vote for President Obama in November; caucusgoers who may vote for Gingrich or may not; and of course lots of die-hard Gingrich fans sporting Newt stickers and waving signs.
Don?t count this guy out. Now that he?s down on his luck, humbled by his crash in the polls after being carpet-bombed by negative ads, some folks here find him endearing. They appreciate the tears he shed last week when asked about his mother, who had mental problems. And over and over, they mention his time in Washington and ability to get things done.
?I like his ideas, his thoughts, his experience, and dedication,? says Donna Miller of Waterloo. ?I saw Bachmann and Romney, too, and chose Newt.?
?He?s the man with the answers,? says her husband, Ivan Miller.
Indeed, in his appearance here, Gingrich expounded on the space program, global warming, guns, taxes, energy, and the United Nations.
"President Clinton and I negotiated endlessly on welfare reform, balanced budget, and the tax cut,? he said, referring to his four years as House speaker in the 1990s. ?You have to think about country more than party or your own position. Nobody else has been as involved in change as I have in those two cycles.?
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