Tuesday, 24 January 2012

Letter From America

Voter Dissatisfaction

Here is Washington Times columnist, Charles Hurt's take on the Gingrich win in South Carolina.  It's an interesting perspective.

COLUMBIA , S.C. — It is always here in the birthplace of the Civil War that things go bump in the night for presidential campaigns. . . . But all the shady twists and turns of the past were nothing compared with the Spanish moss-draped soap opera that has unfolded here in the past week. . . .

Two candidates — former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman and Texas Gov. Rick Perry — crashed and burned, each begrudgingly endorsing their former enemies as they withdrew. . . . It has been a week of more heartache and drama than "Gone with the Wind." More intrigue than a John Grisham novel. And the story has been so Southern Gothic as to make William Faulker wake from the dead to enjoy the show.


Far and away, the most salacious chapter of the past week has been the final-hours, heart-bearing interview by Mr. Gingrich's second ex-wife, telling the world that her ex-husband is an open marriage-seeking, dishonest cad unworthy of the presidency.  And, yet, here in the first Bible Belt primary, it is the serial philanderer who left two wives on their sick beds who won handily last night. . . .

The truth is, nobody actually likes Mr. Gingrich. They just really don't like Mr. Romney or Mr. Santorum, and they are a little worried about Rep. Ron Paul.  Most of all, it is the media that voters despise and they cast their votes just to keep Mr. Gingrich's relentless beatings of the media going on for as long as possible. The spurious claims made against the former House speaker by his ex-wife not only didn't hurt him, they actually helped him. Because a vote for him was a vote against the media that gave such voice to her aspersions.

So, it is hardly surprising that after a weeklong soap opera, it is the king of drama who emerged the victor after delivering the operatic performance of a lifetime trashing the media in the last debate.  The king of drama, Mr. Gingrich is flawed, brilliant, introspective and full of passion. At times, he is the soul-searching Hamlet and at other times the destructive King Lear. . . .

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