
Former Speaker Newt Gingrich, who led Republicans to their first House majority in four decades in 1994, said Saturday the House Freedom Caucus should recall how his own caucus led conservatives to power within the party.
Gingrich tweeted that he and other conservatives had developed âpositive action principlesâ in 1983 as part of what they called the Conservative Opportunity Society.
â[Those] led 11 years later to the Contract with America and the first GOP House Majority in 40 years.â
âIf the Freedom Caucus would study them, they could be dramatically more effective,â Gingrich said, going on to cite and agree with a sentiment from political reporter Mark Halperinâs âWide World of Newsâ newsletter.
â[T]he Freedom Caucus is a bunch of rebels with a series of causes but no coherent path to achieving said causes,â Halperin wrote.
In the 1980s, although Ronald Reagan was in the White House, Boston Democratic Speaker Tip OâNeill wielded strong control of the House. OâNeill and Reagan had a notably friendly but ideologically disparate relationship.
Coinciding with the early days of C-SPAN televising live floor proceedings, Gingrich would often take to the well of the House in the late-night hours and address conservativesâ issues to a mostly empty chamber but with a captive audience on the new TV format.
GINGRICH BLASTS HARRISâ âRAMBLINGâ SPEECHES
Gingrich biographer Craig Shirley told Fox News Digital on Saturday that the Freedom Caucus should study the work of their comparative predecessor, the Conservative Opportunity Society, as well as the path Gingrich led from a low-profile congressman to speaker.
âI guess the word brilliant is thrown around so, so cavalierly. So let me just say, it was extremely smart politics to make the case for conservative governance,â Shirley said of Gingrichâs work in the 1980s and 1990s.
âReagan had already blazed that path eight years before Gingrich did.â
While critics say the GOP has shifted hard to the right on some issues and softened on others, Shirley said itâs essentially the same as it was during Gingrichâs rise.
âLess government, more freedom, less taxes, strong national defense, pro-life.â
Former Rep. Vin Weber, R-Minn., another top member of Gingrichâs conservative group, said in a PBS interview that there have not been too many groups like the Conservative Opportunity Society (or the Freedom Caucus, which hadnât been formed at the time of the interview) and that there was the same issue with apprehension over angering their party leaders.
Weber said there had been a few small intra-caucus conservative groups prior to the Reagan era, including one in the 1960s led by then-Rep. Donald Rumsfeld, R-Ill. â who would go on to serve as Pentagon chief two times.
On the last day of the 1982 session, Gingrich approached Weber and asked, âWhat are you doing next year and for the next 10 years after that?.â
âI thought that was interesting and I said, âI expect to be back here, but nothing special other than that,ââ Weber recalled.
âWhat he was saying was that he, as one person, was not being effectiveâŠ. He identified me in the [GOP] conference as somebody [who] had been supportive of his point of view and maybe had some ability to organize things,â Weber said.
MIKE JOHNSON RE-ELECTED HOUSE SPEAKER
Shirley said the current Freedom Caucus has the rare opportunity to achieve their goals if they play their cards right, with full Republican control of Washington.
âThey donât have a âcontract,â but they have the next best thing there. They have a core set of issues and an ideology that they can easily follow,â he said, adding that âno one should ever doubtâ Speaker Mike Johnsonâs commitment to âReaganiteâ principles.
In additional comments to Fox Newsâ âHannity,â Gingrich said the one-round vote Friday was a âgreat victoryâ for Johnson, R-La.
â[Heâs] just a decent, hardworking, intelligent human being.⊠I could not have been the kind of speaker he is. I donât have the patience. I donât have that ability to just keep moving forward. Itâs really very extraordinary.â
Meanwhile, Freedom Caucus member Ralph Norman, R-S.C., told Fox News the group met with Johnson earlier and that he âjust didnât come away with the feeling that the âumphâ or the willingness to fight for Trumpâs agenda was there.â
âAnd I use as a backdrop whatâs happened the last 14 months, we had 1500-page omni-bills that you couldnât read â where you had no spending cuts to offset $100 billion in new spending.â
âAnd I know we had a slim majority, but thatâs over with now. What we wanted to impress with [Johnson] yesterday was, are you going to fight for these things that weâve been asking for, like a balanced budget? Like offsets? Like getting behind all of the Trump agenda?â
Norman, along with Rep. Keith Self, R-Texas, initially did not vote for Johnson, which would have set up a second round of speaker votes.
But, Norman told âThe Storyâ that that action was the âonly way to let my voice be heard.â
He said Johnson âgave his wordâ to fight for the things he mentioned to Fox News, and that agreement, plus a message from Trump that Johnson was the only speaker candidate with support in the caucus, guided his decision to ultimately support the Louisianan.
In a âDear Colleagueâ letter released Friday, House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris, R-Md., and his members expressed several policy points that Johnson should commit to in order to âreverse the damage of the Biden-Harris administration,â as well as achieve long-standing conservative goals.
The letter indicated they had voted for Johnson because of their âsteadfast supportâ of Trump and ensuring the Jan. 6 elector certification can run smoothly.
âWe did this despite our sincere reservations regarding the Speakerâs track record over the past 15 months.â
The caucus called for Johnson to modify the House calendar so its schedule is as busy as the Senateâs, ensure reconciliation legislation reduces spending and deficits in âreal terms,â and halt violations of the â72-hour-ruleâ for debate on amendments to bills.
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They also demanded Johnson not rely on Democrats to pass legislation that a majority of his own caucus wonât support.
In comments on âThe Story,â Norman said he believes Johnson now understands â through the initial silence of several Republicans during the first roll call and his and Selfâs initial non-Johnson-vote â that he will have to work to consider the conservative blocâs demands.
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