Townhall Celebrates America 250
Where Are the Obamas and the Clintons on the Monsters Taking Over Their...
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 327: God’s Name in the Declaration of Independence
The Leech Has Two Daughters—Give and Give
Don’t Shop at Von’s
12 Score and 10 Years Ago
Make Unsubsidized Passenger Rail a Condition of the Union Pacific-Norfolk Southern Merger
Obamacare's Fraud Bill Just Came Due
Ellison's Independence Day Video Sparks Backlash Amid Pardon Scandal
Operation Patriot Shield Nets 224 Fugitive Arrests Across Missouri, Illinois
Department of War Awards Mike Rowe’s Foundation $10 Million to Rebuild Skilled Trades
Independence Day Revealed the Death Throes of Peak Woke
Two Men Indicted in $35 Million Medicaid Ambulette Fraud Scheme
Illegal Alien CDL Holder Kills Pennsylvania State Trooper in Horrific Accident
House Republicans Celebrate the America That Democrats Are Trying to Destroy
Tipsheet

The Declining Newt

The Declining Newt

This primary season has been a chaotic concoction of jumps and slides in polls. The latest fading spark plug appears to be Mr. Gingrich. His surge shocked voters and garnered many bandwagon jumpers -- but, in Iowa at least, his favor is looking to be short-lived.

Advertisement

According to a new poll released by Public Policy Polling, "Newt Gingrich just keeps on sliding. He's gone from 27% to 22% to 14% to 13% over the course of our four Iowa tracking polls. His favorability numbers are pretty abysmal now at 37/54."

The latest in a string of anti-Romneys, Newt's decline has yielded an ironic result: increasing support for Romney. The same poll, though, says that Ron Paul is the current leader in Iowa with 24 percent to Romney's 20 percent.

Many view this as relatively inconsequential, as a second place finish to Paul would still be a boost for Romney.

A recent Politico story cited Rep. Steve King on this matter:

"I think if Romney finishes second and he’s separated from" a third-place finisher, he springboards well into New Hampshire, Rep. Steve King said. But, he added, if he is a distant third to Gingrich or someone else, "I think that does damage him going forward."

Advertisement

Related:

NEW HAMPSHIRE

But, as Paul and Romney battle it out for first place, Newt's fall is not inconsequential. For those who underestimate the importance of Iowa I have one word: Giuliani.

The Iowa Caucuses take place January 3rd, so Gingrich has limited time to recover. But if the ups and downs of this primary have taught us anything, it's that nothing is predictable.

Written by Mary Crookston

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement