Newt
Gingrich Blasts GOP Budget As ‘Right-Wing Social Engineering’
Newt Gingrich slammed the House
GOP budget on Meet The Press this morning, telling interviewer
David Gregory that replacing Medicare with a voucher system was too “radical”
an approach. His words were by far the harshest of any major presidential
candidate towards Paul Ryan’s proposal on entitlements.
“I don’t think right-wing social
engineering is any more desirable than left-wing social engineering,” Gingrich
said, calling the plan “too big a jump” for the country. “I don’t think
imposing radical change from the right or the left is a very good way for a
free society to operate.”
Gingrich has distanced himself
from the Ryan plan in recent weeks, calling instead for a system that would
preserve the current Medicare program alongside a voluntary, privatized
version. But nothing he has said came close to the full frontal assault he
unleashed on his own party’s top priority in Congress.
Gingrich was asked about his own
record on health care Gregory played a clip of the then-Congressman on the show
in 1993 calling for an individual mandate, the same policy that has put Mitt
Romney’s candidacy in jeopardy. Like Romney, Gingrich did not disavow his
support for a requirement that people maintain insurance, defending it as an
effective approach.
“I’ve said consistently we ought
to have some requirement you either have health insurance or you post a bond or
in some way you indicate you’re going to be held accountable,” he said.
He addressed his recent attacks
on President Obama as the “food stamp president,” which some critics have
labeled a racial dog whistle. In the same speech he introduced
the phrase, he hinted at the idea of reinstituting poll tests, which were banned by the Voting Rights
Act as a trick to suppress black voters.
Gregory asked Gingrich whether
there were racial undertones to the “food stamp” phrase.
“That’s bizarre,” he said. “What
I said is factually true…And to hide behind the charge of racism? I have never
said anything about President Obama which is racist.”
Benjy Sarlin is a reporter for
Talking Points Memo and co-writes the campaign blog, TPM2012. He previously
reported for The Daily Beast/Newsweek as their Washington Correspondent and
covered local politics for the New York Sun.
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