WASHINGTON (AP) — Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich intends to take a formal step toward entering the 2012 presidential race within the next two weeks, Republican officials said Sunday, after months spent traveling to important primary and caucus states.
These officials declined to say precisely what type of announcement Mr. Gingrich, a 67-year-old former Georgia lawmaker, would make, but added they expect him to make clear his determination to run.
If so, he would be the first Republican to do so in a slow-to-develop field of potential challengers to President Obama.
Mr. Gingrich became the first Republican speaker in 40 years after he led his party to control of the House in the 1994 elections. He left Congress two turbulent terms later, intensely controversial and under pressure from disillusioned one-time supporters in the rank and file.
In the years since, he has developed something akin to a one-man political brand, speaking out on health care and other issues, building a fundraising operation, traveling widely, and offering advice privately and publicly to Republicans in office.
Among the other potential Republican presidential contenders are former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, who worked closely with Mr. Gingrich in the mid-1990s as party chairman. Also considering candidacies are Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels and Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann.
Once the epitome of the Republican establishment, Mr. Gingrich in recent months has worked to align himself with tea party adherents who challenged the GOP hierarchy and provided much of the political energy behind the party’s 2010 electoral gains.
“Two years ago today, Americans from all across the nation and from all walks of life began a movement on a national scale,” Mr. Gingrich wrote Sunday on his Facebook page. “Fed up with a Republican Party that forgot its reformer roots and a Democratic Party where every solution involved more government, tea party rallies began brewing in over 50 cities with an estimated 30,000 people attending.”
Mr. Gingrich also has sought close ties to Christian conservatives, who are particularly influential in Iowa and in Southern states that often prove pivotal in Republican presidential primary campaigns. He has been divorced twice.
The officials who described his plans did so on condition of anonymity, saying they were not authorized to discuss them publicly.
In an e-mail, his spokesman, Rick Tyler, said, “’’We have said for weeks now that Newt will decide whether or not to move to an explore phase by late February/early March. We are sticking to that schedule.”
Later in the day, Randy Evans, a lawyer for Mr. Gingrich, said in an e-mail, “My expectation is that he will make an official announcement about an exploratory committee within the next ten (10) days. I also expect that it will happen in Georgia.”
Mr. Gingrich first flirted with running for president in 1996, when he was speaker.
In recent weeks he has visited Iowa, where the first 2012 Republican convention delegates will be picked early next year, and appeared at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, which thousands of activists attended. According to his Web site, he intends to appear at a breakfast in mid-March in New Hampshire, site of the first 2012 primary election.
He has called for the elimination of the Environmental Protection Agency and creation of an Environmental Solutions Agency to reward innovation, and he has attacked Mr. Obama as clueless when it comes to foreign policy.
In a column Sunday in The Washington Post, Mr. Gingrich wrote that twin government shutdowns that occurred while he was speaker in 1995 and 1996 helped set the stage for a balanced budget agreement between President Bill Clinton and the Republican-controlled Congress in 1997.
The shutdowns were widely seen at the time as political damaging to the Republicans. As the face of the GOP revolution, Mr. Gingrich bore much of the blame.
It was one of numerous controversies that occurred while he was most prominent leader in his party.
Mr. Gingrich stepped down after the 1998 elections in the face of a rebellion by members of the Republican rank and file who blamed him for an unexpected loss of seats.
Associated Press writers Liz Sidoti in Washington and Shannon McCaffrey in Atlanta contributed to this report.
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