- The Washington Times - Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Despite a hair-raising week, Republican presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich now bills himself as “the last conservative standing,” touting a crowded agenda that defies gleeful coverage claiming that he’s out of money and low on voter favorability. Mr. Gingrich campaigns Thursday in Delaware, hosting town halls and appearing on local talk radio. Then it’s on to the real big show.

On Friday, he arrives in St. Louis for the annual National Rifle Association convention, serving as a keynote speaker for the “Celebration of American Values Conference.” Mr. Gingrich has much company for the afternoon event. Also appearing: rival Mitt Romney, former-rival-turned-supporter Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Republican Sens. Roy Blunt and Chuck Grassley, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, Rep. Darrell E. Issa, plus John Bolton, Ken Blackwell and Oliver North.

Still, the big convention is a family affair. Mr. Gingrich’s wife, Callista, also appears at the Women’s Leadership Luncheon on Friday for a public “conversation off the campaign trail,” organizers say. Her companion on the dais? That would be Mr. Romney’s wife, Ann.

HISTORIC MUDSLINGING

“A recession is when your neighbor loses his job. A depression is when you lose yours. And recovery is when Jimmy Carter loses his.”

Ronald Reagan on President Jimmy Carter, during the presidential campaign of 1980.

FOOD STAMP GAS

Rep. Allen B. West is disturbed that food stamps buy much more than food these days. “I happened to drive by a gas station in Pompano Beach, Fla., in the heart of Congressional District 22, the district I represent. In front of the gas station were large banners proclaiming, ’We accept EBT SNAP cards.’ This is not something we should be proud to promote,” the Florida Republican says.

The aforementioned acronym stands for “Electronic Benefit Transfer Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program,” a system that allows state governments to provide food and cash benefits through a debit card. Originally created 48 years ago, the program was intended to provide funds for low-income families to buy healthy food, and ultimately boost domestic agriculture. The scope has grown, the lawmaker says.

“Now we see a growing number of businesses in this country, including sit-down and fast food restaurants, standalone and gas station convenience markets, and even pharmacies eager to accept SNAP benefits,” Mr. West observes, noting that since President Obama’s inauguration, the number of Americans receiving assistance has increased by 45 percent, to 46 million.

“The measure of success for our social safety net programs should be that fewer and fewer Americans must rely on them, not more and more,” he adds.

POLITICAL PROWESS

“How much do you know about political parties?” demands the Pew Research Center. Find out how you stand against the rest of America by taking the group’s official 13-question “News IQ” quiz here: https://pewresearch.org

BLOOMBERG MOMENT

The legal and cultural complexities following the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin has taken yet another political turn. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has now launched a campaign to challenge “Stand Your Ground” laws that have passed in 25 states

Mr. Bloomberg intends to “reform or repeal Florida-style ’shoot first’ laws,” he says, and has dubbed his effort “Second Chance on Shoot First.” The mayor intends to target state lawmakers who voted for the laws, which he says has led to an increase in justifiable homicides.

Mr. Bloomberg, who is funding the effort himself, has high-profile partners. Among them: the Rev. Al Sharpton, along with Chris Smith, incoming Florida Senate minority leader; National Urban League president Marc H. Morial, NAACP Senior Vice President for Advocacy and Policy Hilary Shelton, Color of Change executive director Rashad Robinson, Vote Vets chairman Jon Soltz and Glenn Ivey, a former federal and state prosecutor for the state of Maryland.

AD EXODUS

Former presidential hopeful Rick Santorum’s exit from the 2012 race has generated some collateral damage.

“That sniffling sound you hear is not Rick Santorum’s supporters bemoaning his decision Tuesday to pull the plug on his presidential campaign but the managers of the Keystone State’s television stations counting the ad dollars they have lost,” observes Kathy Kiely, managing editor for the Sunlight Foundation reporting group, a nonprofit that tracks government openness and transparency.

In the recent Wisconsin primary, presidential super PACs alone pumped $3.7 million into the local economy, much of it for media buys, she says. In Florida, they spent $19.1 million; in South Carolina, $8.7 million, in Ohio, $5.1 million.

“Local station managers had to be licking their chops at reports that Mitt Romney was planning to launch a multimillion-dollar ad war to finish Santorum off,” Ms. Kiely notes.

POLL DU JOUR

• 85 percent of Americans know that Ronald Reagan was a Republican; 92 percent of Republicans and 88 percent of Democrats know that information.

• 73 percent overall know that Franklin D. Roosevelt was a Democrat; 73 percent of Republicans and 58 percent of Democrats also know it.

• 71 percent overall identify Republicans as “the more conservative” party; 90 percent of Republicans and 62 percent of Democrats agree.

• 68 percent overall know the initials “GOP” are associated with Republicans; 78 percent of Republicans and 71 percent of Democrats know that information.

• 65 percent overall know that the donkey is the Democratic Party symbol; 76 percent of Republicans and 66 percent of Democrats also know it.

• 61 percent overall know that Rep. Nancy Pelosi is a Democrat; 75 percent of Republicans and 59 percent of Democrats also know it.

Source: A Pew Research Center survey of 1,000 U.S. adults conducted March 29-April 1 and released Wednesday.

Quizzes, quizzical banter, press releases to jharper@washingtontimes.com

• Jennifer Harper can be reached at jharper@washingtontimes.com.

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