"The raw parallel between the liberating impact of C-SPAN starting in April of '79 and the liberating impact of Facebook and Twitter [shows it] is very likely [President Donald] Trump could not have won if there wasn't social media," Gingrich said at an event Monday at The Heritage Foundation with Craig Shirley, author of the new book "Citizen Newt."
"Similarly, I don't think we would have emerged without C-SPAN," he added, referring to the cable channel that covers proceedings in the House and Senate.
"We began very early developing … one-minute [speeches] and doing special orders [speeches]," Gingrich said, adding:
"You have to design a campaign because you know the news media is against you," Gingrich said. "So every issue has to be 70 or 80 percent to your advantage."
"For example, welfare reform has always been a winning issue. By the time we were done, it was at 92 percent approval."
Gingrich detailed how important polling was for determining what was in the Contract with America, and what wasn't:
So, for example, nothing in the contract about abortion and … nothing in the contract about school prayer.
I happen to be strongly pro-life and I am very much in favor of voluntary school prayer—I think we would be a better country if we had it—but I also knew those two [issues] would allow The New York Times to avoid every popular issue and polarize us as social right-wingers, and we frankly would not have won.
"The polarization around Trump is just a taste of what is coming, because the truth is that the left is so out of touch with reality that every time you try to tell the truth, you are automatically smeared and assaulted and attacked, and there is a radicalization under way."
"You have to be aware," he added. "It is going to be a real fight."
Gingrich also reflected on his political career and his vision for the country's future, which he said he began pondering as a teenager.
"Between my freshman and sophomore year of high school … I had essentially three goals: to create a Republican majority, to replace the welfare state, and to defeat the Soviet empire," Gingrich said:
"When I arrived in December of '78, we [Republicans] had already been in the minority for 24 years. And so I went to the chairman of the [National Republican] Campaign Committee and said, … 'We ought to have a plan to become a majority,'" Gingrich said.
Moving forward to today's political climate, Gingrich said he is "optimistic" that conservative ideals will succeed.
"There is an immense amount of effort and an immense amount of sacrifice that is required of a free people," Gingrich said.
"Now I am strategically optimistic that 350-320 million free people in the end are going to decide that Chinese authoritarianism and Islamic dictatorship aren't acceptable futures, and so we will eventually in our own good time, to paraphrase Churchill, 'Get our act together.'"
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Rachel del Guidice (@LRacheldG)is a reporter for The Daily Signal. She is a graduate of Franciscan University of Steubenville, Forge Leadership Network, and The Heritage Foundation's Young Leaders Program.
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