Subj: [Demolist] Newt Gingrich and His Republican Family Values
Date: 8/14/99 5:41:39 PM !!!First Boot!!!
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Newt Gingrich and His Republican Family Values
Beth Berselli and Paul Farhi of the Washington Post, 8/14/99
"http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1999-08/14/
085l-081499-idx.html"
Marianne and Newt Gingrich have acknowledged pain in their marriage
before. But the apparent end of their 18-year union came as a series
of shocks nonetheless to the woman who had stood by her man during
his stormy tenure as speaker of the House of Representatives.
Marianne Ginther Gingrich was visiting her childhood home in Ohio
in early May to celebrate her mother's 84th birthday when her husband
phoned. After offering birthday wishes to his mother-in-law, Gingrich
asked to speak to his wife. Virginia Ginther soon found her daughter
in tears.
"I said, 'Marianne, what's wrong?' " Ginther recalled yesterday.
She said Marianne replied: "He doesn't want me as his wife anymore."
There was a second jolt soon after. Newt Gingrich, now 56, informed
his wife that he was having an affair with a congressional aide,
a woman 23 years his junior, Ginther said.
"I was totally shocked," Marianne Gingrich, 48, said yesterday
in an interview from her home in Marietta, Ga. "I had no idea."
This week, a judge in Georgia gave Marianne's divorce attorneys
permission to question Gingrich and Callista Bisek, of Arlington,
about their relationship.
Bisek, 33, who bears a passing resemblance to Hillary Rodham Clinton,
has been a scheduler and assistant hearing clerk for the House
Agriculture Committee since early 1995. Gingrich oversaw the panel
as speaker, although he was not a member of it.
It's not clear how long Bisek (pronounced BISS-eck) and Gingrich
have been involved. Nor are other details of their romance, such
as how they met, known. Messages left at Bisek's home were not
returned yesterday. Newt Gingrich also was unavailable.
The judge's order could open Gingrich to the same sort of intimate
questioning that dogged President Clinton in the wake of his affair
with Monica Lewinsky. Clinton met Lewinsky while she was a White
House intern.
Gingrich resigned from his speakership after House Republicans
fared poorly in last November's midterm elections. He left the
House altogether in January after 10 terms in office and is now
lecturing and giving radio commentary.
During the investigation and impeachment of Clinton, Gingrich
generally refrained from specific criticism of the president's
personal behavior. But during his term as speaker, House Republicans
voted to impeach a president for the first time in 130 years.
Gingrich also has been an outspoken advocate of "core values,"
saying in a speech in May: "We have had a 35-year experiment in
a unionized, bureaucratic, credentialed, secular assault on the
core values of this country, and we should not be surprised that
eventually they yield bad fruit because they are bad seeds."
However, Gingrich has had tempestuous personal relations of his
own for years. His first marriage, at age 19, to his former high
school geometry teacher, Jackie Battley, dissolved in 1981 after
19 years. The breakup came after his former wife's discovery that
she had cancer.
Within months of the divorce, Gingrich married Marianne Ginther,
a former county planner from Ohio. The couple have periodically
separated during their marriage, and at one point in 1989, Newt
Gingrich publicly acknowledged that it might not survive. ingrich
said his "habit of dominance" contributed to their problems.
Responding to questions about marital infidelity, Gingrich once
said: "In the 1970s, things happened--period. That's the most I'll
ever say. . . . I start with an assumption that all human beings
sin. So all I'll say is that I've led a human life."
Marianne Gingrich's divorce attorney, John C. Mayoue of Atlanta,
said his client "is prepared to thoroughly investigate [Newt
Gingrich's] personal life and business activities."
Under Georgia divorce proceedings, a spouse can gain a superior
alimony and property settlement if it can be shown that the other
spouse was unfaithful. According to court papers, Marianne Gingrich
is asking for "an equitable division" of the couple's property,
as well as "reasonable temporary and permanent alimony." As of
yesterday, no settlement terms had been offered, Mayoue said.
Mayoue said the couple had a good marriage--acting as partners
in business and personal ventures--until Newt Gingrich's "unexpected
demand for divorce" in May. The couple set up a corporate consulting
company in January, called Gingrich Enterprises, and had been
traveling together frequently--from Switzerland to Silicon Valley.
The former speaker's divorce attorney, J. Randolph Evans, said
he hopes the two parties can reach an agreement next week. He had
no other comment.
Bisek earned a bachelor's degree in music from Luther College in
Decorah, Iowa, in 1988. She is a member of the National Shrine
choir at Catholic University. Her videotaped deposition will be
taken at her home, probably by mid-September.
In the meantime, Newt Gingrich's wife and mother-in-law are still
dealing with their surprise at the news--and their own bitterness.
"It's about the cruelest thing you can do," Ginther said of Gingrich's
call to her daughter. "You certainly would not want to be told
like that."
She added: "I think it's terrible when people get away with things
like this. We accepted him like a son. It's just unbelievable."
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The Republicans are the party that says government doesn't
work and then they get elected and prove it."
-- P. J. O'Rourke
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