Gingrich has since remained involved in national politics and public policy debate.
McKay Coppins of
The Atlantic summarized time with Gingrich in 2018: [Gingrich] is dabbling in geopolitics, dining in fine Italian restaurants. When he feels like traveling, he crisscrosses the Atlantic in business class, opining on the issues of the day from bicontinental TV studios and giving speeches for $600 a minute. There is time for reading, and writing, and midday zoo trips—and even he will admit, "It's a very fun life."
Policy in February 2003. In 2003, he founded the
Center for Health Transformation. Gingrich supported the
Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003, which created the
Medicare Part D federal prescription drugs benefit program. Some conservatives have criticized him for favoring the plan, due to its cost. In a May 15, 2011, interview on Meet the Press, Gingrich repeated his long-held belief that "all of us have a responsibility to pay—help pay for health care", and suggested this could be implemented by either a mandate to obtain health insurance or a requirement to post a bond ensuring coverage. In the same interview Gingrich said "I don't think right-wing social engineering is any more desirable than left-wing social engineering. I don't think imposing radical change from the right or the left is a very good way for a free society to operate." This comment caused backlash within the Republican Party. Gingrich also co-chaired an independent congressional study group made up of health policy experts formed in 2007 to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of action taken within the U.S. to fight
Alzheimer's disease. Gingrich has served on several commissions, including the Hart–Rudman Commission, formally known as the
U.S. Commission on National Security/21st century, which examined national security issues affecting the armed forces, law enforcement and intelligence agencies. In 2005 he became the co-chair of a task force for UN reform, which aimed to produce a plan for the U.S. to help strengthen the UN. For over two decades, Gingrich has taught at the
United States Air Force's
Air University, where, as of 2010, he was the longest-serving teacher of the Joint Flag Officer Warfighting Course. In addition, he is an honorary distinguished visiting scholar and professor at the
National Defense University and, as of 2012, was teaching officers from all of the defense services. Gingrich informally advised Defense secretary
Donald Rumsfeld on strategic issues, on issues including the
Israeli–Palestinian conflict and encouraging the Pentagon to not "yield" foreign policy influence to the
State Department and
National Security Council. Gingrich is also a guiding coalition member of the
Project on National Security Reform. , Gingrich and
Al Sharpton meet with President
Barack Obama in May 2009. Gingrich founded and served as the chairman of
American Solutions for Winning the Future, a 527 group established in 2007. The group was a "fundraising juggernaut" that raised $52 million from major donors, such as
Sheldon Adelson and the coal company
Peabody Energy.
Politico reported, "The operation, which includes a pollster and fundraisers, promotes Gingrich's books, sends out
direct mail, airs ads touting his causes and funds his travel across the country." and religious educational organization Renewing American Leadership. Gingrich is a former member of the
Council on Foreign Relations. He is a fellow at conservative
think tanks the
American Enterprise Institute and
Hoover Institution. He sometimes serves as a commentator, guest or panel member on
cable news shows, such as the
Fox News Channel. He is listed as a contributor by Fox News Channel, and frequently appears as a guest on various segments; he has also hosted occasional specials for the Fox News Channel. Gingrich has signed the "Strong America Now" pledge committing to promoting
Six Sigma methods to reduce government spending. Gingrich founded
Advocates for Opioid Recovery together with former Rep.
Patrick J. Kennedy and
Van Jones, a former domestic policy adviser to President Barack Obama.
Businesses After leaving Congress in 1999, Gingrich started a number of for-profit companies: Between 2001 and 2010, the companies he and his wife owned in full or part had revenues of almost $100 million. As of 2015, Gingrich served as an advisor to the Canadian mining company
Barrick Gold. According to financial disclosure forms released in July 2011, Gingrich and his wife had a net worth of at least $6.7 million in 2010, compared to a maximum net worth of $2.4 million in 2006. Most of the increase in his net worth was because of payments to him from his for-profit companies. The revenues came from more than 300 health-insurance companies and other clients, with membership costing as much as $200,000 per year in exchange for access to Gingrich and other perks. In 2011, when Gingrich became a presidential candidate, he sold his interest in the business and said he would release the full list of his clients and the amounts he was paid, "to the extent we can". Between 2001 and 2010, Gingrich consulted for
Freddie Mac, a
government-sponsored secondary home mortgage company, which was concerned about new regulations under consideration by Congress. Regarding payments of $1.6 million for the consulting, In January 2012, he said that he could not make public his contract with Freddie Mac, even though the company gave permission, until his business partners in the Center for Health Transformation also agreed to that.
Gingrich Productions Gingrich Productions, which is headed by Gingrich's wife
Callista Gingrich, was created in 2007. According to the company's website, in May 2011, it is "a performance and production company featuring the work of Newt and Callista Gingrich. Newt and Callista host and produce historical and public policy documentaries, write books, record audio books and voiceovers, produce photographic essays, and make television and radio appearances." one on energy, one on Ronald Reagan, and one on the threat of radical Islam. All were joint projects with the conservative group
Citizens United. In 2011, Newt and Callista appeared in
A City Upon a Hill, on the subject of
American exceptionalism. As of May 2011, the company had about five employees. In 2010, it paid Gingrich more than $2.4 million.
Gingrich Communications Gingrich Communications promoted Gingrich's public appearances, including his
Fox News contract and his website, newt.org. Gingrich Communications, which employed 15 people at its largest, closed in 2011 when Gingrich began his presidential campaign.
Other • Celebrity Leaders is a booking agency that handled Gingrich's speaking engagements, as well as those other clients such as former
Republican National Committee chair
Michael Steele and former Pennsylvania Senator
Rick Santorum. who is Gingrich's daughter, owns the agency. Gingrich has shares in the agency, and was paid more than $70,000 by it in 2010. • FGH Publications handles the production of and royalties from fiction books co-authored by Gingrich. On October 13, 2005, Gingrich suggested he was considering a run for president, saying, "There are circumstances where I will run", elaborating that those circumstances would be if no other candidate champions some of the platform ideas he advocates. On September 28, 2007, Gingrich announced that if his supporters pledged $30 million to his campaign by October 21, he would seek the nomination. However, insisting that he had "pretty strongly" considered running, on September 29 spokesman Rick Tyler said that Gingrich would not seek the presidency in 2008 because he could not continue to serve as chairman of American Solutions if he did so. Citing campaign finance law restrictions (the
McCain-Feingold campaign law would have forced him to leave his American Solutions political organization if he declared his candidacy), Gingrich said, "I wasn't prepared to abandon American Solutions, even to explore whether a campaign was realistic." During the
2009 special election in
New York's 23rd congressional district, Gingrich endorsed moderate Republican candidate
Dede Scozzafava, rather than
Conservative Party candidate
Doug Hoffman, who had been endorsed by several nationally prominent Republicans. He was heavily criticized for this endorsement, with conservatives questioning his candidacy for president in 2012 and even comparing him to
Benedict Arnold. Prior to President
Donald Trump leaving office in January 2021, Trump appointed Gingrich to the
Defense Policy Board Advisory Committee of the Pentagon as part of a series of shakeups where prominent Trump loyalists replaced former members. In February 2021,
Biden-appointed Defense Secretary
Lloyd Austin dismissed all appointments to the committee made by Trump, including Gingrich.
2012 presidential run in September 2011 In late 2008, several political commentators, including
Marc Ambinder in
The Atlantic and
Robert Novak in
The Washington Post, identified Gingrich as a top presidential contender in the
2012 election, with Ambinder reporting that Gingrich was "already planting some seeds in
Iowa,
New Hampshire". A July 2010 poll conducted by Public Policy Polling indicated that Gingrich was the leading GOP contender for the Republican nomination with 23% of likely Republican voters saying they would vote for him. Describing his views as a possible candidate during an appearance on
On the Record with
Greta Van Susteren in March 2009, Gingrich said, "I am very sad that a number of Republicans do not understand that this country is sick of
earmarks. [Americans] are sick of politicians taking care of themselves. They are sick of their money being spent in a way that is absolutely indefensible ... I think you're going to see a steady increase in the number of incumbents who have opponents because the American taxpayers are increasingly fed up." On March 3, 2011, Gingrich officially announced a website entitled "Newt Exploratory 2012" in lieu of a formal
exploratory committee for exploration of a potential presidential run. On May 11, 2011, Gingrich officially announced his intention to seek the GOP nomination in 2012. On June 9, 2011, a group of Gingrich's senior campaign aides left the campaign en masse, leading to doubts about the viability of his presidential run. On June 21, 2011, two more senior aides left. In response, Gingrich stated that he had not quit the race for the Republican nomination, and pointed to his experience running for 5 years to win his seat in Congress, spending 16 years helping to build a Republican majority in the house and working for decades to build a Republican majority in Georgia. Some commentators noted Gingrich's resilience throughout his career, in particular with regard to his presidential campaign. in February 2012 After then-front-runner
Herman Cain was damaged by allegations of past
sexual harassment, Gingrich gained support, and quickly became a contender in the race, especially after Cain suspended his campaign. By December 4, 2011, Gingrich was leading in the national polls. However, after an abundance of negative ads run by his opponents throughout December, Gingrich's national polling lead had fallen to a tie with
Mitt Romney. On January 3, 2012, Gingrich finished in fourth place in the
Iowa Republican caucuses, far behind
Rick Santorum, Romney, and
Ron Paul. On January 10, Gingrich finished in fifth place in the
New Hampshire Republican primary, far behind Romney, Santorum,
Jon Huntsman, and Paul. After the field narrowed with the withdrawal from the race of Huntsman and
Rick Perry, Gingrich won the
South Carolina Republican primary on January 21, obtaining about 40% of the vote, considerably ahead of Romney, Santorum and Paul. This surprise victory allowed Gingrich to reemerge as the frontrunner once again heading into Florida. On January 31, 2012, Gingrich placed second in the
Republican Florida primary, losing by a fifteen percentage point margin, 47% to 32%. Some factors that contributed to this outcome include two strong debate performances by Romney (which were typically Gingrich's strong suit), the wide margin by which the Gingrich campaign was outspent in television ads, and a widely criticized proposal by Gingrich to have a permanent colony on the moon by 2020 to reinvigorate the American Space Program. It was later revealed Romney had hired a debate coach to help him perform better in the Florida debates. Gingrich did, however, significantly outvote Santorum and Paul. On February 4, 2012, Gingrich placed a distant second in the
Nevada Republican caucuses with 21%, losing to Romney who received over 50% of the total votes cast. On February 7, 2012, Gingrich came in last place in the
Minnesota Republican caucuses with about 10.7% of the vote. Santorum won the caucus, followed by Paul and Romney. On
Super Tuesday Gingrich won his home state, Georgia, which has the most delegates, in "an otherwise dismal night for him". Santorum took Tennessee and Oklahoma, where Gingrich had previously performed well in the polls, though Gingrich managed a close third behind Romney. On April 4, the Rick Santorum campaign shifted its position and urged Gingrich to drop out of the race and support Santorum. On April 10, Santorum announced the suspension of his campaign. Following this announcement, The Newt 2012 campaign used a new slogan referring to Gingrich as "the last conservative standing". Despite this, on April 19, Gingrich told Republicans in New York that he would work to help Romney win the general election if Romney secured the nomination. After a disappointing second place showing in the Delaware primary on April 24, and with a campaign debt in excess of $4 million, Gingrich suspended his campaign and endorsed front-runner Mitt Romney on May 2, 2012, on whose behalf he subsequently campaigned (i.e. stump speeches and television appearances). Gingrich later hosted a number of policy workshops at the
GOP Convention in Tampa presented by the
National Republican Committee called "Newt University". He and his wife Calista addressed the convention on its final day with a Ronald Reagan-themed introduction. Because FEC regulations prevent campaigns from ceasing operations until they settle their debts, the Newt Gingrich campaign was never formally dissolved. In 2016, the campaign filed a proposal to shut down without paying back its outstanding debt to 114 businesses and consultants; the FEC rejected this proposal. By then, the campaign still owed $4.6 million in debt, with only $17,000 being raised by the campaign committee over the previous year.
2016 election Gingrich supported
Donald Trump more quickly than many other establishment Republicans. After having consulted for Trump's 2016 campaign, Gingrich
encouraged his fellow Republicans to unify behind Trump, who had by then become the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. Gingrich reportedly figured among Trump's
final three choices to be his running mate; the position ultimately went to
Governor of Indiana Mike Pence. in October 2017 Following Trump's victory in the presidential election, speculation arose concerning Gingrich as a possible secretary of state, chief of staff or advisor. Eventually, Gingrich announced that he would not be serving in the cabinet. He stated that he didn't have the interest in serving in any role related to the Trump administration, stressing that as a private citizen he would engage with individuals for "strategic planning" rather than job-seeking. In May 2017, he promoted a conspiracy theory that Hillary Clinton and the Democratic Party had
Seth Rich, an employee for the
Democratic National Committee, killed during the 2016 presidential race. Gingrich attended his wife's swearing-in as
U.S. ambassador to the Holy See at the White House in October 2017. According to journalist Robert Mickens, Newt Gingrich served as the
de facto ambassador or the "shadow ambassador" while Callista Gingrich, as paraphrased by McKay Coppins of
The Atlantic, "is generally viewed as the ceremonial face of the embassy".
2020 election While ballots were being counted during the 2020 election, Gingrich supported President Trump in his
attempt to win re-election and called on him to stop the vote counts after unsubstantiated allegations of fraud emerged. After the 2020 election, Gingrich made unsupported claims of election fraud and refused to acknowledge
Joe Biden's victory. He called for the arrest of poll workers in Pennsylvania following the election.
2022 election Nancy Pelosi,
Kevin McCarthy,
Paul Ryan and
John Boehner in 2023 In January 2022, Gingrich told Fox News presenter
Maria Bartiromo that members of the
House Select Committee investigating the January 6 attack on the Capitol faced a real risk of jail after Republicans take over Congress, accusing them of breaking laws without explaining which laws were broken: I think when you have a Republican Congress, this is all going to come crashing down,... and the wolves are going to find out that they're now sheep and they're the ones who are in fact, I think, face a real risk of jail for the kinds of laws they're breaking[.] In July 2022, he was featured at an
America First Policy Institute conference promoting a "Trump-inspired platform for the 2024 GOP presidential nominee". As of August 2022, Gingrich was advising
Kevin McCarthy and House Republicans for the
2022 midterm elections, according to journalist
Dana Milbank.
Spouse to the U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland Gingrich accompanied his wife Callista to
Bern after she was confirmed as
U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland and Liechtenstein in 2025. As with her 2017 appointment in Rome (see above), Swiss political and business leaders perceived Newt Gingrich, not his wife, as the actual representative of the Trump administration. == Political positions ==