Before the debate Saturday night at Wofford College, Newt stopped by Furman University to speak to a classroom full of students and a tailgate townhall of 300 people before the football game.
Gingrich presented his platform to the class in broad terms. Speaking on the economy, perhaps the biggest issue of this election cycle, the one-time college professor drew out a two-sided division he sees in the current economic debate on a green slate chalkboard.
He identified on the right, an "austerity and pain" model for fixing the crisis, and on the left, policies of "fantasy and collapse", which, he explained as putting off solving the economic problem until it's too late. Outside these two sides, Gingrich placed his own ideas, which, he explained as innovation and growth that would fix the economy in a painless way.
The other key idea Gingrich drew out for students was his belief in American exceptionalism. Appealing to his freethinking collegiate audience, he contrasted this idea of his to what he speculated were the leanings of most of their professors.
Other speaking points made by Gingrich that seemed to give special consideration to his Furman audience, so much smaller than the national audience he would speak to in the televised GOP debate Saturday night. Gingrich mad mention of his own made of his liberal arts credentials; a P.H.D. in European History. He also spoke of the bright future he projected students would find the Upstate job market with increasing application of an innovation model.
The success of Gingrich's appeals to his Furman audience could be viewed at the lecture's end, when the candidate and his staff filed on to the mall to the applause of a Newt Gingrich 2012 tent. Exiting students either sprung for a place in a crowd of supporters requesting pictures and autographs or looked politely on at what could potentially prove a historical moment; a candidate for United States president tailgating a game of Paladin football.
Newt Gingrich, Gingrich Campaign Press Release - Newt Tailgates at Furman University Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/298268