Newt: The Health Nut
In this chapter of his life, the former Speaker has become
obsessed--with his fitness and yours
By Karen Tumulty/Washington
November 15, 1999
Web posted at: 1:53 p.m. EST (1853 GMT)
The scene was the kind that happens almost every morning in
Washington. At a downtown think tank, one expert was introducing
another at a conference so thinly attended that two-thirds of the
seats around the table were empty. The question at hand: health
care and, specifically, how emotions affect organic processes.
When the visiting authority launched into a scientific
explanation of why panic constricts the arteries, the other one
cut him off. "First of all," Newt Gingrich interrupted, "you have
to tell them about petting bunnies."
When Gingrich resigned as House Speaker a year ago, the only
thing that seemed certain was that the world had not heard the
last of the heat-seeking former backbencher who toppled the
Capitol in 1994. But these days when he makes the papers, it is
mostly with the details of his messy divorce from wife Marianne
(last week's testimony: his affair with congressional aide
Callista Bisek began two years before Bill Clinton met Monica) or
with the latest sighting of the lovebirds canoodling over pricey
wine.
It turns out, however, that Gingrich has had plenty else to keep
him busy and engage the idea-a-minute side of him that so often
exasperated his colleagues when he was running the House. The
most unlikely reincarnation of the paunchy ex-lawmaker is as a
zealous advocate of the virtues of a low-fat diet, exercise and
stress management. Although he is occasionally seen at a downtown
Washington health club, no one would call him buff--he is still
carrying the legacy of too many cheeseburgers and Fritos from the
Capitol basement takeout. But that has not prevented him from
bonding with best-selling author Dr. Dean Ornish, who wrote Love
and Survival: 8 Pathways to Intimacy and Health and Eat More,
Weigh Less: Dr. Dean Ornish's Life Choice Program for Losing
Weight Safely While Eating Abundantly.
Ornish was the guest with whom Gingrich shared the conference
room several weeks ago at the slightly right-of-center American
Enterprise Institute, where he is a resident scholar. But while
he is enamored with Ornish's approach--and devours studies of
medical breakthroughs that show, among other things, that
rabbits that are regularly stroked have less plaque in their
arteries--he puts them in the context of policy. He argues, for
example, that the government and private insurers could save
untold billions on unnecessary heart surgery. And he doesn't
stop there. "General Motors ought to be saying to every
[employee] that they cover, 'If you decide you need a heart
transplant, you ought to be taking vitamin E, you ought to be
taking selenium,'" he said. "That ought to be part of the
contract General Motors insists on."
In addition to his gig studying and advocating health policy at
A.E.I., Gingrich is a visiting fellow at Stanford University's
conservative Hoover Institution, where he focuses on technology
and society. And while neither place pays him, Gingrich is for
the first time in his life earning big money for his thoughts,
making speeches--35 or 40 so far this year--for which he charges
$35,000 in Washington and Atlanta and $50,000 when he has to
travel. "Every audience gets it," he bubbled in an interview
last week. "In the country at large, there is an understanding
that the old order is crumbling. I love it!" He also has a
corporate consulting firm, a syndicated radio show and a perch as
a commentator on Fox News.
His speaking fees and the money raised for his Friends of Newt
Gingrich political-action committee pay for other projects.
Gingrich last month put up websites to promote his other
endeavors: revamping Social Security to allow people to invest
their own premiums; abolishing inheritance taxes; and shrinking
government by cutting a combined load of federal, state and local
taxes to no more than 25% of income.
Then there is his leisure time. Once a month, the former college
professor sits in on classes as a student at Georgia Tech, and
spends half a day at the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention. A month ago, with the birth of his daughter's
daughter, he became a grandfather. "I'm so happy being in private
life that I felt the absence of frustration," he notes. "So I
took up golf."
And of course, he has time to ponder politics. In the interview,
he said his party's chance of holding the House will ride on its
presidential nominee, and he thinks either George W. Bush or
John McCain is up to it. ("Forbes, frankly, should have run for
Governor of New Jersey.") But what either candidate must do is
find the right four or five issues and convince voters they are
relevant to their lives. Asked to name those four or five,
Gingrich, typically, comes up with six. (They're mostly the ones
listed on his website.) "There's no [stopping]...better ideas,"
he exulted. "I'm 56 years old. I probably have 20 years of
talking about better ideas ahead of me."
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Cover Date: November 22, 1999
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