GINGRICH: We have been here before

President Bill Clinton gestures during an address to the "Friends of Mario Cuomo" in New York, Oct. 19, 1994. Clinton was the main event at a $1,000-a-plate fund-raiser for Democratic New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, while New Jersey Gov. Christine Todd Whitman, current darling of tax-cut-minded Republicans, headed the list of luminaries at a similar affair down the block for Cuomo's GOP challenger, George Pataki. (AP Photo/Ron Frehm)

Americans are eager and ready to talk about the good things we can do to make all of our lives much happier, freer, and more prosperous. The 2021 elections are indicative of this.

Republicans made important gains in the elections last week — particularly Glenn Youngkin’s election as Governor of Virginia.

People have been asking for my reaction to the election results, and my first impression is simply: We’ve been here before.

This is not the first time Americans have rejected Democrat-run systems which failed to follow campaign promises of unity and moderation.

In 1992, Bill Clinton was elected president claiming to be a moderate. He promptly moved to the left and alienated the country. The following year, Republicans won governorships of New Jersey and Virginia, and momentum started building for the 1994 Republican Revolution.

In 2008, Barack Obama was elected president, claiming to be a moderate. He promptly moved to the left and alienated the country. Again, the next year Republicans won several important governorships, and in 2010 John Boehner led a massive, successful Republican effort to take back the Congress (even larger than the one we had in 1994).

Now, we are seeing the same pattern play out. In 2020, Joe Biden campaigned (from his basement) as a moderate. He immediately moved to the left — pulled along by Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the Big Government Socialists. We are now again seeing Americans reject a Washington-centric Democratic establishment that lied to them.

Further, what we are seeing beginning to build is a sense that “it ain’t working.” Americans are seeing Democrats trying to pass massive spending and tax packages at a time when the prices of groceries, gasoline, home utilities, and many other everyday necessities (including Thanksgiving meals and Christmas gifts) are rising. Many Americans know first-hand the pain of inflation from their memories of the Jimmy Carter administration. They are presently seeing that elected Democrats apparently don’t remember that pain — or don’t care.

Americans are watching President Biden focusing on non-binding, international, largely rhetorical climate agreements (and falling asleep while doing it). Americans are seeing Vice President Kamala Harris using child actors to inauthentically — and ineffectively — boost (or resuscitate) her profile.

And what you saw across the country this week in the elections of school board members, county commissioners, city officials, state legislators, and of course governors is: The American people are telling the Big Government Socialists, “no, this is not the future we want.”

So, I’m personally encouraged. I think this was an historic election cycle. I think the growing movement against Big Government Socialism and for fair, prosperous, and open American society will be fascinating to watch.

Gov.-Elect Youngkin — who is a strong, smart manager — is going to give Republicans great ideas for reform and dramatically enrich campaigns throughout 2022, 2024, and beyond. In 1993 and 1994, we relied heavily on smart Republican governors. At that time, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Virginia had all passed welfare reform, and we learned from them and borrowed their ideas. This, of course, infuriated federal staff, but it was great for the country.

Learning from our strong governors — who had already earned the support and affirmation of their states — gave us a much greater capacity to get things done. And I think in the next year, we’re going to have a great opportunity to learn from Youngkin and other Republican leaders in the states.

So, I have a great sense of optimism. I think Americans are eager and ready to talk about the good things we can do to make all of our lives much happier, freer, and more prosperous. The 2021 elections are indicative of this.