The chamber went cold. Cameras rolled, history unfolded, and one side of the aisle barely moved. Newt Gingrich says that silence wasn’t boredom — it was a warning. A refusal to clap, to nod, to even feign agreement. What happens when politics becomes pure performance, and the audience stops beli… Continues…
Newt Gingrich’s criticism of House Democrats was not just about etiquette; it was about what that silence symbolized. In his view, a refusal to applaud even broadly unifying themes shows a politics that no longer recognizes common ground, only opposing teams. That image, broadcast nationwide, feeds a public already convinced the system is rigged and unresponsive.
When 82% of Americans tell pollsters they see their political system as corrupt, distrust is no longer a fringe sentiment, it is the center of our civic life. Whether or not one accepts Gingrich’s framing of Republicans as reformers and Democrats as defenders of bureaucracy, the deeper problem remains: a democracy cannot survive on cynicism alone. Rebuilding trust will require leaders on both sides willing to risk partisan backlash to show respect, argue honestly, and put service above the spectacle.