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Gingrich suspends campaign in typical Gingrich style

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Gingrich did not take questions from a media throng bigger than he had seen in months after delivering a 20-minute speech in a hotel ballroom a few miles from his home in the affluent suburb of McLean, Va.

Gingrich constantly played up his Georgia ties, making his first speech as a candidate to the state GOP in Macon. He officially housed his campaign in Buckhead, though the nerve center was in Northern Virginia — where Gingrich spent the rare time he was not politicking across the country.

Gingrich persisted through myriad highs and lows and outlasted nearly all his Republican rivals. He was left for dead in June when most of his staff quit, led in national polls and declared himself the likely nominee in December but ultimately could not overcome a relentless barrage of negative advertising and his own inconsistencies as a candidate.

His fiery populism and strong debate performances brought him victory in the South Carolina primary, making Gingrich the first Republican to win there and lose the nomination since the state’s primary was established in 1980.

“This will make me feel slightly guilty every time I go through South Carolina,” Gingrich said.

Heavy advertising from a Romney-allied Super PAC and a couple of limp debate performances felled Gingrich in Florida and he never recovered, though he managed to win the Georgia primary on Super Tuesday — a triumph overshadowed by his losses elsewhere.

Among Gingrich’s many thank-yous Wednesday were Gov. Nathan Deal and Georgia legislators in the statehouse and Congress who backed him. Gingrich noted that he won 156 of 159 counties in his old home state and carried Carroll County, the base from which he launched his first congressional campaigns in the 1970s, with 60 percent of the vote.

“It was nice to feel we had a very strong base of support from the people who knew us best,” he said.

A pro-Gingrich Super PAC, Winning Our Future, helped sustain his bid with a media campaign funded almost entirely by the family of Las Vegas casino mogul Sheldon Adelson. Gingrich, noting their shared affinity for Israel, singled out the Adelson family for thanks, noting that they “singlehandedly came pretty close to matching Romney’s Super PAC and I’m very, very grateful to them.”

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