And that looks like all we've got for tonight. The New York Times, which I just mistakenly typed as "The Newt York Times," has a fascinating little electoral map for you to click around on. 99% of the results are in at the time of this writing, and Gingrich won all but three counties in the state*. He's up by 12.6% of the vote, and Nate Silver points out that Gingrich and Romney are running almost neck-and-neck in the popular vote count so far among Republicans.

Gingrich's speech contained nearly every single Fox News point against Obama, and the crowd adored it. Romney's contained a series of talking points he's practically burnished down into platitudes by now. Gingrich is going into Florida with a lot of momentum. His Baby Rush Limbaugh demagoguery won't sit as well with the masses as it did in South Carolina, but his intellectual schtick just might. Gingrich, at least, is a candidate with a menu of options to choose from. Romney only has one gear, but he's mastered it.

Look: Romney is a perfectionist who has learned from his mistakes last time. He's got machinery in all fifty states and he has the Republican establishment behind him. I still think he's got the nomination locked up, because Gingrich has no organization set up beyond Florida. But Gingrich has shown tonight that he knows how to be a politician, and this week, he gained the support of Rick Perry, who had the third-best machine in the race, after Romney and Ron Paul. This race has been wildly volatile, with candidates rising and falling at the whim of the Republican voters. Based on the pattern we've seen so far, there is probably a calamitous fall in Newt Gingrich's future. But his peak in South Carolina sure was an impressive one, and he might not be done peaking just yet.

* Interesting note: Two of the counties Romney won were coastal, and the South Carolina coast is popular among older retirees. This could actually bode very well for Romney in Florida.