He told a crowd near the Kennedy Space Centre,
on Florida's so-called Space Coast, that he wants to build a commercial
space industry that can enjoy the kind of boom airlines saw in the
1930s.
Republican Mr Gingrich, who is battling other candidates for the top job at the White House, also wants to expand the exploration of Mars.
Gingrich wants a return to glory for the US space programme
The announcements won applause from hundreds of local aerospace
bosses and community leaders, who have seen the space industry badly hit
by federal cuts under Barack Obama.
"We want Americans to think boldly about the future," said Mr Gingrich during the campaign rally.
"By the end of my second term we will have the first permanent base on the Moon and it will be American."
Mr Gingrich said he would offer financial prizes – worth 10% of Nasa's $18bn (£11.5bn) budget - to help stimulate investment in space missions from private firms.
Thinking big: Newt Gingrich was campaigning on Florida's Space Coast
Since the space shuttle programme came to an end last year,
the US has been reliant on Russia to fly its astronauts on piggy-back
missions to the International Space Station – at a cost of some $60m
(£38m) per person.
A total of 12 Americans have left their footprints on the Moon in six
manned missions, though the US last sent astronauts to land there in
December 1972.
The race to put the first man on the Moon began in May 1961, when
then-US president John F Kennedy announced America's ambitious goal.
Mr Gingrich is in a close battle with Republican candidate Mitt Romney ahead of the presidential primary in Florida on Tuesday.
Mr Romney said earlier this week that space exploration should be a "priority".
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