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Shootin’ Straight on Our Fiscal Challenges

Everybody is talking about fixing earmarks as if they are the sole source of today’s deficit woes, despite the fact that all of my opponents enthusiastically participated in the process, and that earmarks have now been halted. But what I’m talking about is how to fix America’s economy so that entrepreneurs can create jobs and we as a nation can once again live within our means.  My plan to cut spending and taxes will help hard-working Americans, and by one estimate, create ten million jobs within three years and move unemployment to below 6%.  I will do this with your help by cutting $5 trillion in five years of federal spending we cannot afford, and passing a Balanced Budget Amendment so that we don’t do this again to future generations.  More important to our fiscal health than a smokescreen on earmarks, I will reform Medicare and Social Security and end other entitlements for the able-bodied just as I have already done with welfare reform.

Some specific spending cuts I will make include eliminating all energy subsidies while unleashing America’s domestic energy sources, eliminating at least half of the U.S. funding contribution to the United Nations while standing for America’s interests and values around the world, and downsizing the federal bureaucracy by eliminating at least 10% of non-defense related workers.  The only government jobs President Obama is willing to cut are military jobs, the men and women who have served our nation in harm’s way, undermining our core constitutional responsibility to defend America.  The one thing I will not cut is defense; the top responsibility of the federal government is to keep America safe.

The real fiscal challenge that we face as a nation is the fact that President Obama and Congress are spending more than 40% more than we take in each year; racking up deficits of more than a trillion dollars a year on top of our 15-trillion plus debt which holds back our economy and undermines our future.  The federal expansion of entitlements under ObamaCare significantly worsens this problem.  President Obama thinks he can tax his way to growth to cover up his extreme over indulgence of hard earned taxpayer money.  His theory and practice is to “spread the wealth” which actually spreads poverty and economic decline.

In 2008, John McCain, whose impressive military service to the nation, one I greatly respect, based an entire presidential campaign attacking the earmarking process.  Apparently he is bringing this back again as attempted cover for Governor Mitt Romney’s big-government ways such as the freedom-undermining insurance mandate in RomneyCare embraced in ObamaCare.  Senator McCain, a moderate in many areas, did that in part in 2008 to shift the focus from his weak record on addressing the financial burden of growing entitlements, the real challenge to our long-term economic viability.

I don’t recall Senator McCain joining me in leading the fight to reform entitlements on Welfare Reform, or arguing around the country for Social Security reform, or successfully embedding fundamental health-care reforms in Medicare, later undermined by ObamaCare.  Having said that, Senator McCain is right about at least two things; Mitt Romney was significantly more moderate and big government than he, and, the earmarking process was being abused and had to be stopped.  Just listen to Mitt Romney on earmarks: “I’d be embarrassed it I didn’t always ask for federal money whenever I get a chance.” That’s why I supported a moratorium on earmarks.

The real straight-talk express on fiscal issues is the message I’ve been delivering: the need for sustainable entitlement reform. I have been riding around in a truck telling seniors in nursing homes in Iowa, and retirees in South Carolina, of the need to reform Medicare and Social Security, in particular.  Entitlement programs represent nearly 60% of government spending, growing further on an unsustainable path as more people are in poverty under Obamanomics and more of our citizens become seniors.

Let’s clear the record on earmarks with the help of Congressman Ron Paul whose passion I admire but who captures well the Massachusetts big-government flip- flopping on earmarks and spending, and Texas-sized grandstanding of my fellow candidates on this issue.

During an interview with Neil Cavuto, after his second run for the presidency, Congressman Paul pointed out that eliminating earmarks wouldn’t cut one penny from the federal budget. Cavuto asked: “But would you argue, then sir, that, when John McCain was here saying the whole earmark thing itself is what’s out of control?”  Paul: “Oh, no, no.  He – he – totally misunderstands that.  That’s grandstanding.  If you cut off all the earmarks, it would be 1% of the budget.  But if you vote against all the earmarks, you don’t cut one penny.”

Here in 2009 Congressman Paul is telling it straight.  Properly done, earmarks don’t add to total spending numbers, they take a percentage of dollars from the control of Washington bureaucrats and let local officials decide what is most important for their community instead, like those in South Carolina did in support of improving Charleston Harbor.  You may not have heard that in 2009 Congressman Paul had more earmarks in a spending bill than any other Republican that same year.  Paul, representing a single district, made over $157 million in earmark requests for 2011, one of only four House Republicans to request any earmarks.  Additionally, he made over $398 million in earmark requests for 2010, again one of the leading Republican House members.

I’m sure Governor Rick Perry, many of whose values I share, also agrees that his 1,180 plus special requests for funding from the federal government and his 26 years of Texas government service doesn’t mean that he no longer supports the 10th Amendment.  This adds up to about one federal funding letter request to Washington every four days.  To say it’s OK to lobby for local projects — just not vote for them, or to ask for special projects but not to support the constitutional role of the legislature to provide them — doesn’t pass the test.

While I share cowboy boots and many values with Texans, that’s not straight shootin’ where I come from in Pennsylvania.  This is Texas-sized grandstanding to quote Congressman Paul.  The real gateway drugs and the real challenge to America are not earmarks but exploding overall spending and rapidly growing entitlement liabilities which grow government, dependency, and economic decline.

I’m not ashamed that I fought to have local officials and county commissioners in Pennsylvania decide the best use of their tax dollars rather than Washington bureaucrats. The question of who decides where to spend federal taxpayer dollars has already been decided by the Constitution — it’s the Congress.  Abuse should be stopped and corruption should be prosecuted.  I raised my hand and swore to uphold the Constitution for 16 years as a member of Congress, and I still passionately support it and thank God for the wisdom of our founders to let the representatives of the people decide rather than bureaucrats.  The real question for our nation is who will lead us back to fiscal and economic strength.  My focus is not on debating 1% of our fiscal challenges but on facing 100% of them.  This abdication of leadership and smokescreens rather than telling the truth will only increase insecurity for seniors, limit the opportunities of young people, and put our nation’s security at risk.

I have held more than 380 public events and town hall meetings in Iowa, more than 100 in New Hampshire, and I’ve already held nearly 150 public events in South Carolina.  In every meeting, the American people are responding to real answers because they know the truth and they want the games to stop.  They want the real challenges to be addressed head on. They want problem solving and a brighter future for their children.  As far back as 1995 I was taking heat from the establishment for “rocking the boat” when I called on the Republican Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee to resign after he switched his vote to defeat the Balanced Budget Amendment by just one vote. Had he joined me and those who voted for it, we could have worked together to take away the credit card and put America on a budget.

I can promise you this: nothing has changed since then except our growing debt. I am prepared to take the heat in order to lead our country once again to fiscal health and to restore America’s greatness for the future.  Let’s keep our focus on the real spending problem: entitlements that need to be modernized, restrained, and made sustainable, the real need for a Balanced Budget Amendment, and the real goal which is defeating Barack Obama and restoring America’s future together.  Game on.

Rick Santorum, a former representative and senator from Pennsylvania, is a candidate for the Republican nomination for president.

COMMENTS

  • tngal

    re: this country’s fiscal crises and entitlement reform. And good hit on the felon/voting issue last night too against Romney. While mitt didn’t create the law he didn’t try to get rid of it either. A good leader lawmaker should be able to assist in getting rid of bad policy not just creating new ones.

    • shinglejim

      for taking the time to articulate some of your positions.

      I’ll be honest with you. I’m voting for Rick Perry over you for three general reasons.

      1) He’s been my governor for the past 11 years and I think he’s done an excellent job. He shares my principles and beliefs on what this country should look like. I think he’s done an admirable job playing the hand he was dealt by DC in dealing with the border (an issue I know you’ve disagreed with him on).

      2) While I admire your positions on social issues, I have a hard time trusting you on fiscal issues. To me it just seems like your statements and past voting record demonstrate that when presented with an issue, you tend to favor more government. I see it in your votes on labor and I see it in your support of spending.

      3) I’mn not a fan of your demeanor. I wasn’t a fan of your demagoguery of Governor Perry’s positions on the border and immigration when he entered the race. Frankly, your comments were easy to make for somebody who doesn’t deal with those issues on a daily basis. As a resident of Texas, I found it insulting that you think you know more about the issue than our Governor. Furthermore, while you tend to be a bulldog when it comes to attacking an issue during debates (which I can appreciate when the facts warrant it), you also tend to whine quite a bit as well. That doesn’t strike my fancy.

      I’m sorry but these are just some of the issues that make you a non-starter for me.

      Should you end up the eventual nominee, I’d be glad to evaluate your positions again. Until then, I remain a Perry man. Thanks again for taking time to stop by and visit.

      Shinglejim

      • tyman

        Perry isn’t my governor.

        I had to travel to Texas a couple of years ago and could not believe all the private construction going on. Haven’t seen that here in Georgia for quite a while.

      • bgintn

        I am leaning toward the guy who has run the 13th largest world economy with a surplus. And as a outsider has a track record of getting things done.

        He helped secure more than $100 million to protect against drug violence and illegal immigration on the Mexican border.

        Perry asked for emergency federal aid for victims of wildfires, tornadoes, hurricanes, droughts, flooding and crop-killing heat waves and freezes in his state’s 254 counties.

        Perry has asked for money for bioterrorism preparedness at Texas hospitals.

        For border sheriffs who wanted better communications systems.

        It seems he would not need some of this if the Federal Government was doing it’s job.

        • nativetexan41

          He has been my choice since he got in the race. I think his record of leadership is what we need to get this country back working.
          I am praying SC comes through for him.
          I will not vote for Santorum , the more I see and hear him the less I like him. I can’t see this preppy little guy wearing boots , he looks too wimpy. But most of all I don’t like his record of voting in the Senate.
          I will be voting for Perry.

          • A_Texan

            Thank you Senator. I’m looking forward to voting for you here in Texas, both this spring and next November!

            Here are three suggestions that I know you will read personally and closely :)

            1. TARP. It separates you from Gingrich and Romney in a decisive way. Crony capitalism–and those guys, so tied up with the New York-Washington axis of power, did not have the political insight to see the problem.

            2. Promise to veto ANY debt ceiling increase. Your promise of passing a Balanced Budget Amendment, which you have no power to pass, is frankly, empty. You will have the veto power. Promise to use it….liberally…in order to reduce, not the marginal growth of the deficit, not the deficit, but the actual debt.

            God bless you, your family, and our great country.

      • pttx333

        n

        • tjms

          that he will say what he means and mean what he says.

          • Danielle Davis (ocleverone)

            nt

  • http://www.timothy-bladel.com/ center77

    what you said, but you were so quick to point out each and every flaw Perry had in his record. SO are fiscal conservatives cheap liberals or are we conservatives.

    Sorry, but I trust you about as much as I trust Romney, but at least he has executive experience. I am not too into having my favorite candidate treated like you and Bachmann did Perry, but in reality, you could only wish to have his record.

    I would vote for you over Obama, Newt, and Ron Paul, but that is about it.

    On the flip side, now that I got that off my chest, great article.

  • romansdaughter

    I am one who believes a Governor is the best choice for a President and I am totally behind Rick Perry who has been governoring for 11 years and has a great conservative record and is for small government and state rights which sorry to say your record in the Senate doesn’t seem fiscally conservative at all and you don’t have any indication of small government policies. I would only vote for you over Obama and Ron Paul. Sorry don’t mean to be mean like that and another thing I personally think that you shouldn’t be President at this time cause you should be spending quality time with your family and especially your very sick little girl.

    • laura211

      I have always said that governors make better presidents (with the exception of Jimmy Carter who was our Governor here in GA and did not make a great president). I will always support a Governor over a Senator or House Member who do not have the executive experience to run the country.

      That is why I have and will continue to support Governor Perry. He has the executive experience this country needs and a record to prove it.

  • citizenkh

    You showed an obvious ignorance on the border security issue, in public.

    Ron Paul has sent many of his earmarks to solely and directly benefit private companies under the guise of “For Free Trade” and if you know anything about his district (a heavy union one) bring home the bacon is what has gotten him re-elected.

    Earmarks are not only the “gateway drug” but bargaining chips. One or two here and there could be acceptable, but not the wide use of them.

    So, you hit Perry on going along wth 97% of his legislature and 80% of his public on the in state tuition, but no one can touch your Big Union support?

    Then there are some sketchy endorsements. First, Roger Viguerie who was scammed by an ersatz TP group in his failed attempt for Lt. Gov. He is not that widely thought of in his home state of Louisiana by rank and file GOP members. Then there is Tony Perkins who back stabbed the GOP, namely Joseph Cao, in 2010.

    How about your good showing in Iowa the home of ethanol plundering of our nation’s economy, and all those preacher baskets with ethanol plant investing farmers tithes into them.

    No Mr. Santorum, you are at the bottom of my list, just above Ron Paul.

    • WillWong

      I find you a tad ungrateful for having served under the great leadership of Speaker Newt Gingrich during the mid 1990′s and not giving credit when credit is due! Perhaps, you are trying to ignore having him in your conversation just like you referred to him as a congressman while others had the courtesy of addressing him as Mr. Speaker!

      • http://www.timothy-bladel.com/ center77

        At least giving Newt the respect he deserves. Sad to say Santorum has not shown much respect for anyone. When a man says that he can’t believe people are taking Perry serious. I would have to say I can’t take him serious. I think Santorum is a fighter on social issues and he has excuses for the rest. How is it OK for him to follow Bush but nail Perry on the instate issue. Santorum did want to rock the boatto get Toomey elected but goes after Perry for doing what most of the Texas legislature wanted. I then look at his voting record and its not even close to being about state rights. Its all central government knows best.

    • romansdaughter

      nt

    • bzip

      I would also add: Rick Santorum – you are a embarrassment to the conservative movement. You are exactly what is wrong with our gov’t. You need to go back home, drop out and endorse the only true consistent fiscal conservative in the race – Rick Perry.

      Santorum you make me want to ill ever time I hear that big spender tone in your voice. Stop parading yourself around as a conservative.

      • pttx333

        like to add one thing regarding Ron Paul’s elections. I lived in his district for many years which includes many conservatives. What has also been going on these many is that Paul figured out he was going nowhere on the (L) ticket and jumped over to the (R) ticket. A lot of conservatives vote straight ticket which drags Paul right along with the others. I was guilty of it myself until figuring out what was happening. Talk about being appalled! I’ll never get over being so innocently stupid, and I’m certain there are many who have yet to learn what they have been doing – dragging that same old loon into office. Horrible!

        I agree with you entirely on Santorum.

        • aesthete

          I hope that you/your aides engage RS readers in the comments section, as others on the Hill have done in the past. There are many comments which have brought up some good points, both in support and in opposition of your Presidential bid. For myself, I find it upsetting that you (rightly) excoriate others for focusing overmuch on earmarks — even including a somewhat bizarre sidebar on Ron Paul which seems to simultaneously attack and praise him for his defense of same — while distorting your own record and stated position on spending to make yourself seem more serious than your opponents on these issues.

          First of all, you dramatically over-state your record on entitlements. In point of fact, the only Medicare reform that you supported was Medicare Pt D. The largest expansion to entitlements since LBJ’s “Great Society” (one that greatly added to the deficit) can hardly be termed a move in the right direction. I do appreciate the sophistry required to characterize this expansion as “successfully embedding fundamental health-care reforms in Medicare”, but I do not appreciate it from a candidate who claims to be “shootin’ straight” on this issue. As far as welfare reform goes, it’s a stretch to characterize yourself as a key leader in the welfare reform fight. It is true that you were assigned to get Senate Republicans to vote for the bill, and that you did your job. However, welfare reform was conceived and put on the Contract with America long before you got your start in politics, and was already a Republican position by this time. This in no way detracts from your correct vote in favor, but characterizing it as “leadership” is pure embellishment on your part. (To your credit, and in fairness, you were a relatively strong proponent for SS reform during the Bush administration, though you appear to have changed your mind on this issue as of last night.)

          Secondly, let us discuss both your record and proposed cuts to discretionary spending. For the purposes of discussion, let’s apply some statistics to the list of items that you mention. The DoE’s energy subsidies (which you voted for in the Senate, and which you support in the form of ethanol subsidies today) accounted for ~$9 billion in 2009, according to the Cato Institute. Between peacekeeping operations and general dues, the US spent about $2 billion on the UN last year. Due to UN spending on Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan, and peacekeeping efforts (most of which you supported), this was one of the most expensive UN budgets in the history of the organization. Half of that is 1 billion. The # of federal government employees was ~2,841,000 according to the US Census Bureau, and cost about $150 billion (which policies you voted for helped add to). Since I don’t know which 10% of federal government employees you want to fire, let’s just take 10% of the dollar amount and go with that — $15 billion. Altogether, this is ~$27 billion. The federal government spent about 3.6 trillion dollars in 2011. Basic high school arithmetic reveals that these cuts — apparently the headline cuts in discretionary spending under a Santorum administration — are less than 1% of spending just for this last fiscal year. That’s a good start, but we have to be better than that.

          All of this, in conjunction with an unwillingness to cut the military (and apparent desire to increase spending), paints a picture of a man who was not serious about reducing spending in Washington when he was there, and who still doesn’t fully appreciate or understand the need and drivers of spending, or the motivations for discontent among the base, some of which have been stated masterfully by NightTwister, JSob, acat, and buddyp. (I’m sure I left someone out, and I apologize for that oversight to the other inspired commenters on this thread.) Even the Apostle Peter had to wait two years before the church leaders put him in a position of authority over other believers, and they had the Holy Spirit to tell them whether St Peter checked out or not. Unfortunately, the Holy Ghost ain’t been all that talkative on the subject of your Presidential run (at least, not to me), so I’m left with your record and statements. Neither of the two inspires confidence, and your defense of a practice condemned by most fiscal conservatives, one which has symbolic and philosophical importance in the context of a restrained and Constitutional federal government, is far from reassuring.

          • aesthete

            Apologies to all for the incomplete reasoning and bad semantic choices in this post; I’m very timered. I do think that the gist of my point is clear from this (unsatisfactory) comment, however.

      • citizenkh

        shows WHY Rick Perry’s devotion to 10th Amendment Rights are the key. Jindal gives several examples of what individual school districts have tried and is working for them. States need to be treated likewise and worshipers of Big Fed are not the answer.

        http://gov.louisiana.gov/index.cfm?md=newsroom&tmp=detail&catID=2&articleID=3197

        No wonder that a very successful GOVERNOR supports Rick Perry and NOT Rick Santorum.

        • romansdaughter

          I am having deep admiration for Gov.Bobby Jindal. He is another Governor that I could totally get behind.

          • citizenkh

            here in Louisiana, hate Jindal with a passion.

          • lizzie

            by staying in this GOP nominating contest.

            The DNC has two strategies, even with Obama’s negative coattails:

            1) Romney is zero-coattails and even us independents and disillusioned dems want leadership and not a private equity job-killing guy with name recognition and a glass jaw. The DNC is collecting “Mitt Fits” and could not wish for a better example of the 1% Vulture/Locust who puts profits above people.

            2) The DNC will use Senate contests and the NYS 2010 “protecting women’s reproductive rights” message to drive voter turnout, a campaign for which Mr. Santorum is the poster boy.

            Obama finally got me to vote GOP for president in 2008, because McCain had excellenty economic advisor Douglas Holz-Eakin, anda worldview that was NOT postmodern transnational multi-culturalism.

            I will never vote for Ron Paul, Mitt Romney, or Rick Santorum, not even as a a protest vote.

            If the GOP fails to nominate Rick Perry, or Newt Gingrich, it might even change my down ticket voting.

            I want America to be America again, and if I have to, I shall write-in James Richard Perry, because he can win New York.

            And, shame on you for attacking Gov. Perry for “earmarks” almost all for transportation infrastructure – when Texas is a net exporter of revenue to the Federal pork barrel.

            Even us Blue-Dog dems knew NCLB and Medicare Part D were DeLay/Bush43 mistakes – and a Senator Santorum voted along with them.

            Yeah – RedState lets fiscal conservatives join in.

            I want Leadership, not anyone who will hand Obama his undeserved re-election or, even worse, Mrs. Pelosi her gavel back.

          • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

            .

          • jakeofalltrades

          • marktx

            If Santorum and Perry dropped out of the race, that would give Newt Gingrich a clear path to defeating Romney. Not only would Santorum be helping the party, but his actions would be the honorable thing to do.

          • Hooah_Mac

            Where does that leave those of us who don’t think Newt is the right guy for the job? If Newt and Santorum dropped out, that would give Perry a clear path too. Frankly, with 48 states left to vote, I see ALL the “they should drop out” suggestions as self-serving.

          • pttx333

            m

          • pttx333

            nt

          • avagreen

            Tell it like it is! Huzzuh.

            Shame on you, Santorum, for you attempt at smearing our Governor!

          • pttx333

            b

          • pttx333

            supporters, and I assume Ron Paul joins with them, would hate Jindal. They hate anyone who isn’t Ron Paul or anyone who has the very audacity to disagree with any of Paul’s “teachings!”

            They are pathetic, and I’m being kind here.

          • citizenkh

            Heck you are being overly generous!

          • pttx333

            with words to avoid being thrown off RS ain’t easy, doncha know. ;-)

        • http://www.nighttwister.com NightTwister

          With regard to earmarks, I’d like to address this statement.

          Properly done, earmarks don

          • http://www.nighttwister.com NightTwister

            –no–text–

          • tngal

            I mean it. Well reasoned and very well articulated. :) knucklebump

          • Bill S

            .

          • jakeofalltrades

            :D

          • http://www.nighttwister.com NightTwister

            BTW, is there a reaon why my comment above shows (0 replies) in the “My Profile” section even though there are replies? I’ve seen this happening more frequently in recent weeks.

          • westcoastpatriette

            ))((

          • txpat

            While I respect your coming here on RS to voice your convictions and ideas I think you lose a majority of us when you attemp to drag down the other folks who are running also.
            Any one would be better than BO, but to try to score points here the way you wrote your diary was plain wrong.

        • jmag

          … I suggest you have one proofread your posts. I’ll assume this was done in error, but in paragraph 11, you state the following:

          “While I share cowboy boots and many values with Texans, that

      • pj2012

        thank you.

        Mr Santorum you’re a hypocrite and I could never vote for you. Your rhetoric on the campaign trail doesn’t match your voting record. I also prefer a Governor with executive experience to a senator. Not just any Governor, but one that has been governing for 11+ years a state that is ranked the 13 largest economy in the world. Someone with a strong record of conservative governing that has created an environment where jobs are being created.

        The only one with the strongest conservative record not matched by anyone in this race is Gov. Rick Perry. If Gov Perry had only taking the time to fully heal before entering this race you and all the other not Romney’s would simply be a forgone conclusion.

        I will always prefer Gov. Rick Perry who actually walks the walk to someone who thinks he can win by talking a good game with no record to back him up.

        I prefer substance to empty rhetoric, we’ve already seen what a good talker with no governing experience has gotten us.

    • JSobieski

      The only reason why I was interested in having a Mitch Daniels or a Paul Ryan run for President was that I knew it would mean that there would be a public debate on Medicare Reform.

      Well none of those two guys ran, and all I have heard about Medicare reform is an occasional “I like the Ryan plan”. Nobody is actually trying to make Medicare reform as part of their platform. Nobody is investing their time and energies to build support for reform.

      The Republic is in danger, and there are no candidates to get excited about.

      But yes, earmarks are a drop in the bucket . . .

      • Hooah_Mac

        http://www.rickperry.org/cut-balance-and-grow-html/

        He addresses medicare and medicaid reform. It’s a pretty solid plan overall, and about as detailed as you can really get other than writing actual legislation.

        • aesthete

          a plan that goes without advocacy is just parchment (or bytes, as it were). Perry should be advocating for entitlement reform, not just have a plan buried on his website that addresses the issue.

          • JSobieski

            These policies need to be explained . . . and sold to the public.

  • acat

    You went off the rails with your first sentence, your first word in fact. Saying “Everyone is talking about” is simply not true. “Many people” would be more accurate.

    For those who think this is small potatoes, or who wish to accuse me of candi-botting for someone else, do bear with me a moment.

    Senator, you went further off the rails by stating that the McCain Campaign was “entirely about earmarks”. While McCain railed against them as a symptom of a larger problem – lack of fiscal discipline in D.C. – it’s simply not accurate to describe that as “his entire campaign.”.

    I will further question your role in welfare reform. While you were front and center, Senator, the reform bills started in the House.. where were you before the Contract with America brought your fellow candidate, Newt Gingrich, to the House leadership?

    I finally have to ask, Senator, how well you think your long-standing relationship with labor unions – noting your 1993 vote against allowing companies to fire and replace striking workers and the rather large sums you raised from unions – given the current need to better manage (i.e. cut) government union employee benefits.

    Seems to me, Senator, the better 2012 play for you would have been to go get your old Senate seat back from Casey Junior.

    To be perfectly clear, Senator, you may not count on my support in the primary.

    Mew

    • notpropagandized

      Well said.

      Black and white feline
      with arched back,
      puffed fur and
      claws at the ready.

      That was 17.36 points! Whew.

      W’pediaSays:
      Casey’s margin of victory was the largest ever for a Democratic Senate nominee in Pennsylvania, and the largest margin of victory for a Senate challenger in the 2006 elections.[2]

      • acat

        Terri Schaivo, Casey Junior, Bush Fatigue, and an economy more jittery than a grade schooler who got into the chocolate-covered espresso beans …

        Remove any of those issues, and Santorum’s loss becomes less spectacular.

        Mew

  • buddyp

    If you are going to post a lengthy piece to make the point that you are the one talking straight about our real fiscal challenge, and that you are the one correctly focusing on “sustainable entitlement reform”, particularly Medicare and Social Security, I would suggest that you include in such a piece what “reform” you are speaking of.

    I think in the debate last night you showed some commendable guts by arguing that we should at least get started with at least a small degree of means testing.

    Why not state at least very briefly the major elements of your plan (with link to your site for more details, assuming they are there) ?

    We certainly have far too many politicians who speak of the need for fiscal responsibility and spending constraint and “entitlement reform” without spelling out the particulars that would turn off some voters. My guess is that you have laid out some such particulars, but I wouldn’t know it from your piece here.

  • conservativemusician

    If you are still around by the time it gets around to my state. Assuming Governor Perry is also still around after SC and FL, he will be getting my vote because he has proven himself above all the remaining candidates to be the most consistent conservative with an exemplary record of governance in the state of TX which continues year in and year out to be a haven of economic growth.

  • notpropagandized

    It is clear in reading this post by Senator Santorum that he really is NOT an executive. No question, wonderful, righteous person with a charming and intelligent wife. There is no evidence that his Senator / lawyer background is any better than the electoral mistakes of the past.

    We need a WARRIOR !!! The only ones that qualify are Rick Perry and Newt Gingrich. Mitt Romney will prove to be weak and wimpy. Don’t make that mistake! Both Perry and Gingrich are not only warriors, but they have the tools and experience to accomplish the deconstruction of this monster in Washington DC.

    Does anybody notice the coup d’ etat happening under their very noses. WAKE UP!!!

    Don’t vote Republican. Vote WARRIOR. (warts and all)

    • pttx333

      c

  • http://www.timothy-bladel.com/ center77

    Which should act like a warning to all conservatives. The liberal argument is everything is just a certain percent. Of the budget. Just happens to be an amount of money that could take a certain percendebt off the debt.

  • westcoastpatriette

    for giving me the opportunity to speak directly to you. I pride myself on never saying anything behind peoples’ back that I would not say to their face.

    And just last night I commented on a thread here at RS while watching the debate that you are full of bluster and have already allowed your meager wins in this race to go to your head.

    Your diary sounds hollow (as in lacking any substance) and arrogant has done nothing to convince me that you are anything but a pompous know it all who really believes he is better than other people. I really resent you flying in here with such a pitiful message of “aren’t I great” and stomping all over those you look down upon.

    Governor Perry makes you look like a small man. You don’t come close to him in character, achievements, executive experience or integrity. You have wasted your time with me and, in fact, have reinforced the negatives I already had against you. I would never give up my commitment to Governor Perry to support you.

    I won’t even thank you for writing this diary. To me, it it offensive.

  • sunshinek67

    it appears as though you might be missing one of the legs on Reagan’s proverbial conservative “stool”,

    From the Washington Times:

    “Ronald Reagan often spoke of a

    • onenationundrgod

      TEXAS Gov Rick Perry 2012!

      You lost me in your ill attempted attacks on Gov Perry in the first debates.

      You might want to put on your cowboy boots with that black suit instead of those brown shoes! It might make you look less of a schmuck….but then again maybe not.

      • onenationundrgod

        My reaction rather than response was in bad character

    • sunshinek67

      doesn’t win the targets. God bless you :)

  • http://impudent.edublogs.org/ kyle8

    But your record as a Senator tells me something else. You were fanatical on social and military issues, but uninspired on the fiscal issues which are currently devouring us.

    In fact you went along with every bit of big spending, big government that the Bush Administration and the other Rinos pushed.

    • neukm

      Actions speak much louder than words! Especially the words of a politician,

      • texasref

        is speaking so loudly I can’t read a word you’re saying.

        Please, for the good of the country, do like Huntsman did and support the only one who can stop this Romney Train to Hell

        Newt Gingrich.

  • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

    So many comments ignoring the ideas to attack the poster.

    • jakeofalltrades
    • westcoastpatriette

      a person’s ideas cannot be heard due to the chatter they have created for themselves–which is what I was trying to address in my comment.

      I call his ideas bluster because I see little in Santorum’s record to show that he will be able or willing to accomplish his goals. Another way to put it is Santorum has not earned the respect from me to listen to his ideas and I have already heard enough from him in the debates to cause me to doubt that he will govern conservatively.

      Top it off with his arrogant criticisms of others in this diary and I just shut down.

    • lizzie

      and he writes like a lawyer.

      yawn.

      • lizzie

        stopping PPACA aka Obamacare is a bigger problem because it will impose New York’s Medicaid model for eligibility and benfits on the rest of the country.
        NO ONE is talking about that!!!!!

        I am already on Medicare, and based on the last new specialist who bullied me out of his office on January 10, 2012, I would really prefer “Death Panels” to this bizarre form of insurance that I paid taxes for until Corporate America threw me out with the garbage at age 49 after a rewarding career because of
        a stupid Private Equity LBO “downsizing” followed by two smaller companies who did not want anyone age 50+ to distort their health insurance premiums.

        I believe Mr. Santorum was in the US Senate when the wave of firings of over 50′s accelerated. Not a word from him on this.

        and, btw, I refuse Medicare Part D as a give-away to Big Pharma.

        So, happy to offer my feedback, from my multi-perspective.

        If Gingrich posted here, I would tell him about how I spent $30,000 of my own savings (and 3 years) to re-train as a history teacher after my corporate career ended, only to find out that NYC does not want any more >50 teachers who happen to be Jewish. Only young people and minorities are welcome – and that was in The Bronx, a high-needs poorest urban county in the country..

        but at least Gingrich gives voice to history!

    • tngal

      I love Rick Perry more today than yesterday. Mr. Santorum may not be my first choice, or even my second, but I swear Ron Paul couldn’t have received worse treatment from you guys.

      “You are no Rick Perry”
      “It might make you look less of a schmuck”
      “Governor Perry makes you look like a small man.”
      “I won

      • Common_Cents

        What happened to be respectful or be banned?

        If these comments were made in the Gov Perry thread, the perry bots would lose their minds.

        This is getting out of hand. they are sounding like Paulbots.

        I’m not even supporting Santorum, unless he wins the nomination of course.

        • jakeofalltrades

          I don’t know about you, but I want candidates to be respected and welcomed here. I want Redstate to matter. I don’t want its future being sold out to unbridled passion.

          • jimmyg

            There is no stronger a Perry supporter than you, but you do it with class. Sen Santorum is worthy of our respect whether we agree or disagree with him. Many of these comments are mean spirited and if done to another candidate there would be calls by that candidates supporters for banning of the offending poster.

          • jakeofalltrades

            Which is why I avoided this diary like the plague until I felt compelled to say something. But thanks – it was a nice sentiment.

          • jimmyg

            We are all guests here, just as Sen. Santorum is a guest. He should be treated with the respect accorded a fellow guest of our hosts. You have, others, sadly, have not. Some of these posters should be ashamed of themselves.

          • trickamsterdam

            Me too. It makes it more interesting. You are very right in this instance. Good post.

            And, BTW, I’m not supporting Sen Santorum either, unless he’s the nominee.

            That being said, I still urge people to fight for a brokered convention. Even if your candidate has dropped out, if he’s on the ballot, you can vote for him,, and he gets the delegates.

            Romney could still yet be denied, or at least your chosen candidate could have more power.

            Even if it’s Rep Paul, it’s worth the risk. A brokered convention will produce someone who’s acceptable to both conservatives and centrists…like Ryan or Rubio…Paul is acceptable to neither.

            And it doesn’t hurt Gov Romney, either, IMO…if he’s the eventual nominee, it may have kept D attack ads off his back, until after the convention.

            If it doesn’t: it was all going to happen anyway.

        • jakeofalltrades

          fyi

          • Common_Cents

            Can you please share your thoughts on this?

            Polling in low double and single digits in SC and FL and beyond, what is going to change?

            What do your resources look like to wage a decent campaign in Florida?

            Is it realistic or a hope and a prayer?

            We all know the dilemma. 3 Candidates splitting up the vote, nearly guaranteeing a Romney victory.

            Is your campaign plan just to outlast Gingrich and Perry and hope for the best? If that happens, by that time, Romney would have won IA(maybe) NH, SC, FL and beyond.

            How could you mount a serious challenge after all that momentum?

            Would you at least consider throwing support to Gingrich for the SC primary to make Romney lose and then competing after that? Not sure how it works but it is one strategy.

          • http://908StraightSt.wordpress.com/ mbecker908

            part of the solution.

            You spent a dozen or so years in DC and didn’t bother to draw a conservative breath or entertain a conservative thought once. You’re a big-government social reformer, not a so called “social conservative”. Your leadership in the Senate was every bit as bad as my golf game and the last time I played was 1971.

            Your calls for fiscal reform are election year BS, in your tenure in DC, you voted for every expansionist program offered and not once did you stand for fiscal restraint. And then there’s your support of unions with your votes against Right-to-Work.

            No thank you sir. Go get a real job. We need a conservative in the Oval Office and neither you or Ron Paul measure up.

        • tngal

          Direct attacks on the candidate. Not from one or two perrybots mind you but a truckload. Perry has written a post and has outlined a key theme of his. I wouldn’t say anything bad about him, because i think all the candidates have some good qualities. Even Paul. But I did tell one poster that Erick is asking for Perry to pull out.This was based on another poster catching it on the radio. They didn’t lose their minds but it did irk one or two.

          I did wonder what would have happened had I directed the comment directly at P and not another poster. And suppose I used words like wimpy, schmuck, offensive, small man, preppy, in description of their candidate.

          This was truly over the top stuff.

      • westcoastpatriette

        Since when, tngal, are people running for office off limits when it comes to telling them how we feel about them. I am a constituent who is suffering a great deal because of politicians like Santorum who has done very little if anything to protect me from constant assaults coming on my freedom and finances from Washington. To the contrary, rather than stop the assaults, Santorum has heavily contributed to them.

        Maybe if more politicians listened to what the people say about them when they are not around, they might humble themselves a little and change course a little more.

        Furthermore, I have been coming to RS since June of this year and Santorum has not contributed once with a diary here until today. Not only did he take cheap swipes at others in the diary, his arrogance showed through the entire thing. It is as if he thinks he can just fly in here — just because he has had a few meager wins — and dis whoever he wants because, after all, can’t you see how wonderful I am. It was in poor taste and very offensive to me — whether he insulted my favorite candidate or not.

    • aesthete

      but we should differentiate between a respectful rebuttal and critique, and hyperbolic insult. Critique and investigation of Mr Santorum’s record on the issues which he brought up (entitlements, discretionary spending, and earmarks) is both appropriate and on-topic, IMO.

      • jakeofalltrades

        if the visitor were a dignitary visiting your home.

        • aesthete

          No text

    • burke

      n/t

  • Hooah_Mac

    I like you. I’d love to see you run for a different office and take the opportunity to prove you are sincere fiscal conservative rhetoric. I don’t think you have what we need against Obama this cycle. Running against the guy who never held executive office and it shows, we really need someone who has held executive office. You are a young man and will have ample future opportunities.

    • http://908StraightSt.wordpress.com/ mbecker908

      Governor of Pennsylvania.

      • Hooah_Mac

        Although I didn’t mention it specifically because I don’t know enough about the dynamics or timing of the governship there. That would be ideal, an opportunity for him to gain executive experience and prove his fiscal conservative record was a product of the Senate’s difficult system rather than his true beliefs.

        I would not support Rick Santorum for President at this time, but he is a good man and could gain a record I would support. My opposition to him has nothing to do with his persona or his current rhetoric, just his lack of the right kind of experience and his past wobbliness on fiscal issues.

  • Melody Warbington (rwm52)

    is that you, Gingrich and Perry get in a room somewhere and decide how to make sure neither Romney nor Paul is nominated, even if it includes promises to the others for cabinet positions or whatever.

    That being said, if you are the GOP nominee, I will not only vote for you, but I will work to elect you and as many conservatives down the ticket as I can.