Posted on 02/09/2012 8:36:53 AM PST by Michael van der Galien
Rick Santorum a man who lost his last election in his home state by eighteen points is suddenly threatening the frontrunner status of Mitt Romney for the Republican presidential nomination. He, not Newt Gingrich, is emerging, at least for the moment, as the conservative alternative to Romney, having won decisively in three state contests this week.
I say for the moment, because only a dopey pundit like me would assert that this race is over, as I did immediately after the Florida primary.
Nevertheless, things are looking good for Santorum. Events, again for the moment, are swinging his way, with Obama coming under heavy, and justifiable, criticism from conservatives and some liberals for crossing the line on religious freedom. The Obama administration issued what amounts to a diktat to Roman Catholics to toe the liberal line on birth control, even to the extent of paying for the contraceptives their faith finds immoral. For shame.
Santorum, the candidate most associated with religious faith, should profit from this execrable policy, especially in the short run. But definite perils are ahead for the Republican Party if it allows Santorum-style social conservatism to dominate the election. And those perils go well beyond the obvious that the campaign will be largely about the economy.
The greatest danger is that Rick Santorum will be singled out as the spokesperson for extreme right-wing religiosity and made to look like a bigot to the largest voting group in our country the independents. This is particularly true in the area of gay rights, but not because those people favor gay marriage. The majority of them probably dont. But most people these days have homosexuals among their friends, family, or work colleagues and dont appreciate even the whiff of bigotry. Its become a big no-no.
(Excerpt) Read more at pjmedia.com ...
Good summation, except Specter didn’t win anything after endorsing Santorum in 2006. Specter won reelection in 2004 then went down in flames in 2010 in the primary after his party-switching scheme. In that case it was the Democrats who erred on the side of purity with their primary vote. Specter definitely would have had a better chance to win against Toomey than Sestak did.
Lately I’ve been wondering if the two of them have secretly teamed up to beat mitt....with newt playing the part of john wayne and rick the part of jimmy stewart in “the man who shot liberty valance”.
Or something like that.
I think saying Newt “can’t stick to any one thing” is a stretch too far. He certainly did in 1994. He just has a wealth of ideas now. And he’s done a good job tailoring his message to each state or community he visits. In campaign messaging though, less might be more. So he might need to actually be less ambitious with his ideas and be more repetitive with a smaller number of themes. Each new idea gets excitement but there need to be some specific winning issues that get repeated over and over again. Otherwise people are going to be constantly looking for the next “new” thing which leaves an opening to other candidates to steal the spotlight.
Or maybe Newt is Obi-Wan Kenobi and Rick is Luke Skywalker. Or Newt is Mr. Miyagi and Rick is the Karate Kid. If there’s one message they’re both sticking to it’s that Mitt isn’t conservative enough. Problem is that’s not going to work in the more liberal/moderate states. They need to focus on something else to stop it from going to a brokered convention. I think they need to start to say he’s a “cold, heartless, unemotional, out-of-touch, insensitive” guy. You can get there with his business record and the gaffes he’s made.
Please. Santorum and other Catholics say that the acts are sinful but the unchosen orientation is not sinful.
When you lump both together under “homosexuality” you make the conservative defense harder. The best evidence (from NARTH) suggests that the causes of the orientation are largely developmental and not freely chosen. Acting upon the urge is freely chosen and therefore sinful.
Gays hate us even for saying that the orientation is disordered but not sinful, not to mention for saying the acts are sinful When you put words in Santorum’s mouth to the effect that the orientation itself is sinful, you unnecessarily undermine our cause.
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