Rick Santorum
Chuting Downmarket: Imus' Replacement Is a Jersey Buffoon
In a move akin to firing Bobby Knight and replacing him with Woody Hayes, CBS Radio has at last settled on Don Imus's successor: Craig Carton. read more »
Time to Point Fingers: Karl Rove in Pennsylvania!?
My Monday-morning questions for Karl Rove: Why didn't you sacrifice everything else to try and hold the Senate? Howard Dean had a 50-state srategy, you should have had a 5-state strategy: Montana, Virginia, Missouri, Tennessee, Rhode Island. Right now it looks like you won one of those, and you needed two. How bad was your pollingwhy didn't you understand ten days ago that you had lost the House and forget about it? Most important, you famously abandoned Mike DeWine in Ohio, and good for you, but why didn't you abandon Pennsylvania? DeWine lost by 12 points but next door, even as the conservative websites were saying he was competitive, Rick Santorum lost by nearly 60/40. Santorum got absolutely crushedin the most expensive race in Pennsylvania history. Why didn't you know this? Why did you put one nickel in Pennsylvania when power was inching out of your grasp in smaller markets?
Brown, Casey, Menendez...
But the six-seat gain Democrats need to reclaim the majority is very much within sight right now. In New Jersey, Robert Menendez has held off Republican Tom Kean, preserving for the Democrats a seat that appeared to be in serious jeopardy last month, when news of a federal criminal probe of Menendez leaked from the U.S. Attorney's office.
All eyes are now on Virginia, Rhode Island, Missouri, Montana, Tennessee and Arizona. Win four of those, and Democrats have their majority-- assuming, of course, that they retain Maryland, where final results could take a few days.
-- Steve KornackiEye of Mordor
"As the hobbits are going up Mount Doom, the Eye of Mordor is being drawn somewhere else," Santorum said. "It's being drawn to Iraq and it's not being drawn to the U.S. You know what? I want to keep it on Iraq. I don't want the Eye to come back here to the United States."
It's the next logical step after Ronald Reagan's Star Wars defense plan, right? Daily Gotham thinks it's just crazy. More Santorum-Mordor musings are here.
-- Azi PaybarahMore on Catholics and Jews in Politics
The Protestant Ministers JFK was addressing actually had conservative social views similar to the Catholic Church... It was the smear of disloyalty and foreign allegiance that was being leveled against the Catholics, just as its now being used to smear the Jews.
OK, fair enough. I still call for more Jewish transparency, and point to the Catholic model.
Look at Sen. Rick Santorum, running for reelection in Pennsylvania. Just about every time he's in the press, people talk about what a devout Catholic he is, because of legitimate fears of religious geeks in politics.
Thus, the second paragraph of a recent story in The Hill calls Santorum, "The dedicated Roman Catholic and fierce opponent of abortion rights.." Or there is this dissection in the Jewish Exponent last week of Santorum's belief system:
Terry G. Madonna, director of the Center for Politics and Public Affairs at Franklin & Marshall College...said that he considers Santorum to be an "evangelical Catholic," meaning that he is a practicing Roman Catholic but shares the worldview of certain evangelical Christians, including a strongly held belief in the importance of Jewish rule over the Holy Land.
The press will look at Christian evangelicals all day long, what they believe about blah blah blah. And generalize to a farethewell, make them sound like crazies. And maybe they are. But the press will not look for even an instant at Jewish beliefs surrounding the Middle East. The observant Jew David Frum helped to author our current Syria and Iran policy; he was the Bush speechwriter who collaborated on the Axis of Evil speech. In a recent sermon at a Washington synagogue, Frum described America as "this new Israel, this America, this haven and refuge for so many of the persecuted of the world, including Jews." And said that Israel's "neighbors" were "determined to repeat the work of the Nazis."
I would question the accuracy of that statement. I believe there is a religious component to it. I'd never know about it from the press, though. Frum, bless his openness, chose to blog it.
Rudy's Non-Litmus Test
Rick Santorum believes in a culture of life. He led the charge in the U.S. Senate to pass legislation to ban partial birth abortion, and also worked to pass the Born-Alive Infants Protection Act, which recognizes the basic rights of all children born alive.
Maybe it's just a coincidence, but in Giuliani's bio on the Solutions America website - and in the section dealing with his record as a public official - there's no mention of his own, considerably more liberal position on the issue.
-- Josh BensonThe Morning Read: April 19, 2006
The Sun reports on union spots that take aim at George Pataki's budget vetos.
The Albany Times Union reports on the next step in the CFE lawsuit for city schools; and George Pataki's federal fundraising picks up.
—Nicole BrydsonGary Barnett: Friend of Santorum
The Politicker, out sister site, has a list of prominent New Yorkers who have been donating to Rick Santorum, the staunchly conservative Pennsylvania senator who's in the midst of a bitter re-election campaign.
Mr. Barnett's donation: $2,000.
- Michael CalderoneNew Yorkers for Santorum
A quick Politicker once-over of past Santorum donors turned up lots of usual suspects -- think Rupert Murdoch, who has given $4200, and Henry Kissinger, who plunked down $500 -- as well as some genuine surprises, like die-hard Democratic fund-raiser John Catsimatidis. The list also includes baby neo-con Mark Gerson, failed would-be senator Rick Lazio, MTA Chairman Peter Kalikow, controversial businessman Kenneth Langone, and a piggy bank's worth of Merrill Lynch and Bear Stearns-ers (we're sure Mr. Santorum's plum position on the banking committee had nothing to do with that). Most impressive, however, was Mr. Santorum's ability to recruit a real, live Frank Sinatra and Robert E. Lee!
-- Lizzy Ratner
More names after the jump: read more »
The Casey Problem
Ferrer said Bloomberg "can't have it both ways," supporting abortion rights personally while throwing his money and prestige behind anti-abortion pols.
But Chuck Schumer has recently complicated this argument for Democrats around the country, but particularly here in New York, by putting the weight of the Democratic Party behind Robert Casey Jr., the strongest candidate against Rick Santorum, and also anti-abortion.
Can Chuck have it both ways? read more »
"Ask Senator Schumer," Ferrer said.
(Incidentally, at the press conference, we also learned from James that "most of the women who vote in my district are women." Just so that's clear.)Chuck Bucked by Casey's Big Cash
Casey announced today that his campaign committee has raised $1.89 million for the quarter, setting a new record for a Democratic Senate challenger taking on a Republican incumbent. This comes on the heels of a new Quinnipiac poll, released yesterday, which gave Casey a double-digit lead over Rick Santorum. read more »
So whose record did Casey break? The reigning cash champ had raised $1.5 million in the first half of 1997. His name was Chuck Schumer, and he was the one who convinced Casey to run in the first place.Hillary vs. Santorum on Parenting
"It takes a village, Rick, don't forget that," Clinton called out, according to the Associated Press.
"It takes a family," he countered.
"Of course, a family is part of a village!" she replied. read more »
The two, the AP reports, continued on in opposite directions.Santorum: DeLay Not Weird
Santorum: Tom's a very good leader. I don't think anyone can question that...
Imus: He's a weird little dude.
Santorum: He's not a weird dude. He's a good guy. read more »
Imus: He just looks to me like a guy that has some kind of weird, kinky, sexual thing going on.
Santorum: I don't think it's appropriate to talk about the majority leader of the House of Representatives that way.









