iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Rick Santorum Fights To Contend In Iowa Caucus 2012

THOMAS BEAUMONT   12/28/11 06:23 PM ET  AP

MASON CITY, Iowa — Rick Santorum isn't going down without a fight. In fact, that fight seems to be lifting him – at exactly the right time.

The Republican presidential candidate who has logged more miles in Iowa than any of his rivals is starting to see his work begin to pay off with a growing list of supporters and a new poll that shows the little-known former Pennsylvania senator vaulting into contention here five days before the Jan. 3 caucuses.

"We've got momentum," Santorum, a long-overlooked candidate in the GOP race, told people at a diner Wednesday in Independence, a day after sounding a similar tone in Mason City. He told reporters: "I have a shot and I'm feeling better about that shot every day, the top three. This could be a late-breaking race. Now we just have to get over the hurdle of convincing people we can win."

By evening, the candidate was telling CNN "hard work pays off, as it does in most areas of life" after the network, in conjunction with Time, released a survey that moved him from the back of the pack to third place behind Mitt Romney and Ron Paul.

Indeed, there is new evidence that Iowa Republicans, many of whom are still undecided and looking for a consensus conservative, are starting to give Santorum a fresh look as the caucuses loom and the prospect of a victory by Romney or Paul – considered less conservative than their rivals – becomes more realistic.

Santorum tried to press that point at a Dubuque furniture store, acknowledging anger in the electorate while also saying: "If you want to stick it to the man, don't vote for Ron Paul. That's not sticking it to anybody but the Republican Party."

In recent days, Santorum's crowds have started growing as he rallies conservatives with a pit bull's pugnaciousness, and just a touch of anger. He began airing a new radio ad Wednesday that, while less obvious than a television spot, can be effective in reaching niche conservatives in rural Iowa. And now, the poll that shows him with 16 percent of support in Iowa.

But he still faces hurdles. His cash-strapped campaign has only just started running TV ads, and his organization is small in a state whose contests rely on the ability of campaigns to turn out a slew of supporters.

Even so, Iowans could end up giving him credit for campaigning in the state the old-fashioned way – in living rooms, coffee shops and town squares – even as his rivals relied mostly on TV ads, debates and media interviews. Santorum has built his organization painstakingly, having visited all 99 counties, including at times when there was only one GOP activists to greet him.

His rise comes at a critical moment: conservatives have tested others – helping several candidates rise and quickly fall – and now are focusing on the caucuses, just five days away.

"Rick Santorum could be a real surprise," said former Dallas County GOP Chairman Rob Taylor.

He has earned the support of a number of key backers of former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who won the 2008 Republican caucuses. They include former gubernatorial candidate Bob Vander Plaats, conservative Sioux City radio host Sam Clovis and some influential evangelical pastors.

Santorum landed the endorsement Tuesday of evangelical conservative activists Alex and Brett Harris, founders of Huck's Army, a national group that supported Huckabee's 2008 campaign. On Wednesday, Steve Sukup, a conservative business leader and former state legislator, announced he was supporting Santorum.

"He's the only candidate in this race I trust," said Chuck Laudner, a veteran Iowa GOP operative who introduced Santorum to more than 100 party activists on Santorum's fourth trip to Mason City. "And he's a fighter."

As if to prove the point, Santorum launched into a speech filled with pokes at the national media and his rivals. For 90 minutes, he tore into President Barack Obama, Hollywood and moderate Republicans – and, by implication, rival Romney.

While Santorum's profile in Congress as a social-issues crusader bought him entree with influential evangelical conservatives in Iowa, it's his unhesitating attack on liberals that seems to be fueling his rise in internal polls by rival campaigns.

"Let's look at colleges and universities," Santorum said in the ballroom of the restored Frank Lloyd Wright Park Inn Hotel on Mason City's town square. "They've become indoctrination centers for the left. Should we be subsidizing that?"

Santorum tossed out Harvard University's motto, "Veritas," Latin for truth. "They haven't seen truth at Harvard in 100 years."

Santorum refers to Obama as a "radical." Just as easily, though, he calls his own party's leaders "the good old guys you can count on to sell out in the end."

Even in entertaining questions from voters, he is frank and at times pointed.

"No, you're missing my point," he told Mason City Republican Julia Jones, a retired factory worker, as he tried to explain Social Security.

Jones, who walked into the event weighing Santorum and Texas Gov. Rick Perry, liked what she heard – and decided to support Santorum.

"He doesn't soften the edges, but he doesn't talk down to you either," Jones said. "He's just in-depth."

___

Associated Press writer Mike Glover in Independence, Iowa, contributed to this report.

Also on HuffPost:

FOLLOW HUFFPOST POLITICS
Subscribe to the HuffPost Hill newsletter!
MASON CITY, Iowa — Rick Santorum isn't going down without a fight. In fact, that fight seems to be lifting him – at exactly the right time. The Republican presidential candidate who has l...
MASON CITY, Iowa — Rick Santorum isn't going down without a fight. In fact, that fight seems to be lifting him – at exactly the right time. The Republican presidential candidate who has l...
Filed by Luke Johnson  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 1,987
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Highlights
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (60 total)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sledding girl
06:01 AM on 01/08/2012
Oh my...people being educated as a political ploy! Hide your children, sanatorium! They might learn something!
04:53 PM on 12/31/2011
"They've become indoctrination centers for the left. Should we be subsidizing that?"

Good question. Answer: NO! Good for Rick Santorum!
11:04 PM on 12/29/2011
"Facts have a well known liberal bias." -Colbert

Rick is angry at the colleges now that he has realized this. Instead of trying to understand the facts he seems to want to change them.....*sigh*
08:43 PM on 12/29/2011
Rick 'Spreading' Santorum is right! We shouldn't be making an investment in higher education. Who wants to be competitive, anyway? No, instead we should just keep on with the insane, archaic, and xenophobic rituals of the Church. God bless America.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sisa
08:25 PM on 12/29/2011
"Homeschooled" : the red flag that there is likely physical, mental, sexual, emotional, or far worse neo Christian cult indoctrination spiritual abuse being hidden within the home. In this case I'll bet more than one apply.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sisa
08:19 PM on 12/29/2011
Well it refreshing to see that at least one woman has a shot in the GOP now that Michelle Bachman is pretty much done. Yay Rick ! You go girl !
02:12 PM on 12/29/2011
"Let's look at colleges and universities," Santorum said in the ballroom of the restored Frank Lloyd Wright Park Inn Hotel on Mason City's town square. "They've become indoctrination centers for the left. Should we be subsidizing that?"
~
Funny, in my common sense enclave we think churches are the indoctrination centers.
09:12 PM on 01/01/2012
Wow, did you just now realize that the word "doctrine" has something to do with church? Yes, people are "in-doctrinated" there. That's the point.

Santorum's argument can be backed up with facts. University faculties are overwhelmingly left-leaning and Democrat-voting. "Diversity" at universities includes race and gender orientation, but not political or religious belief. Leftist nonsense infects most colleges of social science and humanities, thanks to all the aging hippies who sought refuge in the cushy, tenured world of the university when their ideas were rejected by those outside the cocoon.
04:36 PM on 01/07/2012
Good dodge.

Indoctrinated much?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sledding girl
06:05 AM on 01/08/2012
Are you kidding me? There is nothing if not talk about religios and ethnic acceptance in colleges. It really doesn't change anything. Professors are liberal leaning for a reason. Those funding the universities are right leaning for a reason. The rich don't need to learn anything new and those who are in higher learning tend to lean toward more scientific explanations than those based on religios hearsay.
01:10 PM on 12/29/2011
I hope all the doctors and nurses taking care of his ill child did not see that comment. What an insult to educated, caring people every where.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nana-anne
just trying to make sense of the senseless
12:51 PM on 12/29/2011
I love the politicians who take great pains to insult those who have graduated from, what they call, "elite north eastern colleges".(which is code for ivy-league) I often wonder how many of them would have turned down acceptance at any of these schools had it been offered to them. Most of the schools they denigrate are world renowned for their excellence and institutions which we should be extremely proud of as Americans.
photo
uniquindividual
I'm unique and so are you
11:48 AM on 12/29/2011
Indoctrination centers - Church, Temple, Mosque.

Enlightenment Centers where respect for facts, logic and the scientific method apply - Non-Religious school classrooms and lecture halls.

The truth will set you free Rick
photo
Larkhill
Vi Veri Veniversum Vivus Vici
11:21 AM on 12/29/2011
If we're going to stop subsidizing indoctrination centers, let's start making churches pay taxes.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:14 AM on 12/29/2011
when did education become indoctrination...republicans like santorum just cant deal with people who are educated enoug to see through the BS
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joe Krumbach
We are the children of an alien experiment.
10:56 AM on 12/29/2011
Rick, Larry Craig is waiting for you, he said "usual place" and then gave me a wink, kind of creepy but I guess you know what it means.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Doreen1960
10:34 AM on 12/29/2011
Wow, if colleges and universities are center of indoctrination that we can't trust.. Well then we can't trust you Rick----Santorum earned a B.A. in political science from The Pennsylvania State University in 1980 and a Masters of Business Administration from the University of Pittsburgh in 1981; during his time at Penn State, he joined the Tau Epsilon Phi fraternity. Five years later, Santorum received a law degree from the Dickinson School of Law
photo
ElizabethRoo
All leaders should be readers
10:12 AM on 12/29/2011
Freaky way of thinking.
Obama 2012