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Rick Santorum Contraception Stance Remains Out Of Step With Nation

Rick Santorum Contraception

CONNIE CASS and JENNIFER AGIESTA   02/17/12 12:07 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON — Most Americans don't share Rick Santorum's absolutist take on abortion. He's out of step on women in combat. He questions the values of the two-thirds of mothers who work. He's even troubled by something as commonplace as birth control – for married couples.

Even among a Republican presidential field eager to please religious conservatives, Santorum's ideas stand out.

A Catholic father of seven whose kids are home-schooled, Santorum may seem to wear his conservatism as comfortably as his sweater vests. But he's walked a careful path, keeping the more provocative opinions that helped sink his re-election to the Senate in 2006 mostly out of his presidential campaign.

That is until he leaped to the top of the polls, alongside Mitt Romney.

Now Santorum's record on social issues is getting a closer look. On several matters, he's outside the Republican mainstream. And if he becomes the GOP nominee, some of his ideas would probably be surprising, even puzzling, to general election voters.

BIRTH CONTROL

_ Santorum: Says he wouldn't try to take away the pill or condoms. But he believes states should be free to ban them if they want. He argues that the Supreme Court erred when it ruled in 1965 that married Americans have a right to privacy that includes the use of contraceptives.

Birth control, even within marriage, violates his beliefs as a Roman Catholic. Last year Santorum told the Christian blog Caffeinated Thoughts that as president he would warn the nation about "the dangers of contraception" and the permissive culture it encourages. "Many of Christian faith have said, `Well, that's OK. Contraception is OK,'" he said. "It's not OK. It's a license to do things in the sexual realm that is counter to how things are supposed to be. ... If it's not for purposes of procreation, then you diminish this very special bond between men and women."

On Friday Santorum told "CBS This Morning" that as a senator he supported federal money for birth control services but he also wants to promote abstinence "as a healthier alternative."

_ Catholics: Despite the church's teachings, 84 percent of U.S. Catholics believe a person who uses artificial birth control can still be a good Catholic, according to a CBS News poll. And 89 percent of Catholic women favor expanding access to birth control for those who can't afford it, the nonpartisan Public Religion Research Institute found.

_ All Americans: Almost all say contraception is OK. Three-fourths of U.S. women have taken the pill, the CBS News poll says, and other studies show nearly all sexually active women have used some type of birth control. A mere 8 percent of Americans think birth control is morally wrong, according to a Pew Research Center poll this month. Four in 10 say it's not even a moral issue these days.

WORKING WOMEN

_ Santorum: His 2005 book, "It Takes a Family: Conservatism and the Common Good," suggests parents in two-income families aren't doing what's best for the kids. Too often, he writes, both parents work when the family could get by on one salary: "For some parents, the purported need to provide things for their children simply provides a convenient rationalization for pursuing a gratifying career outside the home." He described it as a sad situation created by "radical feminists" who undermined the traditional family by "convincing women that professional accomplishments are the key to happiness."

Santorum's unsuccessful re-election bid took a hit from a rival's TV ad featuring a working mother challenging the senator "to come to my house at the end of the month when we're doing our bills and tell me how we can live on one income." Santorum recently tried to deflect questions about the book by saying that his wife, who left her nursing career to care for their children, helped write that section because she felt her decision to become a stay-at-home mom wasn't valued by society. He predicted a Santorum administration would have "plenty of working moms."

_ All Americans: Two-thirds of married mothers are working or looking for jobs, according to the Labor Department. Like Santorum, most Americans don't think it's best for children when moms work full time; they're divided over whether staying at home or working part time is ideal. But more moms are working for economic reasons than personal satisfaction. Half of full-time working mothers would rather work part time, and a third would prefer to stay home, according to a 2009 Pew Research Center poll. Only about 1 in 10 of the moms working full-time says it's an ideal situation.

WOMEN IN COMBAT

_ Santorum: Spoke out against women in combat when the Pentagon announced plans to allow them to serve closer to the front. He says he worries that fighting men will be distracted by their "natural instinct" to protect women. He also says the differences in physical abilities between men and women aren't being taken into account.

_ Republicans: Six in 10 would allow women to serve in units that engage in close combat; about a third are opposed, a Quinnipiac University poll last year found.

_ All Americans: Slightly more favorable toward women in combat than Republicans.

GAYS IN THE MILITARY

_ Santorum: Wants to reinstate the "don't ask, don't tell" policy that banned openly gay service members. In a GOP debate in Florida, Santorum said lifting the ban was social engineering and "sexual activity has absolutely no place in the military." He added: "Keep it to yourself whether you're a heterosexual or a homosexual."

_ Republicans: Santorum's party is divided on the issue. A CBS News poll gave a 48-41 edge to supporters of gays serving openly in the military. Republicans who felt strongly about the issue were twice as likely to support gays in the military than to oppose them, however.

_ All Americans: A big majority – 68 percent – favor allowing gays to serve openly, the same poll found.

ABORTION

_ Santorum: Favors amending the Constitution to ban abortion. He says that human life begins at conception and doctors who perform abortions should be charged as criminals. In his book, he compared women who have abortions to 19th-century slaveholders, writing that "unlike abortion today, in most states even the slaveholder did not have the unlimited right to kill his slave." In the past, Santorum supported allowing abortions in cases of rape or incest, but he now says no to those exceptions.

_ Republicans: Although united in the belief that abortion should be illegal in most cases – two-thirds say so – an overwhelming majority of Republicans are willing to make some exceptions. Only a fifth say abortion should always be illegal, according to AP-GfK polling in August.

_ All Americans: Even less likely to say there should be no abortions at all – 16 percent support a total ban. About half of Americans want abortion to be legal in most cases, and almost as many say it should be mostly illegal.

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WASHINGTON — Most Americans don't share Rick Santorum's absolutist take on abortion. He's out of step on women in combat. He questions the values of the two-thirds of mothers who work. He's even...
WASHINGTON — Most Americans don't share Rick Santorum's absolutist take on abortion. He's out of step on women in combat. He questions the values of the two-thirds of mothers who work. He's even...
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chtrek
MichiganLiberal
11:51 AM on 03/03/2012
A Catholic father of seven whose kids are home-schooled, He forgot to include at the expense of the taxpayers.
10:10 AM on 02/29/2012
"A Catholic father of seven whose kids are home schooled"... that says it all...
Rick Sanctimonious doesn't live in mainstream America. He lives in Happyland. Yes, everybody should have a houseful of kids and indoctrinate them into 1950's philosophy.
Watch a few episodes of Mad Men and you will see that the America he glamorizes was not so friendly if you were not a white male...
09:20 PM on 02/25/2012
Rick Santorum wants to take us back. Well, I want to take us back too. To the days when Republican's made some sense. Like the sense that Betty Ford made when she said she was glad abortion was legal...out of the back alley's and into the hospitals where it belongs. Can we go back there, GOP?
02:57 PM on 02/19/2012
Women shouldn't have sex.
Women shouldn't use contraception.
Women shouldn't have careers, or even earn additioinal income to give their children a better life (i.e. providing for the family should be the man's responsibility).
Women should simply stay at home and take care of their families.

Um... how exactly is Rick Santorum's views of women different from the Taliban's?
serdelp
Dealing with ignorance
02:12 PM on 02/19/2012
When I was a child in the 1950's I remember the nuns teaching us about the evils of contraception and that it was sinful. Now forward to 2012 and Santorum thinks this is still that era, when the church had so much control over all our lives. We all grew up and put aside all those antiquated thoughts and chose what was best for us. Unfortunately the church and Santorum are still trying to take back our rights by making contraception evil once again and yelling that the Democrats are out to squelch their religious freedom. Santorum forgets that Most Americans don't want to be told what to do in bed. To think that in today's world, a politician wants to once again control our lives is repugnant to any intelligent person. Trying to ban contraception is bad enough but his other beliefs that women should quit their jobs, stay homes and raise their families is another one of this man's ideas for the American woman. Like I said before, Santorum thinks this is still the "glorious" 1950's when men controlled women's lives and women just had to accept it. Santorum is in for a rude awakening.
11:59 AM on 02/18/2012
Apparently clueless Rick forgot that women gained the right to vote in 1920. We need to get the social fascists out of the political process so that we'll have rational, competent and balanced candidates who can work on important issues, not distracting side shows.
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krf1942
Healing conservatives since 19XX
09:54 AM on 02/18/2012
Basically, the mani s a throwback to the 19th century. He must have been freeze dried then and brought back to life in an era he simply does not understand. PS: What's his stance on his wife having lived with that abortion Doc without the benefit of marriage. Think she used birth control or was it simply a platonic relationship?
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krf1942
Healing conservatives since 19XX
09:46 AM on 02/18/2012
Santorum seems to exist in an alternate reality. Could this man be president? Potential Voters, He wants to adopt some quasi-middle eastern philosophy regarding women's rights; and some wrongfully worry that Obama is a Moslem. This man could slip into Saudi Arabia and feel completely at home with their stance on how women should be treated.
11:42 PM on 02/29/2012
You've given me a brilliant idea... can we all bombard his campaign offices with real estate info from countries that practice Sharia law?
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ZeraLee
A Citizen's View from Main Street
02:41 AM on 02/18/2012
He wants the entire country to revert to his childhood.
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StephenHNIC
02:38 AM on 02/18/2012
Hey, Rick Santorum: 1952 called. It wants its political issues back.
zinxeb
Empathy ends cruelty
11:26 PM on 02/17/2012
The grim truth is today the same as it has always been...most men aren't capable of allowing their wives to stay at home to raise lots of little kiddies, since they don't make enough to support them all.

Most marriages, even without children, are stressed financially...and even more now that eight years of GWB and the republican neocon administration's "trickle down" economic policies ruined the economy. In fact, the number one cause of divorce is financial problems.

So when the couple divorce and the man leaves, usually without paying child support for even one, let alone a half dozen little kiddies, the woman usually has to fall back on Social Services for help...but what happens when the republican neocons gut Social Services...what happens to mommie and all of her little kiddies?
10:25 PM on 02/17/2012
What a man, he wants to amend the Constitution of the United State so it bans abortion, that's just brilliant. Why not just rewrite the whole Constitution?? The government, churches, ect. don't have the right to infringe on a womans decision of whether to use or not use contraceptives or whether to have or not to have an abortion. Santorum wants the little lady pregnant and barefoot all the time, then home school all the kids. No wonder the pictures I've seen of his wife, she looks totally worn out. This man plans on setting women back 125 years and feelgood about it, no doubt he'll try to take away a womans right to vote and drive. Sounds like a Muslim to me, not a Catholic.
09:23 PM on 02/17/2012
Our elected politician's are supposed to represent us, our views...they aren't supposed to be trying to force their belief system on the entire country.
09:14 PM on 02/17/2012
I'm glad that Santorum and the GOP have no chance.

In his own party Santorum has no chance against Romney. In the presidential election, Romney has no chance against Obama.

Santorum's views are so outdated and screwed up. The idea of living in the world he presents makes me nauseous...I wouldn't want to live in it at all.
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ettyg
09:08 PM on 02/17/2012
On a business website, I stated Rick Santorum's dishonest behavior as Senator from Pa. He HOME SCHOOLED his children, where they were living during his tenure as Senator, while he received federal school funds earmarked for the district his children should have attended and, I guess pocketed those funds. I don't know if this was ever proven. I don't recall. Now he is telling Americans who they can marry, who can serve in the military, which HE did not, how to treat family planning issues and women's health. In addition, he is trying to destroy the public school system which has educated millions of talented and successful people, all because he does not believe in public schooling. How about we tell Santorum he needs a vasectomy because birth control is illegal, and his kids if not attending public schools at once, he will be prosecuted to the full extend of the law. This is what Santorum is trying to foist on the American people, and I for one, elderly but not stupid, object to his irresponsible actions and his attempts to fire up the American voter against all that our great country stands. President Obama is a sure thing, if, God forbid, any republican becomes a viable candidate;.
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almchrl13
01:47 AM on 02/19/2012
He's a charlatan - no better than Glenn Beck.