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A Pennsylvanian's Guide to the Rick Santorum You Don't Know

Posted: 01/05/12 10:51 AM ET

You've probably heard all the good ones about GOP presidential hopeful Rick Santorum by now. The one about his "Google problem." The one about the "man-on-dog sex" (prompting the greatest journalistic response ever, when the reporter told Santorum that he was "sort of freaking me out.") The one about how the Catholic Church's priest sex abuse scandal was caused by Boston liberalism, or the one about how President Obama should be anti-abortion because he's black and abortion is like slavery. And so on and so forth.

That's the Rick Santorum that America has come to know over the last 15 years or so -- an unapologetic and almost goofy culture warrior whose obsessions -- like thinking that gay sex is a gateway drug to bestiality -- make him a hero to social conservatives and often a laughing stock to most everyone else. Santorum's rise in the 2012 presidential race has people talking about whether his views on social issues -- talk of annulling gay marriages, seemingly questioning the right to even birth control -- make him too extreme to be president -- and that's an important topic to discuss.

But I also think Santorum's weird sexual bluster can obscure who he really is, and what truly matters about his suddenly surging campaign. As a Philadelphia-based political reporter, I arrived in town just seven months after Santorum became my state's junior senator. I followed his 12 years on the Washington political stage closely, and I think people obsessing on the "man-on-dog" stuff are missing the bigger picture. For one thing, the self-styled "family values" expert has a surprisingly ambiguous record with his own personal ethics. Also, Santorum's legislative record shows that his real workaday agenda was not so much waging culture wars as protecting the interests of the 1 percent, the millionaires and billionaires who funded the modern Republican Party. You could say that Rick Santorum is just another politician. But that would be giving him too much credit.

Here's a Pennsylvanian's brief guide to the Rick Santorum you don't know:

1. This compassionate Christian conservative founded a charity that was actually a bit of a scam. In 2001, following up on a faith-based urban charity initiative around the 2000 GOP convention in Philadelphia, Santorum launched a charitable foundation called the Operation Good Neighbor Foundation. While in its first few years the charity cut checks to community groups for $474,000, Operation Good Neighbor Foundation had actually raised more than $1 million, from donors who overlapped with Santorum's political fund raising. Where did the majority of the charity's money go? In salary and consulting fees to a network of politically connected lobbyists, aides and fundraisers, including rent and office payments to Santorum's finance director Rob Bickhart, later finance chair of the Republican National Committee. When I reported on Santorum's charity for The American Prospect in 2006, experts told me a responsible charity doles out at least 75 percent of its income in grants, and they were shocked to learn the figure for Operation Good Neighbor Fund was less than 36 percent. The charity -- which didn't register with the state of Pennsylvania as required under the law --- was finally disbanded in 2007.

2. Likewise, a so-called "leadership PAC" created by Santorum that was supposed to fund other Republicans instead seemed to mostly pay for the lifestyle of Santorum and those around him. My investigation of the America's Foundation PAC showed that only 18 percent of its money went to fund political candidates, less -- and typically far less -- than any other "leadership PACs." What America's Foundation did spend a lot on with what looked like everyday expenses, including 66 trips to the Starbucks in Santorum's then-hometown of Leesburg, Va., multiple fast-food outings and expenditures at Walmart, Target and Giant supermarkets. Campaign finance experts said the PAC's expenses -- paid for by donations from wealthy businessmen and lobbyists -- were "unconventional," at best and arguably not legal. Santorum also funded his large Leesburg "McMansion" with a $500,000 mortgage from a private bank run by a major campaign donor, in a program that was only supposed to be open to high-wealth investment clients in the trust, which Santorum was not, and closed to the general public.

3. Santorum was never above mingling his cultural crusades with the everyday work of raising political cash. In 2005, Santorum made headlines -- not all positive -- for visiting the deathbed of Terri Schiavo, the woman at the center of a national right-to-die controversy. What my Philadelphia Daily News colleague John Baer later exposed was that the real reason he was in the Tampa, Fla., area was to collect money at a $250,000 fundraiser organized by executives of Outback Steakhouses, a company that shared Santorum's passion for a low minimum wage for waitresses and other rank-and-file workers. Santorum's efforts were also aided by his unusual mode of travel: Wal-Mart's corporate jet. And he canceled a public meeting on Social Security reform "out of respect for the Schiavo family" even as the closed fundraisers went on.

4. Santorum didn't seem to be against government waste when it came to his family. During his years in the Senate, Santorum raised his family in northern Virginia and rarely if ever seemed to use the small house that he claimed as his legal residence, in a blue-collar Pittsburgh suburb called Penn Hills. So Pennsylvania voters were shocked when they found out the Penn Hills School District had paid out $72,000 for the home cyberschooling of five of Santorum's kids, hundreds of miles away in a different state. The cash-strapped district was unsuccessful in its efforts to get any of its money back from Santorum.

5. Washington's lobbyist culture -- Santorum was soaking in it. The ex-Pennsylvania senator spent much of his final years in government trying to downplay and defend his involvement in the so-called "K Street Project," an effort created by GOP uber-lobbyist and tax-cutting fanatic Grover Norquist and future felon and House majority whip Tom DeLay. By all accounts, Santorum was the Senate's "point man" on the K Street Project and he met with Norquist -- at least occasionally and perhaps frequently -- to discuss the effort to sure that Republicans were landing well-paying jobs in lobbying firms that were seeking to then access and influence other Republicans.

6. Santorum had no problem with big government if it was supporting his campaign contributors in Big Pharma. It's little wonder that Santorum ultimately supported Medicare Part D, a prescription drug plan for the elderly that has added hundreds of billions of dollars to the federal deficit and was drafted in such a way to best help pharmaceutical companies maximize profits from all the unbridled spending. When Santorum was defeated for a third term in 2006, an internal memo at the drug giant GlaxoSmithKline said his departure from Washington "creates a big hole that we need to fill."

7. The defender of family values was also slavish in his devotion to a large American corporate behemoth, Wal-Mart: In the wake of the report about Santorum's travel in the Wal-Mart corporate jet, I counted the many ways that Santorum had done the bidding of the world's largest retailer in the Senate, including battling to limit any increases in the minimum wage and seeking to make changes in overtime rules that would benefit the company and hurt its blue-collar workforce, tort reform to limit lawsuits against what is said to be the world's most-sued company, and changes in charitable giving laws and of course eliminating the estate tax that would benefit the billionaire heirs of Sam Walton.

8. Santorum has frequently insisted that his political values are guided by his religious values, and that John F. Kennedy's famous 1960 speech describing a separation between the two had done "much harm" in America. But despite inviting such scrutiny, there's been little discussion of Santorum's ties to ultra-conservative movements within the Roman Catholic Church. Santorum's comments about JFK were made in Rome in 2002 when he spoke at a 100th birthday event for Jose Maria Escrivade Balaguer, founder of the secretive group within the church known as Opus Dei. Although Santorum says he is not a member of Opus Dei -- which has been criticized by some for alleged cult-like qualities and ties to ultra-conservative regimes around the world -- he did receive written permission to attend the ultra-conservative St. Catherine of Siena Church in Great Falls, Va., where Mass is still conducted in Latin and a long-time priest and many parishioners are members of Opus Dei, mingling with political conservatives like Supreme Court Justices Antonin Scalia and former FBI director Louis Freeh.

9. Santorum isn't above big government-funded boondoggles -- when they're linked to his allies and campaign contributors. Consider the type of project that the Tea Party loves to hate, a $750 million energy plant in Schuylkill County, Pa., that was to convert coal to liquids but needed massive subsidies. Santorum boasted of his rule in securing an $100 million federal loan for the project -- which had hired Pennsylvania's top Republican Party power broker of the 2000s, Bob Asher, as a lobbyist and paid him at least $900,000. Despite Santorum's efforts, the plant has not been built.

10. Santorum apparently believes in "an entitlement culture" when it comes for former politicians. After Tuesday night's virtual tie in the Iowa caucus, the Pennsylvanian spoke eloquently about his immigrant grandfather working for decades in the Pennsylvania coal fields and his massive hands; the grandson probably won't have that problem. Losing an election in 2006 allowed Santorum to become a poster child for how ex-pols quickly and easily cash in in America, as a lawyer-rainmaker and joining a "think tank" (that for a time was called America's Enemies) and as an analyst for the Fox News Channel and as a board member for Universal Health Services, an ethically challenged company where executives had supported his Senate campaigns. The New York Times' Gail Collins noted that Santorum had earned $970,000 in 2010 despite seeming sort of unemployed.

The real Rick Santorum is indeed a frothy mixture -- of self-interest, loose ethical standards, and careerism in a career that's been largely devoted not so much to the social causes about which he makes headlines as looking out for the interests of big corporations and the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans. It's a shame that more voters don't know that yet. That is the "Google problem" that Santorum actually deserves.

 
 
 

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11:37 PM on 02/28/2012
I am so tired of the "career politicians". As soon as they take office it becomes all about what they can do to help themselves get richer and the people that actually voted for them are left by the wayside until they need them again to get re-elected. Is it too late to just clean house completely and start from scratch? Absolutely nothing is going to change in this country as long as these guys are running the show.
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dlefevre23
Corporate Welfare is the worst kind of socialism
09:48 PM on 02/27/2012
Seen in my Facebook feed tonight: "There was at least one liberal Christian. His name was Jesus Christ."
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dlefevre23
Corporate Welfare is the worst kind of socialism
09:45 PM on 02/27/2012
And yet none of these hypocrisies get brought up in the "debates."
08:55 PM on 02/17/2012
It would be nice if just once a candidate for President actually had at one point in their lives had a real job.
(sorry RIck lawyer is not a real job). The problem with both parties in Washington these are all career politicians who live in lala land but they are making laws for people in the real world.
08:27 PM on 02/29/2012
ron paul was a doctor

RON PAUL 2012
09:14 PM on 02/29/2012
you are correct and I wish more "real" people would run for political office. One problem is if you are successful you have to take a pay cut to be in politics and most times keep two residences.
02:33 PM on 02/15/2012
All educated voters know what Santorum and those like him truly represent. The problem is they appeal to a lot of voters that are not educated, and they are easily influenced. These voters are easily fooled by the "red herring" speeches these politicians give. We want to protect your freedoms and liberties; choice, guns, health care, etc... and boy do they soak it up. They use fear to dis-credit the Democratic party, telling listerners that there are "death panels" and FEMA camps. They tell people that they are lazy if they are on any gov. aid.
Their best tool for getting these people to support a party that actually keeps them down is fear. They use abortion, gay rights, and all of these social issues to divide a country that should unite. Our differences on abortion, gay rights, etc.. are no reason to support politicians that have the interests of corporate America at the center of their agenda.
Democrats are never going to take away gun rights, they are never going to force abortion on someone who thinks it is wrong, and they are not going to make straight people gay. What they will do is work to protect the rights of all citizens, and in the process rebuild America from the Bottom up, not the top down.
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dlefevre23
Corporate Welfare is the worst kind of socialism
09:55 PM on 02/27/2012
Don't forget that every one of these mouthy crooks are accepting some sort of government aid themselves, whether it be outrageous tax breaks, subsidies for the business, or Ricky's homeschool money.
04:42 PM on 02/14/2012
why doesn't the Huff dig up Obama's college and work records and the papers he wrote in college, they should be national treasures and shared with everyone?
jparikh1
My micro-bio is half empty.
12:41 PM on 02/15/2012
Conservatives only obsess about President Obama's private life because their candidates for President and elected officials are embarrassing them publicly.
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OutToLunch
take me drunk, I'm home...
01:35 PM on 02/15/2012
yea, because Obama's college papers are TOTALLY comparable with Santorum's 12 yr record in politics.

*snort*
02:00 PM on 02/12/2012
Will Bunch talks intelligen tly and backs up what he says. Santorum comes from the same spoiled batch of eggs that hatched the rest of the Republican field, and wears the same silly sanctimoni ous hat as he foists a minority agenda on the rest of us. Most of us support women in their freedom to make health care decisions; most aren't offended by gay rights; nearly 100% (including Catholics) use or have used birth control and want it available to combat AIDS, VD and unwanted pregnancy. This reactionar y would make a good priest or cardinal: aloof from the population and yet demanding they all follow his words of wisdom. The road to Hades is going to be packed when this field of candidates finally passes on.
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ObamaSupporterPete
05:38 PM on 01/07/2012
I don't know why anyone thinks the rank and file would disapprove of this kind of thing. It's how they live. Get into your bedroom and tell you to get to your separate corners while they invade your partner's uterus. They don't want higher taxes yet they want to have all the morality police you can handle. Apparently his squeaky clean religious ethics don't extend to the financial realm. Such a pious man. NOT!
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EgoNarroVerum
04:11 PM on 01/07/2012
72K for homeschooling... if parents decide to home school their children shouldn't they be responsible for the cost?? .
08:24 AM on 01/09/2012
Absolutely. ESPECIALLY if they're employed by the freaking government. I'm pretty sure I read it as the school they would go to in their home town, a regular public school, sent them their work and did the teaching by correspondence or something. So basically, Santorum is getting paid by the government here and using other government money to homeschool his kids. Sickening, really!
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corkey Dickey
05:35 PM on 02/15/2012
He is a con man
10:46 PM on 02/28/2012
Pittsburgh is like what. 4 hour drive from DC. Not exactly a long distance drive.
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Lou on Vancouver Island
Allin, Lou: Mystery Author
04:37 PM on 01/06/2012
HIs turn is coming very soon. Der Karl and the GOP powers know that he is a total disaster. They will choose some of the worst history and begin skewering him with it. No doubt he will bleat objections, making him look like even more of a wuss. If anyone can sink a ship, Karl can because he aims at man's lowest common denominator. This time it's in a good cause.
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Dani09
Protecting rights my grandma marched for
08:29 AM on 01/06/2012
Santorum will be irrelevant after NH.
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Michael D Ballantine
Former Presidential Candidate - Amer Elect 2012
02:47 AM on 01/06/2012
As a member former neighbor of Rick's, I can attest to the strangeness of his convictions and their unacceptability to the general electorate. His antediluvian characterization of the world is one of the reasons I entered this campaign. I wouldn't want people to think that all Central Pennsylvanians are as loathsome or as backwards as Rick appears to be. Since the Reagan revolution, the Republicans have gone so far to the right that I am hoping they will suddenly reappear on the left side like a screen saver on my computer. Let's hope Rick represents the last gasp of the politics of hate. Join me on Americans Elect and choose a President yourself not one presented to you by the party of 1%.
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Dani09
Protecting rights my grandma marched for
08:26 AM on 01/06/2012
The best Candidate for America is President Obama. While the Green Party has many admirable stances, a vote for the Green Party - in this day and age - is a vote for the GOP.

Obama 2012!!!
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Michael D Ballantine
Former Presidential Candidate - Amer Elect 2012
09:41 AM on 01/06/2012
Is there a difference. I can't tell from the policies. It seems Gov Romney is just the Republican version of President Obama.
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ERN13962
01:07 PM on 02/23/2012
Obama is the GOP. Please.
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Lou on Vancouver Island
Allin, Lou: Mystery Author
04:39 PM on 01/06/2012
Thirty years in Ohio, I love Pennsylvania and Kate Smith's statue in Philly. She will be singing "God Bless America" the day this hypocritical scam-man leaves politics.
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ThinkinPerson
12:44 AM on 01/06/2012
Thank you for this article. I had no idea that these ethical and legal issues stand behind this sudden 'favorite.' Typical, these are the guys always talking about 'success' and how they make it on their own.

He's a current day example of that horrible band of Republicans who sold out with Grover Norquist, the very scummy sick side of the Republican party. Classic Republican is all but dead, or voiceless, sadly.

Thank you for the good reporting . From what I can tell, this guy ran a non-profit without the requisite permission. Law breaker too. Wow.
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Ferris J Anderson
reports of my demise are greatly exaggerated.
06:30 PM on 01/05/2012
As a former Pittsburgher I can attest to the disgust we SW Pennsylvanians have for this man.
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Joni Geller
"I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one."
06:24 PM on 01/05/2012
Sad, most people won't even know these facts. Keep plugging away!