Sunday, 1 June 2014

RLC 2014 Round Up

RLC 2014 Round Up

He did not announce his candidacy, but Santorum’s presence at the 2014 Republican Leadership Conference was more than a cameo appearance.

In 2012, Santorum ran on the argument that Mitt Romney was the worst possible Republican candidate to challenge Obama. I’ll not review the subpoints, but in post-election reflections, all the pundits suddenly came to the same conclusion, and did so as if it were their own discovery.

Santorum was the last not-Romney candidate, and by the end of the campaign, he carried 11 states, despite party elitist meddling to prevent victory announcements in Iowa until after the New Hampshire and South Carolina primaries. The most frequently expressed complaint against Santorum was that he had no chance to win; what a difference the end result would have been if South Carolinians had seen Santorum victorious in Iowa.

Santorum had been labeled as a one-song candidate for social values. This was a marginalizing and tidy pigeon hole, a popular narrative that put Santorum into a precisely defined category for a media and an electorate focused more on Gangnam style in 2012 than on the future of the country. In reality, Santorum was the candidate most expert in the Middle East, the candidate with the most comprehensive economic recovery plan, the candidate whose balanced budget plan was projected for five years precisely so that he and the House and Senate members supporting it would be held responsible by the voters in a second term election. Indeed, it was by a single Senate vote that Santorum’s 1995 Balanced Budget Amendment failed, a day whose infamy should be altogether clear to Americans who now face an $18 trillion deficit with a clear path and a pedal-to-the-medal Legislature that will see that number double and triple by the time Hillary’s grandchild will be enrolled in NYC’s most prestigious elementary school.


What is Santorum up to now? He’s making sure that everyone knows him as the Blue Collar Conservative, one who consciously integrates his social values into a compelling economic message that should rebrand and re-vision the Republican Party. He capably explains how this is a winning message for Republicans and that it is a message which brings with it all the urgencies of conservative Constitutional Republicans. Santorum sang a different song at RLC, one which was dominated by this new vision, with red meat anti-Obama rhetoric served only in small portions so that the audience might grasp that one does not win elections by anti-Obama-ism alone, but with a message which each American’s name on it. 

1 comment:

silvergirl2016 said...

Terrific analysis. Santorum is the one who can WIN. More importantly, he has a PLAN beyond just gaining the presidency (troubling aspiration of most of the others) to take America back from the brink! #BlueCollarConservatives brings a powerful message and shows consistency (rare in politics) as it hearkens back to "It Takes a Family" even in it's economic recovery plan. Santorum is saying the SAME things he has said for decades, but, now, as you rightly point out, many Conservative Republicans and Reagan Dems are HEARING the message - and it's causing quite a stir :)