From Those Who Know Him Best: Santorum Still Resented In PA
Rick Santorum is as unpopular in Pennsylvania today as he was six years ago when home-state voters kicked him out of the Senate in a rout. That sour public perception may doom his fading chances of sticking around in the GOP presidential race, along with other hurdles that dot his path to a possible, and needed, victory in the April 24 primary.
He failed to heal a rift with fiscal conservatives who had lost confidence in him or reassure party leaders that he could temper his hardline positions on social issues that repel the moderate and independent voters who are crucial to success in statewide elections in this diverse state. Even some who know Santorum say he isn’t the best candidate.
The former senator also faces a nearly insurmountable hurdle to stop Mitt Romney, who emerged as the nominee-in-waiting after his sweep of contests this week in Wisconsin, Maryland and Washington, D.C.
None of that seems to be deterring Santorum.
“People in Pennsylvania know me,” he said this week while campaigning at a Pittsburgh-area diner. “We’ve got a strong base of support here, and we’re going to work very, very hard.”
That Pennsylvanians know Santorum may be part of the problem.
He spoke at the state’s largest annual gathering of conservatives several weeks ago, yet won a straw vote with less than half the vote. His support in the state also has slipped, according to surveys that highlight his apparent likeability problem.
Santorum is as unpopular now as he was at the time of his defeat. A February poll by Muhlenberg College showed that nearly half the registered voters surveyed viewed him unfavorably. Just 39 percent saw him favorably.
A March 28 poll by Franklin & Marshall College showed Santorum with 30 percent support to Romney’s 28 percent among registered Republicans, a significant drop from the 29-point advantage Santorum enjoyed in February.
Santorum’s image has suffered under a barrage of negative advertising by the better-funded Romney and his allies. Santorum lately also is battling the perception that Romney will be the nominee. He has complained, at times bitterly, about being badly outspent by Romney in states where he has lost to the former Massachusetts governor.
In 2006, with Democrat Bob Casey comfortably ahead, Santorum met with apprehensive conservative activists who wanted him to explain his enthusiastic support for moderate Republican Sen. Arlen Specter over rising conservative star Pat Toomey in the primary election two years earlier. The activists also sought Santorum’s rationale for supporting targeted federal spending, or earmarks, and other fiscal positions they deemed irresponsible.
Santorum, who was his usual combative self and came across as anything but apologetic, argued that his positions should be balanced against everything he’d done throughout his 16 years in the House and Senate.
“The implication was clear that, ‘You guys have no choice. There is no other conservative in Pennsylvania, no other viable conservative,’” said Bob Guzzardi, a real estate investor and conservative activist from suburban Philadelphia who said he confronted Santorum at the meeting.