Rick Santorum
Rick Santorum rose to prominence as a U.S. congressman and senator from Pennsylvania. He was a candidate for the Republican Party presidential nomination in 2012 and 2016.
Who Is Rick Santorum?
Richard John Santorum was born May 10, 1958, in Winchester, Virginia. In 1990, at age 32, he ran for political office for the first time as a candidate for the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania's 18th congressional district. He sought higher office, and won election to the U.S. Senate in 1994. Seeking the Republican nomination for president in 2012, Santorum was a popular candidate among conservative voters before ending his campaign that April. He announced another presidential bid in 2015, but dropped out of the race after the 2016 Iowa Caucus. In 2017, he joined CNN as a political commentator.
Early Life
Richard John Santorum was born May 10, 1958, in Winchester, Virginia, the second of three children. His father, Aldo, an immigrant from Italy, is a psychologist, and his mother, Kay, is a nurse. The family was Catholic and attended church regularly, though Santorum later described his parents' religious practice as more dutiful than intense. Both Aldo and Kay worked for the Veterans Administration; Santorum mostly grew up in suburbs outside Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but graduated from high school in Illinois. He then attended Pennsylvania State University, where he pledged the Tau Epsilon Phi fraternity and earned a bachelor's degree in political science in 1980. He followed with an MBA from the University of Pittsburgh in 1981.
A lifelong Republican, the conservative Santorum volunteered for Senator John Heinz's campaign while still in college and then worked as an administrative assistant to Republican State Senator Doyle Corman while putting himself through law school at Dickinson School of Law. Santorum earned his law degree in 1986 and started practicing law at Kirkpatrick & Lockhart, where he met his future wife, Karen Garver Santorum, with whom he would eventually have seven children.
Political Career
In 1990, a 32-year-old Rick Santorum ran for political office for the first time as a long-shot candidate for the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania's 18th congressional district, representing the Pittsburgh suburbs where he had been raised. To the surprise of political experts, Santorum won the election, knocking seven-term Democratic incumbent Doug Walgren out of office.
Particularly effective in that first campaign were Santorum's charges that Walgren had lost touch with his constituents by spending too much time in Washington and not enough in his district. As a freshman congressman, Santorum became part of the so-called "Gang of Seven" of new GOP lawmakers (as did future Speaker of the House John Boehner). The group made its reputation by fiercely attacking corruption in the Democrat-controlled House, focusing in particular on the House banking scandal and the Congressional Post Office scandal.
Considered a rising star within the Republican Party, Santorum soon sought higher office and won election to the United States Senate in 1994, at the age of just 36, again knocking out a Democratic incumbent, Harris Wofford, in the general election. Six years later, Santorum won reelection to a second term and became chairman of the Senate Republican Conference. A skilled and spirited politician, Santorum became famous for his blunt and aggressive style in Congress, described as "confrontational, partisan, 'in your face' style of politics and government."
Political Views
Santorum garnered attention far beyond the borders of his Pennsylvania constituency for his vigorous advocacy of socially conservative views. "I'm out front on a lot of issues that matter to people of faith," he said. A conservative Catholic, Santorum became one of Washington's most prominent traditionalist voices on issues such as abortion, sexual morality, evolution and euthanasia.
Santorum introduced legislation that sought to attach to President George W. Bush's No Child Left Behind education bill the teaching of "intelligent design" as an alternative to Darwinian evolution in science classes. He also sought to prevent the husband of a brain-damaged Florida woman named Terri Schiavo from removing her from life support, and he adopted staunchly pro-life positions on all debates over abortion.
Controversies
Santorum became the center of an odd national controversy in 2003 after he was quoted in an interview comparing consensual homosexual relationships to abusive "man on child, man on dog" sex. Liberals and gay rights activists reacted with outrage; nationally syndicated sex advice columnist Dan Savage took revenge by encouraging his readers to come up with a new definition for the word "santorum."
Their graphic and scatological neologism, promoted via one of the first successful "Google bombs" to game the search algorithm, remains the top-ranking result when one enters "Santorum" into the influential search engine. When Santorum began considering a presidential run in 2012, some commentators suggested that he had no chance to win, solely due to this "Google problem."
During his second term in the United States Senate, Santorum became embroiled in a new controversy over his legal residence. Though officially residing in (and thus representing) Penn Hills, Pennsylvania, Santorum and his family spent most of their time in Leesburg, Virginia. His five eldest children were enrolled in a cyber school paid for at taxpayers' expense; in 2004, the school board determined the children were not legal residents of the Penn Hills district and asked Santorum to repay the district for the cost of their education. This fight dragged on through 2006, opening the senator up to charges that he had abandoned his constituency and thus damaging Santorum's reelection chances.
Presidential Campaigns
In 2006, a year in which Democrats nationwide made sweeping gains in congressional elections, Rick Santorum failed in his reelection campaign to Democrat Bob Casey, losing by a wide margin of 59 to 41 percent. In the wake of that loss, Santorum kept a relatively low profile on the national political scene; he ruled out a presidential run in 2008 and also bowed out of the 2010 race for Pennsylvania's other seat in the United States Senate. Instead, Santorum resumed his work as a lawyer and also became a contributor to the conservative Fox News cable network.
In 2011, however, Rick Santorum reemerged as a potential 2012 presidential candidate, with his well-established social and fiscal conservatism appealing to the GOP's energized Tea Party base. Though his national polling numbers were initially weak, Santorum started to build momentum with his Tea Party and evangelical supporters.
During the 2012 race for the Republican nomination, Santorum positioned himself as the "consistent conservative," in opposition to the frontrunner Mitt Romney, who was seen as too liberal by some Republicans. Santorum attracted enough voters to secure wins in several states, including Iowa, Tennessee, Mississippi and Kansas. But as the Pennsylvania primary approached, Santorum had less than half the number of the delegates of Romney. He decided it was time to pull out of the race, making an official announcement on April 10.
In addition to his low number of delegates, Santorum's personal life also played a factor in ending his campaign. His youngest daughter, Bella, has a genetic disorder called Trisomy 18 and was hospitalized several times during his run for the nomination, including the weekend before his announcement.
After dropping out of the race, Santorum focused on supporting other conservative politicians through his super PAC, the Red White and Blue Fund. He also published a book, American Patriots: Answering the Call to Freedom.
In May 2015, Santorum announced his second presidential bid. He launched his campaign from a factory in Cabot, Pennsylvania, vowing he would fight for the middle class. “As middle America is hollowing out, we can't sit idly by as big government politicians make it harder for our workers and then turn around and blame them for losing jobs overseas,” he said. “American families don't need another president tied to big government or big money … and today is the day we are going to begin to fight back!"
However, as the race picked up steam, Santorum found his message eclipsed by those of the bombastic Donald Trump and evangelical favorite Ted Cruz. Shortly after the Iowa Caucus on February 1, 2016, in which Cruz and Trump finished 1-2 on the Republican side, Santorum announced he was suspending his campaign.
CNN Analyst
In January 2017, Santorum announced he was joining CNN as a senior political commentator.
In March 2018, Santorum made waves for his comments that followed the March for Our Lives demonstrations, held to protest the lack of gun-control action in the wake of the tragic Valentine's Day shooting at a high school in Parkland, Florida.
“How about kids, instead of looking to someone else to solve their problem, do something about maybe taking CPR classes or trying to deal with situations [so] that when there is a violent shooter, that you can actually respond to that?” he said, during a panel discussion.