About Me
- Judy Chaffee
- This site is the inspiration of a former reporter/photographer for one of New England's largest daily newspapers and for various magazines.
Monday, February 6, 2012
Tim Pawlenty Used to Tweak Santorum -- By Michael Warren, The Weekly Standard
On a conference call Monday afternoon, a Mitt Romney campaign surrogate—Tim
Pawlenty, the former Minnesota governor—criticized Rick Santorum for being part
of the “big-spending establishment in Congress and in the influence-peddling
industry that surrounds Congress,” and for previously supporting earmarked
spending.
Pawlenty endorsed Romney soon after dropping out of the
Republican presidential primary last year. Today’s call was organized by
Romney’s presidential campaign.
Voters heading to Minnesota’s caucuses on Tuesday, Pawlenty
said, ought to know this about Santorum’s record. “Rick Santorum is clearly not
as conservative on these matters as conservative caucus attendees or Republican
or conservative activists and people who are part of the conservative movement
more broadly,” he said.
One reporter asked Pawlenty if Romney and himself are as
conservative as Minnesota’s caucus attendees. “I consider myself a conservative,
and Mitt Romney, by the way, has got a conservative record,” Pawlenty said. “His
record, of course, isn’t perfect. None of the records of these candidates are
perfect. But Mitt Romney’s record is a conservative record. Again, not perfect
but conservative.”
Santorum has repeatedly defended the earmarks he sought as a member of Congress, and he claims,
now that their abuse became evident, he supports banning them. “People change
position from time to time for various reasons,” Pawlenty said about Santorum’s
transformation. “And the fact that [Santorum] has now tried to move away from
the fact that he was a champion of earmarks is noteworthy…. He’s held himself
out as the perfect or near-perfect conservative when in fact that’s not his
record.”
But the campaign surrogate did not say how Romney’s own
policy reversal on, say, abortion is any different than Santorum’s.
In fact, Romney’s own record shows he sought federal spending
when he was governor of Massachusetts. In 2003, Cindy Gillespie, Romney’s chief
of legislative and intergovernmental affairs, sent a memo to cabinet officers outlining the governor’s plans
to increase federal funding to Massachusetts.
“A major priority of our Administration is ensure that
Massachusetts receives the maximum amount of dollars available from the federal
government,” the memo reads. “We can increase Massachusetts’s share of federal
dollars by implementing a system of identifying and tracking grants so that we
can aggressively advocate and pursue the discretionary funding opportunities and
closely track the receipt of the formula and other funds.”
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