Rick Santorum has only 6 days to bring his Iowa success to New Hampshire. Is this possible? Rick will not beat Mitt in New Hampshire, I think even Santorum knows this but what Rick needs to do is beat expectations. Before the great showing in Iowa, Rick was only showing a 5% following in the latest polls. Even if Rick is able to bring more money into his campaign coffer all the TV ads available have been bought up by Romney. The following article summarizes the tough road Rick has:
Los Angeles Times: Rick Santorum: Will Iowa ‘rocket boost’ propel him in New Hampshire?Christian Science MonitorFor Rick Santorum, a near-tie with Mitt Romney in Iowa shows strength among evangelical conservatives. But New Hampshire is different, and S …
Rick Santorum will have to get back to the shoe leather like he did in Iowa but with only 6 days left before the primary a big task is ahead for him. Rick’s campaign in New Hampshire has been helped with Michele Bachmann getting out of the presidential race and Rick Perry jumping immediately to South Carolina.
A decent showing in New Hampshire will help Rick Santorum pull together the strong Christian conservative group that is so important to win in the South Carolina primary. As Santorum said in his speech after the results from the Iowa caucus “Game On”.
In the last 4 days Rick Santorum has surged forward with his share of possible caucus voters almost doubling. If Rick’s current momentum would continue he would be in a virtual tie with Mitt Romney on Tuesday.
And what is resonating with the Iowa voters, his faith in God, his recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and his strong stance with the people of Israel, his determination to eliminate “Obama Care”, and his pro-life convictions.
Daily BeastRick Santorum’s Last-Minute Crusade in IowaDaily BeastRick Santorum is on a mission. The once darker-than-dark horse candidate for president has become the latest member of the GOP pack to rocket up in the polls, moving from single digits to a strong third place finish in the highly influential Des Moines Register poll released Saturday night.
Although the Register poll put Santorum nine points behind Mitt Romney, who had 24 percent support, it also showed Santorum’s share of the vote doubling over the four days that voters were surveyed, and bringing him to within one point of Romney on the final day. If he can stay on his upward trajectory, it has suddenly entered the realm of possibility that the former Pennsylvania senator could shoot past Rep. Ron Paul and Romney to win the Iowa caucuses, or place in the top three at the very least.
But unlike Romney, who is pitching himself to evangelicals as well as business-minded moderates, and Paul, whose libertarian streak has won him his own merry band of backers, Santorum has just one path to success—through a swath of tiny, but highly concentrated pockets of values voters in northwest Iowa, where Republicans won 88 percent of the vote in 2008 and Santorum must now consolidate the still fractured evangelical vote behind his campaign.
To that end, the Santorum campaign launched a final, frenzied push to win over as many of Iowa’s religious voters as possible on New Year’s weekend. Riding with family and friends in a bus emblazoned with “Faith, Freedom and Values,” the caravan stopped in towns like Indianola, Knoxville, Ottumwa, and Oskaloosa, where the devout Catholic and father of seven gave deeply religious remarks to overflow crowds of church-going people hungry to hear them.
“The Founders believed God gave us rights because we were formed in His image,” Santorum told a standing-room-only group in the basement of the Orange City bank Sunday night. “Do the work of freedom. Put on the cloak of a citizen. Go out and make a difference for your country.”
Genesis 1 26-28 – “(26) And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth. (27) So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them. (28) And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.”
Beyond the language of the Founders, he also specifically said he would recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, abolish “Obamacare” and restore pro-life values to the White House. He also hit the president’s integrity hard, stopping just short of calling Obama a liar. “We have a president who is not concerned about the facts,” he said. “He doesn’t care. It’s not what is true, it is what he believes to be true.”
Saturday, Dec. 31, Rick Santorum visits a Des Moines area coffee house. He then met with a group of pastors and spiritual leaders who are concerned and pray regularly for a moral, cultural and spiritual awakening in America.
This trip and dozens of marathon journeys around Iowa like it in the last year seem to be paying off for Santorum. In addition to securing two last-minute endorsements from key evangelical elders—Bob Vander Plaats, the president of The Family Leader and Iowa campaign chairman of Mike Huckabee’s campaign, and Chuck Hurley, President of the Iowa Family Policy Center—voters who showed up at one of Santorum’s events as “undecided” declared that they would back the former senator in the end.
He hit the president’s integrity hard, stopping just short of calling Obama a liar.
“I think he won my vote,” Randy Bartman said after the Orange City meeting. “He sounds like a strict constitutionalist. He stands up for the core values of this country.”
Randy and wife, Tina, said they had both wanted to vote for Herman Cain until he dropped out of the race in the fall. With just two days until the caucuses, they were both still deciding between Santourm and Texas governor Rick Perry. After Santorum’s remarks, both Bartmans said they would caucus for Santorum on Tuesday.
“It’s mostly just the way he stands on faith for the country and values for family and the way he feels about abortion,” Tina said. “He just sounds like he really cares about the country.”
Henrietta Dystra from Hull, Iowa praised his moral convictions. “I just appreciate his values. Those are our values.”
Mark Lundberg, the chairman of the Sioux County Republican Party, a GOP stronghold that went 8 to 1 Republican in the last general election predicted Santorum would excell in the area on the support of late-deciding conservatives like him. “I am leaning toward Santorum,” said Lundberg, who added that he believes voters were looking for the best person to reflect their beliefs, who also had a realistic shot at becoming president.
“At some point you have to have a little pragmatic vote involved,” Lundberg said. “If you can’t get elected, you can’t get anything done.”
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Patricia Murphy is a writer in Washington, D.C., where she covers Congress and politics.
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Yes, Rick Santorum would bring “Faith, Freedom and Values” back to the White House and this is what the Iowa religious voters want and are not getting from the Obama administration. Santorum is earning the Iowa vote.