Rickypalooza
Rickypalooza
By Ed Kilgore
The whole hep political world is abuzz about the Santorum Sweep last night. So heres my brief take:
There are obviously two ways to look at Rickys Big Night. On the one hand, he ran the table in three reasonably important general-election states after being reduced to an afterthought by most party leaders and the media. His wins in Missouri and Minnesota were by crushing margins. Newt barely showed a pulse (finishing a poor third in CO and a poor fourth in MN), and Mitt showed once against that conservatives arent quite ready to settle for him. In county after county in MN and CO, Mitts performance fell vastly short of his vote in 2008, when he was the flip-flopping movement conservative candidate instead of the flip-flopping RINO hes reputed to be today.
On the other hand, Santorum did not win a single delegate last night (MO was a completely symbolic affair unconnected to the caucus next month in which delegates are selected, which is why nobody but Ricky bothered to campaign there; CO and MN, like Iowa, have multi-stage delegate selection systems in which last nights results were technically just a straw poll). Only about 65,000 votes were cast in CO; 50,000 in Minnesota; and in the one primary, 250,000 in MO. Thats compared to over 1.6 million in Florida.
Whichever of these approaches you take, it is clear Santorum is about to experience a pounding from opinion-leaders unlike anything hes ever experienced, and thats saying a lot considering his Google problem. Party elites may not consider him quite as much of a sure general-election loser as Newt, but his relentlessly extremist positions on cultural issues, among which his reputation as an international symbol of anti-gay bigotry is just the tip of the iceberg, are considered a serious problem. Meanwhile, as his weakness in SC and FL showed, Rickys strength among right-wing voters last night has not, so far, been exhibited in the South, where Tea Party folk and born-agains hate unions and welfare as much as they love Jesus, and Santorum is viewed as something of a Big Government Conservative.
So he has issues, and now he will bear the brunt of the Romney Money Machine and the well-demonstrated willingness of the Gingrich campaign to say and do anything to tear down opponents...
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http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/political-animal-a/2012_02/rickypalooza035267.php
"Rickypalooza"