Toward the end of Saturday night’s debate, the candidates were
asked when they last experienced financial strain. Rick Santorum
answered with a compelling reflection on the value of a stable
family during times of financial hardship:
SENATOR RICK SANTORUM: I c— I can say that I grew up in a very
modest home and was very blessed to have— all my basic needs met.
And one of the most basic needs and the most important one that
I’ve learned was that I was blessed to have a mother and a father.
That was the most important gift that I was given, that I had two
parents who were together, who loved me, who supported me and made
me feel safe. And made the— the— the little things that no one
would consider luxuries today feel like luxuries because I had that
sense of security.
Unfortunately, America, we see the family continuing to break
down. And with that, the economic status of those families.
Single-parent households in America now have poverty levels
approaching 40%. So— you not only have the lack of security and
stability in so many cases, because moms are doin’ heroic work
tryin’ to hold things together, but it’s hard.
And so what we can do as a federal government, we can do more
importantly as the leader of this country, to try to promote this
institution of marriage. Try to promote the family and try to
nurture this environment that we have to— to make sure that
families are elevated and supported and fathers and mothers are
there to take care of their families and— and— and— and be there
for their children. That’s the most important luxury, is a mom and
a dad.
More or less alone among the Republican candidates, Santorum has
consistently highlighted the ways in which government policies make
it harder for families to navigate the economy. Most of the others
have focused solely on the ways that, for instance, the tax code
makes it harder for corporations to find success and remain
internationally competitive. Taxes, regulations, and other
policies, though, don’t just shape the business climate. They also
affect households in countless ways.
A lot of Santorum’s debate airtime has gone toward foreign
policy and other issues on which he isn’t too far removed from the
other candidates. He’s set himself apart on topics that are
particularly relevant for families. For example, he’s highlighted
his leadership role in passing welfare reform — one of the
achievements of the past generation that conservatives can be most
proud of — every chance he gets. He’s offered the
most piercing critique of Romney-style health care regulatory
systems of any candidate. And he’s pointed out that the other
candidates’ efforts to outbid each other on supply-side tax reforms
have led them to
forget the need for tax relief for middle class
families.
Santorum’s legislative experience and appreciation of the
federal government’s effects on families is, at least in my
estimation, his greatest asset as a candidate. If he did more to
highlight his advantage in advancing pro-family policies, it could
help his campaign and it would certainly benefit the level of
debate in the GOP primary.