Could Rick Santorum super PAC do more harm than good?
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| Washington
One point being made repeatedly in the media of late is that super PACs are changing the usual dynamics of the presidential nominating process by allowing underdog Republican candidates to remain in the race. Without Sheldon Adelson鈥檚 millions, Newt Gingrich might well have been forced off the stage by now for lack of funds. The same is often said about Rick Santorum, on whose behalf the Red, White, and Blue Fund has 聽so far.聽Santorum is set to speak at a fundraiser for the super PAC this Thursday in Dallas.
But Paul Goldman and Mark Rozell argue in聽聽that in Santorum鈥檚 case, the super PAC could eventually wind up doing more harm than good. Specifically, they say that by embracing super PAC support, Santorum is blowing a big opportunity to carve out a pure - and unique - populist identity for himself in this race:
鈥淏y giving up the high ground easily attainable by going the other way 鈥 telling the Santorum Super PAC to cease and desist while calling on opponents to put the little people, not the big donors, first 鈥 the former senator dives all in to the wrong pool鈥.聽By legitimizing the growing role of hordes of mystery cash raised from the biggest special interests, Santorum gives away his best potential asset.鈥
Moreover, they add:聽
鈥淲hatever legitimate criticisms there might be of聽聽as the mouth that roared, the former Alaska governor is the one Republican leader who gets it. The best chance the GOP has this year to defeat Obama is to nominate someone willing to 鈥済o rogue鈥 against the GOP establishment as a prelude to challenging the Washington Establishment.聽You can鈥檛 take their money and then have any credibility as a reformer. And it will take a major populist reformer, not a conventional politician, to defeat the president.鈥
DCDecoder agrees that Santorum鈥檚 fighting-for-the-little-guy image is absolutely his best weapon in this campaign - both against Mitt Romney and, should he somehow win the nomination, against President Obama. And accepting money from a super PAC largely funded by one wealthy (and now, thanks to l, controversial) mutual-fund magnate certainly dilutes Santorum鈥檚 鈥減urity鈥 in claiming to represent the little guy against entrenched elites.
Still, it鈥檚 hard to say whether Santorum would even be in this race at all without super PAC money. And while, on the one hand, the travails of the Romney campaign have delineated the limits of what big money can buy, the reach of said money has also been on breathtaking display. As , the super PAC supporting Romney raised $6.6 million in January and spent close to $14 million, much of it on TV ads attacking Gingrich in Iowa and Florida.聽
Santorum鈥檚 best shot at mortally wounding Romney is coming up in Michigan, which votes on Feb. 28 - and where, , the pro-Santorum Red, White, and Blue Fund spent nearly $700,000 last week, and is about to book more fresh airtime. That makes the super PAC essentially the sole factor keeping the airwaves competitive for Santorum there.
Santorum聽clearly decided (like Obama, and every other candidate) that he could better afford to take a hit on the issue of super PAC money than to turn down the money itself. We鈥檒l see if it was worth it.
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