After Rick Santorum’s second place finish in Iowa, The Editors of National Review advised Mitt Romney:
Campaigning in South Carolina today with Tea Party favorite Gov. Nikki Haley and Sen. John McCain, R-Ari., Romney appears to have found the perfect way to thread that needle: attack President Obama and the National Labor Relations Board. In a new ad now airing in the state, Romney says:
Santorum is not mentioned in the ad, but no other Republican candidate in the field is as close to organized labor as Santorum is. Cato’s Michael Tanner wrote at National Review this week:
And RedState‘s Erick Erickson reminds us today:
Santorum also voted to retain the 1930s-era Davis-Bacon Act that forces taxpayers to pay union wages in government-funded construction and gives Big Labor an unfair advantage over non-union companies and workers (“On the Motion to Table (motion to table Kennedy Amendment No. 4031 to S.Amdt. 4000 to S.Con.Res. 57),” Senate Bill Clerk, Vote Number: 134, www.senate.gov, 5/22/1996)
Santorum supported Arlen Specter over Pat Toomey in 2004 helping Specter secure the nomination. Specter went on to cast the 60th vote for Obamacare and then lost, in 2010, to Pat Toomey. Toomey, now in the Senate, is con-sponsoring Jim DeMint’s National Right to Work legislation — the very legislation Rick Santorum filibustered.
There is plenty, if not more, room for social conservatives in the Republican party now then there was in the mid-90s. Romney certainly has gotten more socially conservative since that time.
But there is also a lot less room for pro-union Republicans in the party. Has Santorum moved right on these economic issues? If so, should Tea Party conservatives trust his free market conversion?
