Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Santorum needs Joe Wilson shouting at him



     Frank Bruni has an interesting column up today on the phenomenon that is Rick Santorum. Having made himself out to be Catholic Church's hall monitor for America, he's been roundly rejected by Catholic voters- while among evangelicals, whose antipathy toward Catholicism goes back decades, get all moist about his Savonarola-like denunciations (even The Secular Right, where NRO apparatchiks blog on their days off, likens Santorum to the Florentine Hater).
     As Illinois voters go to the polls today, The Great Scold has a new target. The President, he says, is a Bad Dad:

          Rick Santorum said President Obama set a bad example and potentially endangered American tourists by letting his daughter Malia go to Mexico on a spring break vacation.
          Santorum told Glenn Beck that an American president should not send his own family into the area given State Department travel warnings for Mexico.
          “What I would say is that the president’s actions should reflect what his administration is saying,” Santorum said in a phone interview with Beck. “If the administration is saying that it’s not safe to have people down there, then just because you can send 25 Secret Service agents doesn’t mean you should do it. You should set an example. I think that’s what presidents do. They set an example. And when the government is saying this is not safe, then you don’t set the example by sending your kids down there.”
          Earlier today, Politico reported that several news outlets had removed reports on Malia’s vacation at the request of the White House, which has long asked the press to refrain covering the president’s children when not accompanied by their parents.

     Talking Points Memo wins the Deadpan Close of the Week for this story end:

          As Beck’s website, The Blaze, notes, there is no State Department travel warning in effect for Oaxaca, the popular tourist destination where the first daughter is reportedly vacationing.

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