Skip to main content
Part of complete coverage on
 

Romney jabs at Santorum's record in CNN debate

By Rachel Streitfeld and John Helton, CNN
updated 12:08 PM EST, Thu February 23, 2012
Highlights from CNN debate in Arizona
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Romney, Santorum have lengthy, contentious exchange over earmarks
  • "You don't know what you're talking about," Santorum tells Romney
  • Santorum, Romney find common ground on contraception question
  • Paul said government shouldn't interject itself into contraception debate

Mesa, Arizona (CNN) -- Rick Santorum found that his position at the top of polls made him the biggest target in Wednesday's CNN Republican presidential debate, possibly the last of the GOP primary and caucus campaign.

Mitt Romney, who has been front-runner off and on through the campaign but saw his momentum blunted by Santorum's recent surge, went after the former Pennsylvania senator over his record in Congress, trying to shoulder past him before Tuesday's primaries in Arizona and Michigan, which most polls show neck-and-neck between the two.

"Voting for the debt ceiling five different times without voting for compensating cuts," said Romney, describing Santorum as a big spender in Congress. "Voting to fund Planned Parenthood, voting to expand the Department of Education. During his term in the Senate spending grew by some 80% of the federal government."

Santorum, who surged to the top of state and national polling after sweeping the February 7 contests in Colorado, Minnesota and Missouri, was sitting center stage next to Romney and was quick to fire back.

"When you look at my record of never having raised taxes -- Gov. Romney raised several hundred million dollars in taxes and fees in Massachusetts. I never voted to raise taxes," Santorum said. "Gov. Romney even today suggested raising taxes on the top 1%, adopting the Occupy Wall Street rhetoric. I'm not going to adopt that rhetoric."

Santorum 'voted against his principles'
Analysts: Romney outperformed Santorum
Santorum, Romney clash on earmarks
Birth control question booed at debate

Santorum's opponents joined together to attack a vote he made in support of larger bill that, in part, provided funds to Planned Parenthood.

"If you voted for Planned Parenthood, like the senator has, you voted for birth control pills," Paul charged. "And you literally, because funds are fungible, you literally vote for abortions because Planned Parenthood gets the money ... they have the money left over to do abortion."

Romney followed up aggressively, saying Santorum had not backed away from the vote in a subsequent interview.

Santorum insisted he had always been clear that as president he would defund Planned Parenthood.

"I admit I voted for large appropriation bills and there were things in there I didn't like," he said, but explained he had also created a program that funded abstinence-based education in schools

Truth squad: Fact checking the debate

The candidates confronted each other in a lengthy and contentious argument over the congressional process of earmarking, often derided as "pork-barrel" spending.

"Congress has a role to play when it comes to appropriating money," Santorum declared in a full-throated, detailed defense of the process -- one he said Romney had taken advantage of when he requested funds for the 2002 Olympic Games in Utah.

"I didn't follow all of that," Romney cracked after Santorum finished speaking. While criticizing Santorum for some of the earmarks he supported, Romney defended his request for Olympic funds.

"While I was fighting to save the Olympics, you were fighting to save the 'Bridge to Nowhere,' " he said.

Santorum did not back down, telling Romney: "You don't know what you're talking about."

The former senator said Romney's defense of that Olympic funding request amounted to approval of the earmarking process.

"What you just suggested as to how earmarks should work in the future is exactly how they worked in the past," Santorum said. "So I suspect you would have supported earmarks if you were in the United States Senate."

Romney also came up with a new line of defense against Santorum's repeated attacks on the health care plan passed in Massachusetts when he was governor as being the blueprint for Obama's national health care law by attacking Santorum's support of former Republican Sen. Arlen Specter against conservative challenger Pat Toomey. Specter later switched parties and voted for Obama's health care law.

"If we had said 'no' to Arlen Specter, we would not have ObamaCare," Romney told Santorum.

The two were seated next to each other at a table, flanked by Texas Rep. Ron Paul and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and often turned to each other as they attacked.

While listening to Santorum's criticism, Romney shook his head or looked slightly to the side with a pained expression on his face. Santorum raised his eyebrows at Romney's attacks at him and looked off to the side as if he was running Romney's words through his mind.

Meanwhile, at several points Gingrich was captured chuckling at the other candidates' statements.

The debate, hosted by CNN and the Republican Party of Arizona at the Mesa Arts Center, was the 20th in the campaign and the last before the candidates will share a stage before primaries in Arizona and Michigan on Tuesday, before Washington state holds a contest on March 3, and before 10 more states hold primaries or caucuses on Super Tuesday on March 6. And no more debates are scheduled. CNN canceled a debate in advance of Super Tuesday after Romney, Santorum and Paul pulled out.

Perry: Race could go to the convention

The four last met on January 26 before the Florida primary. Romney went on to win big there and in Nevada, while Gingrich, who had just scored an impressive victory in South Carolina, faded fast.

While Romney and Santorum grew heated at times, Paul deflated the tension a bit when asked why he had labeled Santorum a fake in a television ad that attacked the former senator's conservative credentials.

"Because he's a fake," Paul said.

That line drew cheers, laughter and boos, before Santorum assured moderator John King that he was real.

"Congratulations," Paul responded.

A question on contraception gave Gingrich the opportunity to attack moderator King and a chance for agreement between Santorum and Romney.

When King related a viewer's question on whether the candidates believed in birth control, Gingrich took immediate offense.

"You did not once in the 2008 campaign, not once did anybody in the elite media ask why Barack Obama voted in favor of legalizing infanticide. OK? So let's be clear here," Gingrich said, which brought applause from the audience. "If we're going to have a debate about who the extremist is on these issues, it is President Obama who, as a state senator, voted to protect doctors who killed babies who survived the abortion. It is not the Republicans."

However, Santorum and Romney did reach general agreement on the budding controversy over the issue, as both bemoaned the number of American children born out of wedlock.

"How can the country survive if children are being raised in homes where it's so much harder to succeed economically?" Santorum asked, but added he was speaking ideologically rather than advocating government intervention.

"Just because I'm talking about it doesn't mean I want a government program to fix it," he said.

Romney suggested the president should be "willing to say" the best opportunity a parent could give his child is a mother and a father.

Paul, a former obstetrician, said government should not insert itself into a debate over contraception. But, likening a user of birth control to a gun owner, Paul said the problem was not the contraception pill but the "immorality" of society.

"I think it's sort of like the argument -- conservatives use the argument all the time about guns. Guns don't kill, criminals kill," Paul said. "So, in a way, it's the morality of society that we have to deal with. The pill is there and, you know, it contributes, maybe, but the pills can't be blamed for the immorality of our society."

Asked to use one word to describe themselves, Paul proudly replied, "consistent."

Santorum's word was "courage," and Romney's was "resolute."

The curmudgeonly Gingrich got a laugh when he described himself as "cheerful."

CNN's Marlena Baldacci and Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
Get all the latest news in Campaign 2012 at CNN's Election Center. There's the latest news, a delegate counter and much more.
updated 3:41 PM EDT, Wed May 23, 2012
Dark theories about President Barack Obama's citizenship show no signs of fading away. But "birthers," as those skeptics of Obama's heritage are known, no longer seem relegated to tinfoil hat fringes of American politics.
updated 1:10 PM EDT, Fri May 25, 2012
Wanted: A political attack dog ready to tear into President Barack Obama. Must play by team rules, be able to withstand the pressure of a presidential campaign and pass a rigorous vetting process.
updated 5:30 AM EDT, Fri May 18, 2012
Brinksmanship tactics from both major parties are not new -- in fact, they are all too commonplace on both sides in this Congress as the value of the compromise among moderate voices has all but disappeared. And it appears many voters want it that way.
updated 11:02 AM EDT, Thu May 24, 2012
Over the next several generations, the wave of minority voters -- who, according to the Census, now represent more than half of the nation's population born in the past year -- will become more of a power base in places like Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia.
updated 11:33 AM EDT, Wed May 23, 2012
Obama and Romney are two very different candidates joined by similar, yet hollow, attacks on their faith. Those attacks illustrate the intense mix of identity politics simmering just beneath the surface of the presidential race.
With the Republican presidential race all but over, the focus shifts to presumptive nominee Mitt Romney's choice of a running mate. Here's a list of those who have generated some buzz.
updated 10:57 AM EDT, Mon May 21, 2012
They had the money. They had the organization. They had the ballot access. What they were missing, however, was a candidate.
updated 8:06 PM EDT, Thu May 10, 2012
If you weren't lucky enough to win a seat at the table for dinner tonight with George Clooney and President Barack Obama, fear not. You may still have a chance to party with the president and a celebrity or two in the near future.
updated 12:23 PM EDT, Fri May 11, 2012
With Mitt Romney's victories in the April 24 Republican primaries, a new phase of the campaign began at Obama re-election headquarters in Chicago. After a year spent hiring staff and building an organization, Obama for America finally had what it had been waiting for: an opponent.
updated 8:42 PM EDT, Tue April 24, 2012
With student loan rates set to double in July, President Obama is using the issue to try to recapture the elusive youth vote.
Steps by both political parties to court younger voters proved it's the youth voting bloc's turn to come under the national spotlight, attention that will continue through the November general election.
Famed pastor Joel Osteen reiterated his position that Mitt Romney is a Christian, saying as long as the likely GOP presidential nominee believes that Jesus is the Son of God then he subscribes to the Christian faith.
updated 2:52 PM EDT, Mon April 16, 2012
This presidential election tells us something unexpected about American politics. It appears that both parties will have pragmatic problem-solvers at the top of their tickets.
updated 2:36 PM EDT, Fri March 30, 2012
Another major conservative figure backs Mitt Romney, adding to chorus calling for the divisive GOP nomination battle to come to an end.
Mitt Romney win
Track who's up and who's down with the freshest national polls on the CNN Polling Center.
ADVERTISEMENT