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In reply to the discussion: PPP National Polls: Santorum 38, Romney 23, Gingrich 17, Paul 13; minus Newt 50-28 [View all]muriel_volestrangler
(106,285 posts)16. Santorum had extensive links to dodgy lobbyists as a senator
The Sordid K Street Past of Rick Santorum
Since losing his Pennsylvania Senate seat in 2006, Santorum has used his connections to land a series of highly-paid jobs. Consol Energy, a natural gas company specializing in hydrofracking and the fifth-largest donor to his 2006 campaign, paid him $142,000 for consulting work. He also earned $395,000 sitting on the board of Universal Health Services (UHS), a for-profit hospital chain whose CEO made contributions to his Senate campaigns and which stood to benefit from a big hike in Medicare payments Santorum proposed in 2003. (Incidentally, the Department of Justice sued UHS for Medicare and Medicaid fraud during Santorums four-year tenure on its board.) Santorum also earned paychecks from a religious advocacy group, a lobbying firm, and a think tank. For pushing legislation benefitting UHS and several other companies, one ethics group named Santorum to its most corrupt Senators list.
Santorum has made his post-Senate career doing the sort of quasi-lobbying that helped sink Newt Gingrichs campaign in Iowa. But in fact, while still in office, he was a central actor in an even more sordid venture: The K Street Project. Started in 1989 by GOP strategist Grover Norquist and brought to prominence by former House majority leader Tom DeLay in 1995, the K Street Project was a highly organized effort to funnel Republican Congressional staffers into jobs at lobbying firms, trade organizations, and corporations, while attempting to block Democrats from those same posts. From 2001 until 2006, Santorum was the Projects point man for the Senate, while House Majority Whip Roy Blunt manned the House side.
In 2006, the K Street Project was effectively forced to shut down amid public outcry; the following year, an ethics reform law made such outfits illegal. But in its heyday, it helped create an unprecedented revolving door between the White House, Congress and K Street, blurring distinctions between Republican policy and corporate welfare. As Elizabeth Drew put it in a 2005 New York Review of Books piece, Democratic lobbyists have been pushed out of their jobs as a result; business associations who hire Democrats for prominent positions have been subject to retribution. They are told that they wont be able to see the people on Capitol Hill they want to see. Nicholas Confessore, in a groundbreaking 2003 Washington Monthly expose of the Project, detailed the goal bluntly: First, move the party to K Street. Then move the government there, too.
At the center of all this was Santorum. According to Confessore, Santorum conducted weekly breakfasts with lobbyists, and occasionally Congressmen and White House staff, during which he attempted to match Republican Hill staffers with K Street job openings. As Confessore put it, Every week, the lobbyists present pass around a list of the jobs available and discuss whom to support. Santorum's responsibility is to make sure each one is filled by a loyal Republicana Senator's chief of staff, for instance, or a top White House aide, or another lobbyist whose reliability has been demonstrated. The group refused to meet with Democrats, and threatened sanctions against lobbies that did.
http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/99323/santorum-corruption-k-street-project
Since losing his Pennsylvania Senate seat in 2006, Santorum has used his connections to land a series of highly-paid jobs. Consol Energy, a natural gas company specializing in hydrofracking and the fifth-largest donor to his 2006 campaign, paid him $142,000 for consulting work. He also earned $395,000 sitting on the board of Universal Health Services (UHS), a for-profit hospital chain whose CEO made contributions to his Senate campaigns and which stood to benefit from a big hike in Medicare payments Santorum proposed in 2003. (Incidentally, the Department of Justice sued UHS for Medicare and Medicaid fraud during Santorums four-year tenure on its board.) Santorum also earned paychecks from a religious advocacy group, a lobbying firm, and a think tank. For pushing legislation benefitting UHS and several other companies, one ethics group named Santorum to its most corrupt Senators list.
Santorum has made his post-Senate career doing the sort of quasi-lobbying that helped sink Newt Gingrichs campaign in Iowa. But in fact, while still in office, he was a central actor in an even more sordid venture: The K Street Project. Started in 1989 by GOP strategist Grover Norquist and brought to prominence by former House majority leader Tom DeLay in 1995, the K Street Project was a highly organized effort to funnel Republican Congressional staffers into jobs at lobbying firms, trade organizations, and corporations, while attempting to block Democrats from those same posts. From 2001 until 2006, Santorum was the Projects point man for the Senate, while House Majority Whip Roy Blunt manned the House side.
In 2006, the K Street Project was effectively forced to shut down amid public outcry; the following year, an ethics reform law made such outfits illegal. But in its heyday, it helped create an unprecedented revolving door between the White House, Congress and K Street, blurring distinctions between Republican policy and corporate welfare. As Elizabeth Drew put it in a 2005 New York Review of Books piece, Democratic lobbyists have been pushed out of their jobs as a result; business associations who hire Democrats for prominent positions have been subject to retribution. They are told that they wont be able to see the people on Capitol Hill they want to see. Nicholas Confessore, in a groundbreaking 2003 Washington Monthly expose of the Project, detailed the goal bluntly: First, move the party to K Street. Then move the government there, too.
At the center of all this was Santorum. According to Confessore, Santorum conducted weekly breakfasts with lobbyists, and occasionally Congressmen and White House staff, during which he attempted to match Republican Hill staffers with K Street job openings. As Confessore put it, Every week, the lobbyists present pass around a list of the jobs available and discuss whom to support. Santorum's responsibility is to make sure each one is filled by a loyal Republicana Senator's chief of staff, for instance, or a top White House aide, or another lobbyist whose reliability has been demonstrated. The group refused to meet with Democrats, and threatened sanctions against lobbies that did.
http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/99323/santorum-corruption-k-street-project
While the more power-hungry Republicans may not see much wrong with all that, it could hurt his Tea Party support - and others will look at it an reconsider his chances in a general election.
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PPP National Polls: Santorum 38, Romney 23, Gingrich 17, Paul 13; minus Newt 50-28 [View all]
BrentWil
Feb 2012
OP
I hope the conservatives tell Romney, if his Super PAC attacks Santorum, they will kick Romney out
RickFromMN
Feb 2012
#13
Lots of the Republican candidates had a moment in the spotlight. But then?
Brettongarcia
Feb 2012
#26
Hypothesis: Catholic war-on-Iraq/Iran-votes, which had hoped to buy a SCOTUS justice with
patrice
Feb 2012
#7
Oh would I love to see Rick get nominated. IMO it would result in an historic Obama landslide
totodeinhere
Feb 2012
#17
I do bleieve that Obama would defeat Jeb. But Jeb's numbers would probably
totodeinhere
Feb 2012
#35
there is not a shred of evidence that a Jeb candidacy is in the cards for 2012
Douglas Carpenter
Feb 2012
#34
He might get a pass from the media, but they can't stop the ads that would tell all. nt
nanabugg
Feb 2012
#45