This morning, in advance of Tuesday’s Illinois primary, 2012 presidential candidate Rick Santorum joined us from the state to update us on his campaign.
Over the weekend, Santorum’s competitor Mitt Romney picked up a win in the Puerto Rico GOP primary and took home the 20 delegates offered there. As of now, Romney has a total of 521 delegates and Santorum has 253. A candidate needs 1144 delegates to win the nomination.
According to a new PPP poll, Romney is up 15 points in Illinois, but on the show this morning, Santorum discussed why he’s still confident.
“We’ve won 10 states; we’ve been outspent badly in every one of those states. We’re out there with a very principled message about what this election is about,” Santorum said. “And we’ve got a positive vision for this country. We talk about creating manufacturing jobs and our plan to do so…”
Santorum also responded to Mitt Romney’s criticisms that he’s an economic lightweight.
“If I’m a lightweight, he is a big government heavyweight. That’s what his record was,” Santorum said.
While on set, talk also turned to Santorum’s position on contraception and the president’s HHS mandate.
Below is some of the exchange with Joe Scarborough, Mika Brzezinski and Santorum:
Mika Brzezinski: Since you talk about connecting with average, ordinary Americans, some analysts including maybe some on this set might have said that you got a tad bit sidetracked on the issue of contraception in a way that doesn’t connect with not only members of your party but across the board. Just totally off message, off base in terms of what plagues this country right now. Were members of your team telling you to back off?
Santorum: As you know Mika, the issue wasn’t contraception, the issue was government-mandated health insurance, and that, to me is completely on message. The federal government shouldn’t be mandating any health insurance and specifically going after churches and saying they have to do things that are against the tenants and teachings of their faith. The left is very keen on talking about the separation of church and state when they mean the churches can’t participate and people of faith can’t participate in the public square…This president is rolling over people’s rights, and that is a big issue in this country.








