Detecting language using up to the first 30 seconds. Use `--language` to specify the language Detected language: English [00:00.000 --> 00:17.040] This Sunday, live from Des Moines on this New Year's Day, just 48 hours before the Iowa [00:17.040 --> 00:22.340] caucuses, the official start of this presidential election year. [00:22.340 --> 00:27.480] Senator Rick Santorum surges in the closing days, but will it be enough to buy him a ticket [00:27.480 --> 00:28.880] out of the Hawkeye State? [00:28.880 --> 00:33.480] Iowa provides the spark, there's plenty of tender on the ground that will start burning [00:33.480 --> 00:35.480] in these other states. [00:35.480 --> 00:38.960] Senator Santorum here with us for an exclusive interview this morning. [00:38.960 --> 00:44.200] Meanwhile, Mitt Romney is trying to keep his spot atop the polls as he makes his final [00:44.200 --> 00:45.560] push. [00:45.560 --> 00:50.720] This is an election not only to replace the president, it's an election to save the soul [00:50.720 --> 00:51.720] of America. [00:51.720 --> 00:57.560] And Newt Gingrich, still losing some support, but will his emotional moment in Iowa humanize [00:57.560 --> 01:01.040] him to voters? [01:01.040 --> 01:07.080] Dealing with, you know, the real problems of real people in my family. [01:07.080 --> 01:11.400] And so it's not a theory, it's in fact, you know, my mother. [01:11.400 --> 01:15.520] We'll break down the state of the race and the impact of the caucuses with the chairman [01:15.520 --> 01:21.400] of Iowa's Republican Party, Matt Strong, and NBC News political director Chuck Todd. [01:21.400 --> 01:25.720] Plus full analysis from our political round table, columnist for the Des Moines Register, [01:25.720 --> 01:31.840] Cathy Obradovich, Republican strategist Mike Murphy, New York Times columnist David Brooks, [01:31.840 --> 01:37.440] Time Magazine senior political analyst Mark Halperin, and host of Andrea Mitchell Reports, [01:37.440 --> 01:38.440] NBC's Andrea Mitchell. [01:38.440 --> 01:51.440] Live from Des Moines, Iowa, this is a special edition of Beat the Press with David Gregory. [01:51.440 --> 01:59.680] Good morning. [01:59.680 --> 02:00.680] Here we go. [02:00.680 --> 02:05.040] The presidential race of 2012 is about to officially begin as the voting starts here [02:05.040 --> 02:06.880] in Iowa on Tuesday. [02:06.880 --> 02:11.100] And here's how the race looks this morning with the Des Moines Register poll showing [02:11.100 --> 02:16.840] a three way race now with Romney leading Ron Paul by two points and Rick Santorum with [02:16.840 --> 02:17.880] a late surge. [02:17.880 --> 02:23.240] We will talk to Santorum about his surprise momentum in the race in just a couple of moments. [02:23.240 --> 02:27.600] But first, we have with us NBC's political director Chuck Todd and the chairman of Iowa's [02:27.600 --> 02:29.820] Republican Party, Matt Strong. [02:29.820 --> 02:30.820] Welcome to both of you. [02:30.820 --> 02:31.820] Good morning. [02:31.820 --> 02:32.820] Happy New Year. [02:32.820 --> 02:33.820] Good morning. [02:33.820 --> 02:34.820] Welcome to Iowa. [02:34.820 --> 02:36.920] So Chuck Todd, partner, where are we this morning? [02:36.920 --> 02:40.680] Well, I think we're trying to figure out this is what are Iowa caucus goers going to do? [02:40.680 --> 02:41.680] What are these Republicans? [02:41.680 --> 02:44.240] Are they going to come into these caucuses Tuesday night and pick a president? [02:44.240 --> 02:47.980] Are they going to do what they've done in the past, which is send a message and winnow [02:47.980 --> 02:48.980] the field? [02:48.980 --> 02:53.040] If they come in and a lot of them want to pick a president, Mitt Romney is going to [02:53.040 --> 02:54.040] win. [02:54.040 --> 02:55.040] Turnouts going to go up. [02:55.040 --> 02:57.180] You're going to see the casual voters show up. [02:57.180 --> 02:58.500] And that's good for Romney. [02:58.500 --> 03:05.280] If it's the old style, sort of the activists that show up, I think Santorum has enough [03:05.280 --> 03:06.280] momentum. [03:06.280 --> 03:08.260] There's a little bit of a wild card here in Rick Perry. [03:08.260 --> 03:11.660] But then Santorum does get out of here with some momentum. [03:11.660 --> 03:13.700] And I think that that's what we're what we don't know. [03:13.700 --> 03:15.440] Let me stick with Santorum with you, Chuck. [03:15.440 --> 03:19.960] If you look inside the numbers of the poll, the last couple of days when they were in [03:19.960 --> 03:25.360] the field talking to folks, this is what you see that Santorum is actually in 21 percent [03:25.360 --> 03:29.960] because in those last two days, his numbers actually shoot up six percent. [03:29.960 --> 03:34.880] So if you're measuring intensity, not looking at the full range of the poll, but just the [03:34.880 --> 03:38.240] last couple of days, you see Santorum has really got that buzz. [03:38.240 --> 03:40.320] And that was the big thing out of the NBC Marist poll. [03:40.320 --> 03:43.360] And if you look at both polls together, you can almost see they sort of fit together and [03:43.360 --> 03:44.360] you see this. [03:44.360 --> 03:48.120] And it was Santorum and Ron Paul, for instance, that had much more intensity than Mitt Romney. [03:48.120 --> 03:52.960] In fact, Rick Perry had more intense support in our poll than Mitt Romney did. [03:52.960 --> 03:54.360] And that's the Romney problem. [03:54.360 --> 03:58.060] He's got the, well, I guess I'm going to be for Romney voter. [03:58.060 --> 04:00.280] But does that person show up? [04:00.280 --> 04:01.280] And that's what we don't know. [04:01.280 --> 04:05.140] So, Matt Straughan, you're the chairman of the party here in the state. [04:05.140 --> 04:06.140] And this is important. [04:06.140 --> 04:09.560] I mean, this is the first voting in the presidential campaign. [04:09.560 --> 04:12.800] What's the mindset of an Iowa Republican going into this caucus? [04:12.800 --> 04:15.960] Well, I think the other key takeaway, not just in the NBC Marist poll, but in the Des [04:15.960 --> 04:19.840] Moines Register poll this morning, is the fact that two out of every five caucus scores [04:19.840 --> 04:22.320] could still change their mind between now and caucus day. [04:22.320 --> 04:23.320] And I think it gets to- [04:23.320 --> 04:24.320] That's a lot of volatility. [04:24.320 --> 04:25.320] It is. [04:25.320 --> 04:27.200] And it's moved from three out of five, which it was just a couple of weeks ago. [04:27.200 --> 04:31.620] And I think that's the juxtaposition between the desire to beat Barack Obama, but also [04:31.620 --> 04:35.960] making sure that we have a nominee that can aggressively articulate the Republican-principled [04:35.960 --> 04:38.000] conservative message going into a general election. [04:38.000 --> 04:39.000] So what's more important? [04:39.000 --> 04:44.640] As we've seen, Santorum's latest ad is really about electability, I can beat Barack Obama. [04:44.640 --> 04:49.160] But for the breadth of the campaigning in Iowa, it's been, who's the true conservative? [04:49.160 --> 04:53.760] Has there been a change because there hasn't been a love affair among voters with Mitt [04:53.760 --> 04:56.760] Romney, who's been the front runner throughout most of this contest? [04:56.760 --> 04:59.720] But I think the first thing you see when you talk to any Iowa Republican is that desire [04:59.720 --> 05:03.520] to beat Barack Obama, because we understand that we can't afford former years in Obama [05:03.520 --> 05:07.520] administration that is hostile to our party's values and our principles. [05:07.520 --> 05:11.080] And that's the tension, why you still have two out of every five Iowa caucus scores have [05:11.080 --> 05:12.880] not yet made a decision. [05:12.880 --> 05:15.280] And that's really going to get down to on Tuesday night. [05:15.280 --> 05:18.760] You always hear the mantra, organization, organization, organization. [05:18.760 --> 05:23.400] The organized campaign is going to have someone in each of those 1,774 precincts to make the [05:23.400 --> 05:27.600] case not only why a candidate can beat Barack Obama, but why they have the principles of [05:27.600 --> 05:30.120] our party to carry the banner going into the general. [05:30.120 --> 05:31.520] Remember what happens on Tuesday night. [05:31.520 --> 05:34.280] There's a set of speeches that happen before the actual vote. [05:34.280 --> 05:38.240] And I think that that is why, for instance, Rick Santorum is making an electability argument, [05:38.240 --> 05:41.420] because that's the problem he himself said he was running into. [05:41.420 --> 05:42.420] We agree with you. [05:42.420 --> 05:47.320] He fits the Iowa Republican caucus electorate better, frankly, than any of these candidates. [05:47.320 --> 05:51.780] Better than Rick Perry without all of the baggage that he accumulated himself. [05:51.780 --> 05:52.880] Better than a Newt Gingrich. [05:52.880 --> 05:57.040] He fits it, the social conservative values that are very strong inside the Iowa Republican [05:57.040 --> 05:58.040] Party. [05:58.040 --> 06:00.600] But he said himself, people would come up to him, I don't think you can win. [06:00.600 --> 06:03.240] Not only, I don't even think you can go on to other states. [06:03.240 --> 06:06.140] Well, he's got to make that case at the end. [06:06.140 --> 06:09.880] And if he does, he's got the biggest, he's got the most room to grow here. [06:09.880 --> 06:13.680] And that's why he, on paper, yes, Romney's ahead. [06:13.680 --> 06:16.800] I think it wouldn't surprise anybody if Santorum was the one that comes out of here with the [06:16.800 --> 06:17.800] actual victory. [06:17.800 --> 06:19.240] Chuck, talk about the volatility a little bit. [06:19.240 --> 06:23.000] As we've been covering this, anybody you talk to about the race is still shaking their head [06:23.000 --> 06:26.740] about, well, wait a minute, there was Bachmann, and then there was Perry, and then there was [06:26.740 --> 06:29.600] Herman Cain, and then there was Gingrich, and now he's falling back. [06:29.600 --> 06:30.600] What's going on? [06:30.600 --> 06:31.600] It's about Mitt Romney. [06:31.600 --> 06:35.720] Mitt Romney is not viewed as conservative enough for where this Republican Party is [06:35.720 --> 06:36.720] today. [06:36.720 --> 06:37.720] He's been trying to do this. [06:37.720 --> 06:41.680] We did a little word search on the word conservative with Mitt Romney, and in the first half of [06:41.680 --> 06:44.640] his campaign, he didn't use the word very often. [06:44.640 --> 06:49.280] In the last six weeks, he talks about it all the time, tries to say, I am a conservative. [06:49.280 --> 06:50.600] And he talks about the electability. [06:50.600 --> 06:53.320] But that has been, that is ultimately the issue here. [06:53.320 --> 06:58.480] We still have 75% likely of the Iowa Republican caucus electorate that's going to vote for [06:58.480 --> 07:00.360] somebody else. [07:00.360 --> 07:04.780] That's still a challenge for Romney, and I think that it may be what some activists here [07:04.780 --> 07:10.200] in Iowa decide to do is say, hey, we've got to force Mitt Romney to keep proving his conservative [07:10.200 --> 07:13.920] credentials, to say, you're not going to end this early. [07:13.920 --> 07:16.200] You've got to go out there and earn the conservative vote. [07:16.200 --> 07:17.240] What about turnout? [07:17.240 --> 07:18.480] Because this is a big key. [07:18.480 --> 07:22.120] Bigger turnout, presumably better for Romney, because a lot of strategists I've talked to [07:22.120 --> 07:27.400] say those could be moderates, those could be independents, even Democrats who come out [07:27.400 --> 07:32.320] and say, no, we don't want a Santorum, a Bachman or Paul doing that well. [07:32.320 --> 07:33.760] We don't want to represent Iowa that way. [07:33.760 --> 07:34.760] We want to go with Romney. [07:34.760 --> 07:39.040] Well, I think one thing you see, in 2008, we had a record turnout with just under 120,000 [07:39.040 --> 07:40.320] Iowa Republicans. [07:40.320 --> 07:44.440] And in that four-year span since then, we've had 33 straight months of Republican registration [07:44.440 --> 07:48.640] gains here in Iowa, so we've got about 30,000 more Iowa Republicans. [07:48.640 --> 07:52.720] We had the second largest attendance we saw ever at the Ames Straw Poll in August. [07:52.720 --> 07:56.520] And it's the first chance anybody in the country gets to vote to start the process to replace [07:56.520 --> 07:57.520] Barack Obama. [07:57.520 --> 08:01.240] So I would be surprised if we didn't have a strong turnout Tuesday night. [08:01.240 --> 08:04.680] And with good weather for those senior citizens, when you look at the poll results, Mitt Romney [08:04.680 --> 08:07.680] does the best with 60 and over voters. [08:07.680 --> 08:10.000] So I think we are set up to have a strong turnout. [08:10.000 --> 08:13.440] And people do need to remember, in the Iowa caucuses, as an independent or a Democrat, [08:13.440 --> 08:15.680] you can register as a Republican that night and participate. [08:15.680 --> 08:17.720] He's making a pitch there, you see that? [08:17.720 --> 08:20.760] But higher to the more this is a primary, the better this is. [08:20.760 --> 08:25.720] If this were a primary and there were no speeches that night before you voted, Mitt Romney would [08:25.720 --> 08:26.760] win by 10 points. [08:26.760 --> 08:30.480] So we always have this debate about Iowa, but it's more intense now. [08:30.480 --> 08:37.280] The history of the Iowa caucuses, retail campaigning, a real chance to interact with voters one [08:37.280 --> 08:38.280] on one. [08:38.280 --> 08:41.960] The truth of the matter is that it's a lot like big-time politics everywhere else now. [08:41.960 --> 08:48.760] More than $60 million of TV advertising blanketing the airwaves, so much of it negative. [08:48.760 --> 08:52.340] And here was the headline in the Wall Street Journal editorial on Tuesday. [08:52.340 --> 08:56.120] It was, as Iowa goes, so goes Iowa. [08:56.120 --> 09:01.280] Gail Collins piling on in the New York Times on Thursday writing, feel free to ignore Iowa. [09:01.280 --> 09:04.680] The Republicans hope to get more than 100,000 participants. [09:04.680 --> 09:07.560] That's about the same number of people in Pomona, California. [09:07.560 --> 09:11.080] Imagine your reaction to seeing a story saying that a plurality of people in Pomona thought [09:11.080 --> 09:13.720] Newt Gingrich would be the best GOP presidential candidate. [09:13.720 --> 09:17.240] Would you say, wow, I guess Newt is now the front-runner? [09:17.240 --> 09:18.240] Possibly not. [09:18.240 --> 09:23.720] We're in the Los Angeles area, so I don't like anybody picking on Pomona. [09:23.720 --> 09:26.120] But is Iowa going to pick the president? [09:26.120 --> 09:29.400] Well, listen, this is the quadrennial attack on the Hawkeye State. [09:29.400 --> 09:30.800] And I think Iowa is representative. [09:30.800 --> 09:34.860] If you look at the last four national presidential elections, Iowa's popular vote has mirrored [09:34.860 --> 09:35.860] what has happened nationally. [09:35.860 --> 09:38.920] And you also have to think of what our role in the process is. [09:38.920 --> 09:39.920] We're first. [09:39.920 --> 09:40.920] We're not last. [09:40.920 --> 09:41.920] We're not the decider. [09:41.920 --> 09:43.480] We start winnowing the field. [09:43.480 --> 09:46.800] But the one thing you can't discount, though, is there are very few things the last two presidents [09:46.800 --> 09:48.600] of the United States have in common. [09:48.600 --> 09:51.680] But their path to the White House did start by winning the Iowa caucuses. [09:51.680 --> 09:54.040] Final point here, Chuck, keys to Tuesday. [09:54.040 --> 09:56.200] What are you looking for in the next couple of days? [09:56.200 --> 09:57.840] To me, it's the Rick Perry number. [09:57.840 --> 09:59.360] He is the wild card here. [09:59.360 --> 10:01.800] Newt, I think we clearly know Gingrich is on his way down. [10:01.800 --> 10:05.300] And he may, frankly, may end up in single digits before it's all said and done. [10:05.300 --> 10:08.480] So this little boomlet of his, an amazing rise and fall. [10:08.480 --> 10:09.980] But what happens to the Perry supporter? [10:09.980 --> 10:13.960] Does the Perry supporter that walks in on caucus night, who is also a social conservative, [10:13.960 --> 10:15.220] do they stick with him? [10:15.220 --> 10:16.780] How committed to him are they? [10:16.780 --> 10:22.120] Or do they end up buying the Santorum argument that says, you know what, I'm the conservative [10:22.120 --> 10:25.200] that can come out of here, that can win, that can keep going on. [10:25.200 --> 10:27.400] And where that, what happens to that? [10:27.400 --> 10:30.040] And by the way, Mitt Romney, he needs a strong Rick Perry. [10:30.040 --> 10:33.800] He needs Rick Perry just strong enough so that Perry will go to South Carolina and won't [10:33.800 --> 10:34.840] get out of this race. [10:34.840 --> 10:37.680] Does the field narrow after the results here? [10:37.680 --> 10:42.400] Well, I think it will narrow in the actual, does the actual playing field narrow? [10:42.400 --> 10:43.400] Maybe by one candidate. [10:43.400 --> 10:44.400] Maybe a Bachmann ends up getting out. [10:44.400 --> 10:46.680] I, Newt has no incentive to get out. [10:46.680 --> 10:48.280] Perry, let's see what he does. [10:48.280 --> 10:51.960] If Perry is at 15, he stays in, he goes on to South Carolina. [10:51.960 --> 10:56.480] If he's closer to 10, I think then he may pack it in. [10:56.480 --> 10:58.240] That's not good for Mitt Romney, by the way. [10:58.240 --> 11:01.640] He needs a few more conservatives to hang around so he can steal South Carolina. [11:01.640 --> 11:02.640] We'll leave it there. [11:02.640 --> 11:05.000] Chuck Todd, Matt Strong, thank you both very much. [11:05.000 --> 11:09.640] We're going to turn now to a man who has been making a late surge here in Iowa, former two-term [11:09.640 --> 11:13.120] senator from Pennsylvania, Rick Santorum. [11:13.120 --> 11:17.120] Santorum has spent more time in Iowa this cycle than any other candidate and was the [11:17.120 --> 11:20.200] first to visit all 99 counties in the state. [11:20.200 --> 11:24.280] With limited resources and money and staff, he's been traveling from event to event in [11:24.280 --> 11:25.920] a pickup truck. [11:25.920 --> 11:30.680] Earlier this week, a CNN time poll showed him for the first time in the top three. [11:30.680 --> 11:34.200] And now he's suddenly turning out larger crowds and drawing more media attention. [11:34.200 --> 11:39.000] He's hoping to make a strong showing in Iowa by courting conservative voters, just as previous [11:39.000 --> 11:46.560] caucus winner Mike Huckabee did four years ago. [11:46.560 --> 11:48.320] Senator Santorum, welcome back to Meet the Press. [11:48.320 --> 11:49.320] Thank you, David. [11:49.320 --> 11:50.320] Good to be with you. [11:50.320 --> 11:53.560] So this is the candidate that I'm sitting with who's got the hot hand in Iowa. [11:53.560 --> 11:57.800] Here's the Des Moines Sunday Register here, Romney Paul Leed. [11:57.800 --> 11:59.000] Santorum closes in. [11:59.000 --> 12:03.160] We just talked about in that last segment how you have had this surge, particularly [12:03.160 --> 12:05.880] in the last couple of days. [12:05.880 --> 12:06.880] What does it mean? [12:06.880 --> 12:08.640] What does it say to you about what's going on here in the state? [12:08.640 --> 12:12.280] Well, the people of Iowa, I've been saying this from the very beginning. [12:12.280 --> 12:13.680] People have asked me, when are you going to get your surge? [12:13.680 --> 12:14.920] You're not going anywhere. [12:14.920 --> 12:16.320] Your message must not be resonating. [12:16.320 --> 12:20.560] And I said, my surge is going to come on January 3rd after the people of Iowa do what they [12:20.560 --> 12:25.640] do, which is actually analyze the candidates, figure out where their positions are, find [12:25.640 --> 12:30.500] out who's the right leader, who's got what it takes to defeat Barack Obama and to lead [12:30.500 --> 12:31.500] this country. [12:31.500 --> 12:35.600] And I've always relied that when that crunch time comes in these last two weeks, that's [12:35.600 --> 12:36.840] when we were going to start to pick up. [12:36.840 --> 12:38.000] And that's exactly what's happened. [12:38.000 --> 12:43.300] You talked about needing a miracle here in Iowa, but expectations have changed now. [12:43.300 --> 12:48.080] Is anything less than a win here not measuring up to expectations? [12:48.080 --> 12:52.160] That's really pretty funny, actually, because 10 days ago I was at 5%, and every question [12:52.160 --> 12:54.880] I got was, why don't you pack it up? [12:54.880 --> 12:56.840] Why don't you endorse another candidate? [12:56.840 --> 13:02.360] And now 10 days later, you're saying, oh, you've got to win to exceed expectations. [13:02.360 --> 13:05.000] We feel very good about the way things are going on the ground. [13:05.000 --> 13:06.320] We've got a great grassroots organization. [13:06.320 --> 13:10.680] We've got a great team of people who are out helping us, and they're committed to making [13:10.680 --> 13:15.360] sure that this isn't a Pyrrhic victory in November, that we actually elect someone who's [13:15.360 --> 13:19.600] exactly what America needs to turn this country around, not someone who, well, just might [13:19.600 --> 13:23.200] be able to win and then not really do the change that's necessary in Washington. [13:23.200 --> 13:26.080] But one more on just flat expectations. [13:26.080 --> 13:29.420] You feel at this point, particularly, you've got to do better than a Michelle Bachmann [13:29.420 --> 13:31.440] or a Rick Perry in order to continue in this race? [13:31.440 --> 13:33.040] Yeah, I've always said there's really three primaries. [13:33.040 --> 13:36.600] I mean, you have the conservative primary, and you mentioned the other two people who [13:36.600 --> 13:38.480] I think are in the conservative primary. [13:38.480 --> 13:43.200] You have the libertarian primary, and then you have Gingrich and Romney sort of fighting [13:43.200 --> 13:45.080] for the establishment vote. [13:45.080 --> 13:51.420] And our feeling was from the very beginning, if we can pace ahead of Perry and or Bachmann, [13:51.420 --> 13:54.920] that we'd be in good shape, and we're moving in that direction certainly right now. [13:54.920 --> 13:56.320] You talk about electability. [13:56.320 --> 13:58.220] You talk about conservative credentials. [13:58.220 --> 14:03.880] But we've been checking on this, you know, it'd be 20 years ago this week, actually, [14:03.880 --> 14:05.520] that you had began your service in Washington. [14:05.520 --> 14:11.040] And had you not lost for re-election, you'd still be in Washington as a senator. [14:11.040 --> 14:15.880] But you spent 16 years as a member of Congress, four in the House, 12 in the Senate, and yet [14:15.880 --> 14:19.240] there's nobody who's served with you who's endorsed you, have they? [14:19.240 --> 14:21.400] It's funny, I haven't asked anybody. [14:21.400 --> 14:25.760] And the reason I haven't asked anybody, I'm sitting at 3 percent in the national polls. [14:25.760 --> 14:29.440] And I really haven't gone out and asked any United States senator, I haven't asked a single [14:29.440 --> 14:34.420] one to endorse me, because I felt like I had to earn it first, that I had to go out and [14:34.420 --> 14:37.120] prove to them, you know, I lost my last race. [14:37.120 --> 14:42.900] And the general consensus was, you know, we like Rick, but, you know, who goes from losing [14:42.900 --> 14:46.280] their last Senate race to winning the presidential nomination? [14:46.280 --> 14:48.400] My answer to that was, well, Abraham Lincoln. [14:48.400 --> 14:51.160] But other than Abraham Lincoln, this is not a common occurrence. [14:51.160 --> 14:57.280] But nobody was going out on a limb to offer, having served with you, knowing your credentials, [14:57.280 --> 14:58.280] knowing your principles. [14:58.280 --> 15:03.880] Yeah, again, no one's going to call you and say, you know, gee, can I help your campaign [15:03.880 --> 15:05.960] at 3 percent? [15:05.960 --> 15:08.360] And I would have said to them, you know what, wait. [15:08.360 --> 15:09.360] Because it doesn't matter. [15:09.360 --> 15:12.200] I don't really need or want Washington endorsements. [15:12.200 --> 15:13.200] That's not what I'm here to do. [15:13.200 --> 15:17.300] I'm here to change Washington, and so I didn't really seek out endorsements, I didn't really [15:17.300 --> 15:19.480] want their endorsements, I didn't think they would help very much. [15:19.480 --> 15:20.740] Would you seek them out now? [15:20.740 --> 15:24.480] If people want to endorse me, I'd love their endorsement, but that's not what I'm coming [15:24.480 --> 15:25.480] here to do. [15:25.480 --> 15:30.000] I'm not coming to be buddies with my friends in the Senate and the House. [15:30.000 --> 15:33.120] I'm coming to change the entire nature of Washington, D.C. [15:33.120 --> 15:38.240] It's been one of the benefits, frankly, of being out and looking in and seeing what, [15:38.240 --> 15:43.320] you know, sometimes you said, you know, I'm running as a consistent conservative. [15:43.320 --> 15:44.800] There are votes that I took. [15:44.800 --> 15:47.160] Not that I advocated these things, but I voted for some things. [15:47.160 --> 15:49.360] I look back and say, why the heck did I do that? [15:49.360 --> 15:54.720] You get involved in sort of the idea that, well, you've got to make things happen, and [15:54.720 --> 15:59.800] you forget sometimes, you know, sometimes making some things happen is not, you're better [15:59.800 --> 16:00.800] off making nothing happen. [16:00.800 --> 16:03.160] I wonder if one of those examples might be pork barrel spending, because you're getting [16:03.160 --> 16:07.080] hit by Rick Perry about that, by supporting the notorious bridge to nowhere, and other [16:07.080 --> 16:11.360] pork barrel projects where you deliver cash for folks back in your home state. [16:11.360 --> 16:15.160] Do you regret voting for some of those projects? [16:15.160 --> 16:16.960] You've defended pork barrel spending in the past. [16:16.960 --> 16:21.760] What I've said is that your role as a member of Congress, if you look at the Constitution, [16:21.760 --> 16:24.680] is to appropriate money, and of course, your appropriate money, you're going to say where [16:24.680 --> 16:25.680] that money's going to go. [16:25.680 --> 16:28.480] You're not going to say, well, here's the money Mr. President spent anyway you want. [16:28.480 --> 16:32.960] And historically, Congress has taken the role of, you know, allocating those resources, [16:32.960 --> 16:38.160] and you know, Jim DeMint, who led the charge on pork barrel spending, earmarked things [16:38.160 --> 16:39.160] for years and years. [16:39.160 --> 16:43.540] And so what happened after I left Congress was budgets began to explode. [16:43.540 --> 16:49.680] When I was in the Senate, I voted for tough budgets, I voted for restrictions on spending, [16:49.680 --> 16:51.080] and made sure that that didn't happen. [16:51.080 --> 16:54.760] And as president, I proposed cutting $5 trillion over five years. [16:54.760 --> 16:58.720] I proposed we're going to balance the budget in at least five years, hopefully sooner. [16:58.720 --> 17:02.680] So if you're looking for someone who's voted for tough budgets, voted for spending restraints, [17:02.680 --> 17:03.680] and- [17:03.680 --> 17:04.680] But that wasn't my question. [17:04.680 --> 17:07.440] Do you regret supporting earmarks when you did? [17:07.440 --> 17:11.880] I don't regret going out at the time and making sure that the people of Pennsylvania, who [17:11.880 --> 17:15.400] I was elected to represent, got resources back into their state after spending money. [17:15.400 --> 17:18.080] So if there's a surplus, that's okay, but if the budget's tighter, it's not? [17:18.080 --> 17:19.600] What happened was abuse. [17:19.600 --> 17:21.560] There was abuse of this process. [17:21.560 --> 17:24.720] And I agreed with that, that there was an abuse, and it was leading to more spending. [17:24.720 --> 17:26.920] It was leading to bigger spending bills. [17:26.920 --> 17:28.840] And it had to end, and I supported it ending. [17:28.840 --> 17:29.840] And I support it ending now. [17:29.840 --> 17:30.840] But Rick Perry calls it the fleecing of America. [17:30.840 --> 17:31.840] Do you agree that's what it is? [17:31.840 --> 17:35.520] Well, that's pretty funny, because Rick Perry was hiring lobbyists to fleece America then, [17:35.520 --> 17:39.240] because he was hiring lobbyists to represent the state of Texas to get more money back. [17:39.240 --> 17:43.200] And I suspect if you ask Kay Hutchison or if you ask John Cornyn or any of the Texas [17:43.200 --> 17:46.720] delegation whether Rick Perry wanted money coming back to the state of Texas that Texans [17:46.720 --> 17:49.000] sent there, they'd say, yes, he did. [17:49.000 --> 17:53.440] So look, there is a legitimate role for Congress to allocate resources. [17:53.440 --> 17:55.800] That's what the Constitution requires them to do. [17:55.800 --> 17:58.720] When there's abuse, then you curb the abuse, and I supported that. [17:58.720 --> 18:00.880] Let's talk about final arguments here in Iowa. [18:00.880 --> 18:04.360] Your latest ad talks about conservative credentials and electability. [18:04.360 --> 18:05.840] Let me play a portion of it. [18:05.840 --> 18:09.040] Who has the best chance to beat Obama? [18:09.040 --> 18:10.040] Rick Santorum. [18:10.040 --> 18:17.480] A full-spectrum conservative, Rick Santorum is rock solid on values issues. [18:17.480 --> 18:23.240] So you've been making that contrast, consistently questioning Governor Romney, you're calling [18:23.240 --> 18:27.880] him a liberal Massachusetts governor, arguing, in fact, that he is a moderate. [18:27.880 --> 18:31.240] Yet back in 2008 when he was running for the presidency, you were singing a different tune. [18:31.240 --> 18:33.240] This was your press release back then. [18:33.240 --> 18:37.120] You said, Governor Romney is the candidate who will stand up for the conservative principles [18:37.120 --> 18:38.480] that we hold dear. [18:38.480 --> 18:42.280] He has a deep understanding of the important issues confronting our country today, and [18:42.280 --> 18:46.840] he is the clear conservative candidate that can go into the general election with a united [18:46.840 --> 18:48.320] Republican party. [18:48.320 --> 18:51.120] Will stand up for the conservative principles that we hold dear. [18:51.120 --> 18:54.480] You've been praised his work on fighting same-sex marriage. [18:54.480 --> 18:55.480] What changed? [18:55.480 --> 18:57.880] Well, what changed was who he's running against. [18:57.880 --> 19:02.040] At the time, that was five days or four days before Super Tuesday. [19:02.040 --> 19:05.760] It was after Florida, and it became clear to me that there were two candidates in the [19:05.760 --> 19:06.760] race at that point. [19:06.760 --> 19:11.880] I thought Mike Huckabee, I would have loved to have Mike Huckabee out there, but I made [19:11.880 --> 19:16.200] the political judgment right or wrong that the best chance to stop John McCain, which [19:16.200 --> 19:17.560] was what my concern was. [19:17.560 --> 19:20.000] I had served 12 years with John McCain. [19:20.000 --> 19:24.780] I like and respect John McCain immensely personally, and he's done a lot of great things, obviously, [19:24.780 --> 19:28.560] for this country, but I did not think he was the right person, based on my experience and [19:28.560 --> 19:32.560] deep knowledge of his record, that he was the right person to be the nominee. [19:32.560 --> 19:36.360] Well, you said that Romney will stand up for the conservative principles that we hold dear, [19:36.360 --> 19:37.360] but you didn't say compared to. [19:37.360 --> 19:39.000] Well, of course, I'm not going to say compared to. [19:39.000 --> 19:42.680] I mean, I'm trying to advocate for his candidacy at a time when I thought... [19:42.680 --> 19:43.680] So you didn't mean that then? [19:43.680 --> 19:47.560] Well, I was saying it relative to John McCain, and that's what I meant then. [19:47.560 --> 19:49.800] Remember, it's not like I was an early supporter of Romney. [19:49.800 --> 19:53.480] I endorsed him, actually, seven days before he dropped out of the race, so maybe I was [19:53.480 --> 19:54.480] a little bit of a... [19:54.480 --> 19:57.800] Does he have conservative values, conservative principles? [19:57.800 --> 19:58.800] Of course. [19:58.800 --> 20:03.920] Everybody on that stage that is in these debates has conservative values vis-a-vis President [20:03.920 --> 20:06.940] Obama and generally reflects the Republican Party. [20:06.940 --> 20:12.320] The question is, are those values ones that you can trust when they become President of [20:12.320 --> 20:13.320] the United States? [20:13.320 --> 20:17.720] Is it someone who you know is going to fight, not just for certain things, but for the entire [20:17.720 --> 20:19.520] Republican platform and plank? [20:19.520 --> 20:20.520] Why? [20:20.520 --> 20:24.020] Because those things integrate together, and you've heard me talk about this many times. [20:24.020 --> 20:28.200] You can't have a strong economy and just a strong economic plan unless you have strong [20:28.200 --> 20:30.760] families and you have moral values in this country. [20:30.760 --> 20:31.760] Why? [20:31.760 --> 20:32.760] Because that's the underpinning of our society. [20:32.760 --> 20:40.520] You talk about trust as a conservative, and you have accused Romney of tacking back and [20:40.520 --> 20:45.320] forth as he sought election, calling him a liberal governor from Massachusetts, but we [20:45.320 --> 20:50.520] look at your own record as well, running for reelection to the Senate in 2006 in a democratic [20:50.520 --> 20:52.240] state of Pennsylvania. [20:52.240 --> 20:56.000] Now, here in Iowa, you've taken the pledge opposing abortion. [20:56.000 --> 21:01.640] Back on this program this summer, you said you oppose abortion without exception, and [21:01.640 --> 21:05.400] yet when you were running for reelection in 2006, you had a different view. [21:05.400 --> 21:07.120] And this is what you told the Associated Press. [21:07.120 --> 21:10.800] The question was, do you support legalized abortion if a woman has been raped or if she [21:10.800 --> 21:12.340] is the victim of incest? [21:12.340 --> 21:15.040] What about if a woman's health or life is in danger? [21:15.040 --> 21:16.360] Please explain your answer. [21:16.360 --> 21:20.840] Back then you said, I would support laws that include exceptions in cases of rape and incest [21:20.840 --> 21:23.360] and when the life of the mother is at risk. [21:23.360 --> 21:27.800] So didn't you, when you were running for reelection, do the same thing you've accused Romney of, [21:27.800 --> 21:31.240] which is moderating your stance to try to win a democratic state? [21:31.240 --> 21:35.520] Today I would support laws that would provide for those exceptions, but I'm not for them. [21:35.520 --> 21:37.680] In other words, I support the Hyde Amendment. [21:37.680 --> 21:41.160] The Hyde Amendment provides exception for rape and incest in the life of the mother. [21:41.160 --> 21:47.000] And so yes, I support laws that provide those exceptions because if we can get those passed, [21:47.000 --> 21:48.080] then we need to do that. [21:48.080 --> 21:49.080] But my- [21:49.080 --> 21:51.240] That's not a violation of your pledge that you took here in Iowa? [21:51.240 --> 21:53.400] I supported the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act. [21:53.400 --> 21:55.040] Now, does that ban all abortions? [21:55.040 --> 21:57.460] No, but it moves the country in the right direction. [21:57.460 --> 22:01.040] And so what I've said in the past consistently is I'll support laws that move the ball [22:01.040 --> 22:02.040] forward. [22:02.040 --> 22:05.560] That doesn't mean that's my position and that's where I'd like to go, but that's exactly the [22:05.560 --> 22:08.260] direction that we need to go in. [22:08.260 --> 22:13.720] The issue of moderation goes beyond abortion. [22:13.720 --> 22:17.940] Back in 2006, you were fighting the idea that you were seen as too conservative. [22:17.940 --> 22:23.400] You had television ads heralding the fact that you opposed reductions in the minimum [22:23.400 --> 22:27.000] wage, that you were fighting cuts against Amtrak. [22:27.000 --> 22:32.720] What is your history to try to moderate both when fighting for re-election, but also as [22:32.720 --> 22:36.000] a member of Congress to try to find common ground and to compromise? [22:36.000 --> 22:39.080] Of course my background is to find compromise. [22:39.080 --> 22:40.840] That's what you have to do in order to get things done. [22:40.840 --> 22:42.760] You don't compromise on your principles. [22:42.760 --> 22:45.100] I use welfare reform as an example. [22:45.100 --> 22:50.400] I went out and helped author the Welfare Reform Bill that became the Contract with America [22:50.400 --> 22:51.400] Bill. [22:51.400 --> 22:54.840] And then when I was in the United States Senate, I managed that bill as a first-term, first-year [22:54.840 --> 22:56.120] member of the United States Senate. [22:56.120 --> 23:00.840] I went up against Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Ted Kennedy and battled over two vetoes [23:00.840 --> 23:02.960] of President Clinton was able to get it done. [23:02.960 --> 23:03.960] Did I make compromises? [23:03.960 --> 23:04.960] You bet. [23:04.960 --> 23:10.360] But the compromises I made were not fundamental to the transformation that was important in [23:10.360 --> 23:12.500] welfare, which was to end the federal entitlement. [23:12.500 --> 23:16.180] The only bill that I'm aware of, the only law that's actually ever ended a broad-based [23:16.180 --> 23:19.300] federal entitlement, I was the author and manager of the bill on. [23:19.300 --> 23:24.380] And we put time limits on welfare and we put a work requirement in place. [23:24.380 --> 23:27.220] Those were the things that I believe were transformational. [23:27.220 --> 23:29.080] Was I willing to compromise on daycare funding? [23:29.080 --> 23:30.080] Yes, I was. [23:30.080 --> 23:33.800] Was I willing to compromise on transportation to get folks from welfare to work? [23:33.800 --> 23:34.980] Yes, I was. [23:34.980 --> 23:39.840] But what we did was something that was moving the direction of more limited government. [23:39.840 --> 23:44.360] And in order to get the necessary votes to get that done, you have to make compromises. [23:44.360 --> 23:49.800] But we did a direction of limited government, maybe less than what we wanted to. [23:49.800 --> 23:53.480] But we weren't going in the direction of more government and getting less of more. [23:53.480 --> 23:56.880] That's where Republicans have been in error for so many years. [23:56.880 --> 24:01.820] And that is compromising on just a little less big government instead of saying, no, [24:01.820 --> 24:04.080] no more compromises and less big government. [24:04.080 --> 24:09.820] We'll compromise on less, less government, but not going the other way. [24:09.820 --> 24:16.980] One of the things you look at as an insurgent party trying to beat an incumbent president, [24:16.980 --> 24:21.480] you said that a second term for President Obama would be dangerous for the country, [24:21.480 --> 24:24.080] is that you look at the party that's making the challenge. [24:24.080 --> 24:25.440] And here's the reality. [24:25.440 --> 24:30.560] Disapproval for the Republican Party right now in Congress, I should say approval of [24:30.560 --> 24:34.120] Republicans in Congress stands at 26 percent. [24:34.120 --> 24:36.600] That's far less than the president's approval rating. [24:36.600 --> 24:41.120] And Dan Balz writes this in the Washington Post in his column on Tuesday, for GOP candidates [24:41.120 --> 24:42.840] worries about the party's brand. [24:42.840 --> 24:46.220] A year ago, after their big victory in the midterm elections, Republicans were full of [24:46.220 --> 24:49.680] confidence and anticipation as Americans look toward next November. [24:49.680 --> 24:53.760] The question that many will be asking is, are the Republicans really ready to lead in [24:53.760 --> 24:57.880] three political arenas, Congress, the states and the presidential campaign trail? [24:57.880 --> 25:00.880] Republicans have left a checkered record in the past year. [25:00.880 --> 25:07.680] In Congress, it was the debt debacle forcing a near shutdown of the government. [25:07.680 --> 25:11.320] The payroll tax debate that looked to go in the president's favor. [25:11.320 --> 25:14.600] You had the fight with the unions in the states like Wisconsin. [25:14.600 --> 25:18.840] Do you fault Republican leaders in Congress for not doing more to make government work [25:18.840 --> 25:20.840] better through more compromise with the president? [25:20.840 --> 25:22.780] You have to have someone you can work with. [25:22.780 --> 25:27.240] And this president has done more to divide than any other president that I've ever witnessed [25:27.240 --> 25:28.240] in my lifetime. [25:28.240 --> 25:31.760] This president goes out and gives speech after speech after speech trying to divide America [25:31.760 --> 25:36.360] between class, between income group, between racial and ethnic groups. [25:36.360 --> 25:39.160] This is this is the great divider in chief. [25:39.160 --> 25:43.200] And it's very difficult when you're being lampooned by the president on a regular basis, [25:43.200 --> 25:48.160] not just as a party, but individually to then and the president, who I don't believe has [25:48.160 --> 25:53.280] met with Boehner or any of the Republican leadership in now six months, hard to compromise [25:53.280 --> 25:57.040] and work with someone who won't meet with you, who won't sit down and try to try to [25:57.040 --> 25:58.640] negotiate things and try to talk. [25:58.640 --> 26:03.220] And so I'm not I'm not surprised at all that Republicans are having a difficult time with [26:03.220 --> 26:05.080] someone who has no interest with them. [26:05.080 --> 26:08.600] I mean, even the debt fight over the summer was a constant set of meetings. [26:08.600 --> 26:09.840] So that can't be accurate. [26:09.840 --> 26:14.160] Well, if you look at it, the last time he's had meetings, I know it's been several months. [26:14.160 --> 26:19.080] And I know that President Bush, when I was there and President Reagan routinely met on [26:19.080 --> 26:23.080] a regular basis with with the other side and developed relationships. [26:23.080 --> 26:24.920] You know, it's it's just about trust. [26:24.920 --> 26:29.760] You don't build trust by going up and running around the country, beating up on your opponent. [26:29.760 --> 26:32.000] He's the president of everybody in this country. [26:32.000 --> 26:35.320] As president of the United States, I would be someone who would meet regularly, who would [26:35.320 --> 26:37.800] talk and try to build relationships of trust. [26:37.800 --> 26:45.320] So you don't this president has not done Republicans for intransigence on taxes or spending or [26:45.320 --> 26:48.120] other areas of potential compromise with the president. [26:48.120 --> 26:52.640] Again, we go back to the to the basic fact, the federal government now is spending about [26:52.640 --> 26:55.200] twenty five percent of GDP. [26:55.200 --> 26:58.460] That's historically the average is about 18 percent. [26:58.460 --> 27:01.280] We have an explosion of spending. [27:01.280 --> 27:06.180] And the problem in this country is government oppression, spending and that's leading to [27:06.180 --> 27:08.200] huge debts and deficits. [27:08.200 --> 27:11.240] What the Republicans have said is no more. [27:11.240 --> 27:13.880] We are going to move in the direction of smaller government. [27:13.880 --> 27:16.760] And President Obama has no interest in doing that. [27:16.760 --> 27:20.040] I think Republicans are right to stand and fight on this. [27:20.040 --> 27:24.080] And the president seems to be absolutely disinterested in listening to what the American public [27:24.080 --> 27:27.580] said in the last election, which is we want more limited government. [27:27.580 --> 27:28.840] He did not get the message. [27:28.840 --> 27:31.720] I guess he's going to have to get this message hopefully in November. [27:31.720 --> 27:33.840] Before you go, I want to ask you about foreign policy. [27:33.840 --> 27:37.480] You've been very critical of the president, particularly on the issue of Iran, which has [27:37.480 --> 27:39.880] been a big issue of debate here in Iowa. [27:39.880 --> 27:42.920] Let me play a portion of that. [27:42.920 --> 27:50.600] And this president for every thug and hooligan, for every radical Islamist, he has had nothing [27:50.600 --> 27:52.920] but appeasement. [27:52.920 --> 28:00.240] We saw that during the lead up to World War Two appeasement. [28:00.240 --> 28:04.800] How can that possibly be accurate if you've taken an objective look at the foreign policy [28:04.800 --> 28:06.220] of this administration? [28:06.220 --> 28:10.800] What on Iran specifically separates the approach that President Obama has taken and that of [28:10.800 --> 28:11.800] President Bush? [28:11.800 --> 28:15.800] Number one, he didn't support the pro-democracy movement in Iran in 2009 during the Green [28:15.800 --> 28:17.080] Revolution. [28:17.080 --> 28:22.080] Almost immediately after the election, excuse me, like with hours after the polls closed, [28:22.080 --> 28:25.760] Ahmadinejad announced that he won with 62 percent of the vote. [28:25.760 --> 28:29.560] Within a few days, President Obama basically said that that election was a legitimate one. [28:29.560 --> 28:31.160] What would that have done specifically to disarm him? [28:31.160 --> 28:34.840] Well, I understand why the president would understand that someone announcing a minute [28:34.840 --> 28:36.240] after the polls closed that he won. [28:36.240 --> 28:38.220] I mean, he comes from Chicago, so I get it. [28:38.220 --> 28:41.440] But the problem is that this was an illegitimate election. [28:41.440 --> 28:45.720] The people in the streets were rioting, saying, please support us, President Obama. [28:45.720 --> 28:47.120] We are the pro-democracy movement. [28:47.120 --> 28:51.040] We want to turn this theocracy that has been at war with the United States that's developing [28:51.040 --> 28:56.280] a nuclear weapon, that's killing our troops in Afghanistan and Iraq with IEDs, and the [28:56.280 --> 28:58.840] president of the United States turned his back on them. [28:58.840 --> 29:03.320] At the same time, a few years later, we have the same situation where Muslim Brotherhood [29:03.320 --> 29:08.440] and Islamists are in the streets of Egypt opposing an ally of ours, not a sworn enemy [29:08.440 --> 29:13.520] like Iran, but an ally of ours in Mubarak, and he joins the radicals instead of standing [29:13.520 --> 29:14.520] with our friends. [29:14.520 --> 29:17.440] First of all, that's patently contradictory. [29:17.440 --> 29:21.840] If you say you support democracy, there was a democratic movement in Egypt, and the Muslim [29:21.840 --> 29:22.880] Brotherhood got elected. [29:22.880 --> 29:26.600] So how could you be for democracy in some countries and not others, which is inconsistent? [29:26.600 --> 29:29.480] No, the Muslim Brotherhood is not about democracy. [29:29.480 --> 29:30.920] The Muslim Brotherhood are Islamists. [29:30.920 --> 29:32.840] The Muslim Brotherhood are going to impose a real law. [29:32.840 --> 29:34.840] If you're popularly elected, isn't that what democracy is about? [29:34.840 --> 29:35.840] No. [29:35.840 --> 29:37.040] I asked you about disarming Iran. [29:37.040 --> 29:42.280] There is no material difference in terms of how the Bush administration sought to disarm [29:42.280 --> 29:44.920] Iran and what the Obama administration has done. [29:44.920 --> 29:47.360] There's a material difference in this respect. [29:47.360 --> 29:51.560] Number one, the Bush administration worked with me in passing the Iran Freedom Support [29:51.560 --> 29:55.760] Act, which I authored, which imposed tough sanctions on the Iranian nuclear program and [29:55.760 --> 29:58.980] provided funding for the pro-democracy movement. [29:58.980 --> 30:02.440] When President Obama came into office, he cut that funding. [30:02.440 --> 30:08.060] President Obama did not provide funding into Iran to help those folks who wanted to overthrow [30:08.060 --> 30:12.540] this democracy, and when the time came to support them, he chose not to. [30:12.540 --> 30:16.960] That is a substantive difference between my policy, which I was a leader on in the Senate, [30:16.960 --> 30:19.680] and what President Bush tried to do when he was president. [30:19.680 --> 30:22.240] There is no good option to disarm Iran. [30:22.240 --> 30:23.240] Yes, there is. [30:23.240 --> 30:24.280] The Bush administration knew that. [30:24.280 --> 30:25.680] This administration knows that. [30:25.680 --> 30:26.880] Tell me what you would do differently then. [30:26.880 --> 30:32.000] I put forth a five-point plan that said fund the pro-democracy movement, use covert activity [30:32.000 --> 30:33.000] to disrupt them. [30:33.000 --> 30:34.000] Which is already being done, Senator. [30:34.000 --> 30:35.000] You know that. [30:35.000 --> 30:38.920] There's covert activity to set back their program by the Israelis, by the United States. [30:38.920 --> 30:41.220] Well, we know by the Israelis. [30:41.220 --> 30:43.720] We don't have any evidence if you look at what's being done. [30:43.720 --> 30:47.240] Most of the evidence actually trails back to the Israelis and the methodologies that [30:47.240 --> 30:48.240] they use. [30:48.240 --> 30:52.320] There's no evidence the United States is at all complicit in working at that. [30:52.320 --> 30:57.800] I would be very direct that we would, in fact, and openly talk about this. [30:57.800 --> 30:58.800] Why? [30:58.800 --> 31:01.680] Because I want to make sure that Iran knows that when I say that Iran is not getting a [31:01.680 --> 31:05.680] nuclear weapon, that we will actually effectuate policies that make that happen. [31:05.680 --> 31:07.280] This president has not done that. [31:07.280 --> 31:10.640] He has opposed tough sanctions on Iran, on their oil program. [31:10.640 --> 31:11.640] Why? [31:11.640 --> 31:15.620] Because he's concerned about the economy and his reelection instead of the long-term national [31:15.620 --> 31:17.320] security interests of this country. [31:17.320 --> 31:22.040] I would say to every foreign scientist that's going into Iran to help them with their program, [31:22.040 --> 31:25.400] you will be treated as an enemy combatant, like an al-Qaeda member. [31:25.400 --> 31:29.040] And then finally, I would be working openly with the state of Israel, and I would be saying [31:29.040 --> 31:32.760] to the Iranians, you either open up those facilities, you begin to dismantle them and [31:32.760 --> 31:36.920] make them available to inspectors, or we will degrade those facilities through airstrikes [31:36.920 --> 31:39.020] and make it very public that we are doing that. [31:39.020 --> 31:40.020] The president has done none of those. [31:40.020 --> 31:44.220] So you would lay out a red line, and if they passed it, airstrikes by President Santorum. [31:44.220 --> 31:47.080] Iran will not get a nuclear weapon under my watch. [31:47.080 --> 31:49.080] Well, two previous presidents have said that. [31:49.080 --> 31:51.560] You would order airstrikes if it became clear that they were going to- [31:51.560 --> 31:52.560] No. [31:52.560 --> 31:53.560] That's the plan. [31:53.560 --> 31:58.280] I mean, you can't go out and say, this is the problem with this administration. [31:58.280 --> 32:01.580] You can't go out and say, this is what I'm for, and then do nothing. [32:01.580 --> 32:05.460] You become a paper tiger, and people don't respect our country, and our allies can't [32:05.460 --> 32:06.500] trust us. [32:06.500 --> 32:07.600] That's the problem with this administration. [32:07.600 --> 32:08.600] All right. [32:08.600 --> 32:11.320] Before I let you go back to the politics, you're going to win this thing? [32:11.320 --> 32:12.320] I feel good. [32:12.320 --> 32:13.320] I mean, that's up to the people of Iowa. [32:13.320 --> 32:17.240] I've always said that the people of Iowa are the ones who I put my trust in, and not just [32:17.240 --> 32:18.280] Iowa, New Hampshire. [32:18.280 --> 32:19.800] We've got a great team up in New Hampshire. [32:19.800 --> 32:24.080] We've got about two dozen state legislators who have signed on to our campaign, county [32:24.080 --> 32:25.360] attorneys, sheriffs. [32:25.360 --> 32:28.880] We've got a great team up there, and we're going to have a big jump here in Iowa. [32:28.880 --> 32:32.720] I don't know what it's going to be, but unlike Rick Perry, unlike Michelle Bachmann, unlike [32:32.720 --> 32:36.060] others, we're going to New Hampshire because we're going to compete in every region of [32:36.060 --> 32:37.160] this country. [32:37.160 --> 32:38.520] I come from the Northeast. [32:38.520 --> 32:41.880] I've been able to get the blue-collar voters, the Reagan Democrats, to vote for me in the [32:41.880 --> 32:45.160] past, and we're going to do the same thing, and that's why we're going to win this election. [32:45.160 --> 32:46.160] Senator Santorum, thank you. [32:46.160 --> 32:47.880] We'll see you in New Hampshire for our debate next week. [32:47.880 --> 32:48.880] Thanks, David. [32:48.880 --> 32:53.960] And coming up on this New Year's Day, the final countdown to Iowa, Ron Paul with a strong [32:53.960 --> 32:58.160] showing in the polls, drawing fire now from his Republican rivals, while Mitt Romney sets [32:58.160 --> 33:03.120] his sights on President Obama, who just four years ago pulled off a surprise come-from-behind [33:03.120 --> 33:04.120] win here. [33:04.120 --> 33:07.400] Plus, the president and his team gearing up for the fight as well. [33:07.400 --> 33:11.600] He's going to the important battleground state of Ohio the day after the caucuses. [33:11.600 --> 33:13.160] It's a new year and a new campaign. [33:13.160 --> 33:15.840] We'll break it all down with our political roundtable. [33:15.840 --> 33:20.560] Joining us, the Des Moines Register's Kathy Obradovich, Republican strategist Mike Murphy, [33:20.560 --> 33:27.880] David Brooks of the New York Times, Mark Halpern of TIME Magazine, and NBC's Andrea Mitchell. [33:27.880 --> 33:32.120] Meet the Press is brought to you by the Boeing Company. [33:32.120 --> 33:35.600] Have you met your skin twin? [33:35.600 --> 33:38.240] Cover girl TruBlend has skin twin technology. [33:38.240 --> 33:40.880] Other makeup can sit on your skin, so it looks like makeup. [33:40.880 --> 33:45.280] But TruBlend has skin twin technology to actually merge with your skin. [33:45.280 --> 33:47.600] How easy breezy beautiful is that? [33:47.600 --> 33:48.600] TruBlend from CoverGirl. 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[37:56.080 --> 37:57.520] We are back with our political roundtable. [37:57.520 --> 38:02.320] Joining me, Republican strategist, Mike Murphy, New York Times columnist, David Kline, Time [38:02.320 --> 38:06.360] Magazine senior political analyst, Mark Halpern, columnist for the Des Moines Register, Kathy [38:06.360 --> 38:11.400] Abradovich, and host of Andrea Mitchell Reports on MSNBC, NBC's Andrea Mitchell. [38:11.400 --> 38:12.400] Welcome everybody. [38:12.400 --> 38:13.400] Thanks for being here. [38:13.400 --> 38:14.400] Happy New Year. [38:14.400 --> 38:15.400] Happy New Year. [38:15.400 --> 38:16.840] It's a great story to dig into. [38:16.840 --> 38:22.760] Major moments of the week, and Kathy Abradovich with the Des Moines Register, Iowa as a toss-up. [38:22.760 --> 38:23.760] Who's going to win this thing? [38:23.760 --> 38:29.400] Boy, you know, it is a moving target right now, and right now all the movement is behind [38:29.400 --> 38:31.420] Rick Santorum. [38:31.420 --> 38:37.680] Our poll, actually, the first two days that we were in the field this week had Romney [38:37.680 --> 38:39.580] and Paul neck and neck. [38:39.580 --> 38:44.680] We actually had an illustration on the front page for our paper of Romney and Paul arm [38:44.680 --> 38:49.560] wrestling, and when we came in, saw the last two days of polling, we had to put in Rick [38:49.560 --> 38:50.920] Santorum into the picture. [38:50.920 --> 38:55.040] So he is the only candidate that is surging upward right now. [38:55.040 --> 38:58.320] Everybody else is static except Ron Paul, who is trending down. [38:58.320 --> 39:00.640] I think he peaked a week ago. [39:00.640 --> 39:06.440] Mike Murphy, you're a veteran of these parts, and also of the tactics of expectations. [39:06.440 --> 39:11.720] I spoke to some Romney folks last night who actually suggested they think Santorum is [39:11.720 --> 39:13.200] going to win this thing. [39:13.200 --> 39:16.440] Are they setting us up to say, oh, what a win by Mitt Romney? [39:16.440 --> 39:19.700] Well, I think they think Santorum might win this thing. [39:19.700 --> 39:22.440] They had too easy of a life seven days ago. [39:22.440 --> 39:26.000] They had Gingrich declining, and they had Ron Paul, who would be very easy to beat in [39:26.000 --> 39:27.640] the full series of caucuses. [39:27.640 --> 39:29.600] So now they've got Rick Santorum coming up fast. [39:29.600 --> 39:31.320] I think the surge is totally legitimate. [39:31.320 --> 39:32.860] Your poll shows that. [39:32.860 --> 39:36.080] And consolidating that social conservative vote, which in the past has always been the [39:36.080 --> 39:39.040] key to finishing at least second in the Iowa caucus. [39:39.040 --> 39:43.520] So I think they would love to beat Santorum, but if Santorum beats them, they're still [39:43.520 --> 39:46.520] in the top two, and there's great clarity. [39:46.520 --> 39:49.160] There's no way Romney comes out of here a loser if he's in the top two. [39:49.160 --> 39:52.320] But now he knows who his opponent's going to be in New Hampshire, which is not social [39:52.320 --> 39:56.240] conservative territory at all, and as they roll the process out. [39:56.240 --> 39:57.960] So I think the Romney people would like a win. [39:57.960 --> 39:58.960] I'm not sure they need one. [39:58.960 --> 39:59.960] Well, Mark Hopper, it's interesting. [39:59.960 --> 40:03.400] Part of that analysis is, hey, Santorum's good for us. [40:03.400 --> 40:04.400] We keep it expanded. [40:04.400 --> 40:06.040] You take that field to South Carolina. [40:06.040 --> 40:10.520] He'll go after Rick Perry if Perry can stay in the race, better for Romney. [40:10.520 --> 40:16.480] If the issue is who is the stalwart conservative, did Rick Santorum help himself this morning [40:16.480 --> 40:17.480] in the final push? [40:17.480 --> 40:20.320] I think he had some convoluted answers to two of your questions. [40:20.320 --> 40:25.240] One about his support for Mitt Romney four years ago, and also on rape and incest exceptions [40:25.240 --> 40:27.540] and abortion when he was running in Pennsylvania. [40:27.540 --> 40:29.240] Right now I see two buckets of scenarios. [40:29.240 --> 40:32.260] There's scenarios that are great for Mitt Romney, and there's scenarios that are really [40:32.260 --> 40:34.400] good or decent for Mitt Romney. [40:34.400 --> 40:38.960] They would love to leave here with the top three in whatever order, being Paul, Santorum, [40:38.960 --> 40:42.360] and Romney, because they believe they will never lose in the long run and maybe even [40:42.360 --> 40:45.360] in the medium run to Santorum or Paul. [40:45.360 --> 40:49.520] Gingrich and Perry represent bigger threats for them, and I think the worst case for Romney [40:49.520 --> 40:52.160] is if one of those two guys surges in the last few days. [40:52.160 --> 40:54.960] No indication that will happen, but they're both out there working hard. [40:54.960 --> 40:56.600] Andrea Mitchell, you've been out here reporting. [40:56.600 --> 40:57.600] What are you seeing? [40:57.600 --> 41:01.520] Well, the crowds are much smaller than you'd expect, smaller than the Huckabee crowds were [41:01.520 --> 41:02.800] four years ago. [41:02.800 --> 41:07.960] But there's that evangelical core, and when we talk about organization and enthusiasm, [41:07.960 --> 41:09.040] they're going to come out. [41:09.040 --> 41:14.320] And I think that, as Mark and the rest of us all noticed with you today, Santorum may [41:14.320 --> 41:19.120] have stubbed his toe a bit by you pinning him down on what he said when he was running [41:19.120 --> 41:24.880] for re-election in Pennsylvania in 2006, the exceptions that he previously agreed to, the [41:24.880 --> 41:28.640] fact that he is willing to compromise, he said, not on his principles but to get things [41:28.640 --> 41:32.960] done, a little bit convoluted, and the fact that he said he made a political decision [41:32.960 --> 41:37.280] to support Mitt Romney against John McCain, a political decision. [41:37.280 --> 41:41.740] If the crime, David Brooks, is moderation in today's Republican Party, what are we learning [41:41.740 --> 41:46.840] now a couple of days away from actual voting beginning in a Republican caucus about the [41:46.840 --> 41:47.840] state of the party? [41:47.840 --> 41:51.120] Yeah, it's a pretty conservative party, but it's not, they don't want dogmatists. [41:51.120 --> 41:53.140] And I actually think Santorum helped himself today. [41:53.140 --> 41:56.480] His problem is not that he compromises too much, his problem is that people think he's [41:56.480 --> 42:00.360] too rigid and he can show that he's a practical politician, I think that's a net plus for [42:00.360 --> 42:01.360] him. [42:01.360 --> 42:03.960] You know, Iowa has produced some candidates who have not gone on to great success, how [42:03.960 --> 42:08.500] could be Pat Robertson many years ago, I don't think Rick Santorum is one of them. [42:08.500 --> 42:12.280] In part because he's got some working class credentials as opposed to Romney, in part [42:12.280 --> 42:16.980] because he tells a very good story about connecting moral concerns with the economy, and partly [42:16.980 --> 42:17.980] he's just a good politician. [42:17.980 --> 42:22.080] You know, I covered him in the Senate when he lost badly in Pennsylvania, he was a pretty [42:22.080 --> 42:23.460] bad politician. [42:23.460 --> 42:27.200] If you look at him today like you're a baseball scout looking at a pitcher, you'd say, yeah, [42:27.200 --> 42:29.360] this guy's good enough to play in the major leagues. [42:29.360 --> 42:32.680] So I think he's going to be reasonably strong, I'm not sure he's going to win the nomination, [42:32.680 --> 42:33.960] but reasonably strong going out of here. [42:33.960 --> 42:35.920] You talked about the economic message that you think is important. [42:35.920 --> 42:39.120] Yeah, no, one thing that's not being covered as much because his base is social conservatives [42:39.120 --> 42:42.880] is he's still the guy with the blue state Pennsylvania chops and he does a very good [42:42.880 --> 42:46.840] message on manufacturing jobs, which is a bell ringer in Eastern Iowa, which people [42:46.840 --> 42:50.680] don't, you know, from outside Iowa don't know is a place with a lot of light manufacturing. [42:50.680 --> 42:52.040] And I'd make one other point about this morning. [42:52.040 --> 42:53.440] I thought he did fairly well too. [42:53.440 --> 42:56.640] He's always going to be pro-life enough, you know, for the pro-life voters. [42:56.640 --> 42:58.320] So that's not going to be his problem. [42:58.320 --> 43:02.160] But there's something else happening on Sunday morning, which is an evangelical churches [43:02.160 --> 43:03.600] across Iowa and the pulpit. [43:03.600 --> 43:07.600] They're seeing that pole and they're saying one of our guys is moving fast. [43:07.600 --> 43:10.560] And I think the messages are going to go out that are going to be very bad for Perry, going [43:10.560 --> 43:15.440] to be very bad for what's left of Bachmann to go with Rick to win this, that social conservatives [43:15.440 --> 43:18.400] will move toward him and they'll say, that's it. [43:18.400 --> 43:20.080] That's the alternative we've been looking for. [43:20.080 --> 43:22.480] Social conservatives have been like all the other voters in Iowa. [43:22.480 --> 43:28.420] They have wanted to give everybody a try and they are undecided and unwilling to unify. [43:28.420 --> 43:31.800] And even in our poll, they are not unified. [43:31.800 --> 43:36.320] Rick Santorum polled about 23 percent of people who described themselves as born again. [43:36.320 --> 43:40.320] But Ron Paul, Ron Paul and Mitt Romney each got 18 percent. [43:40.320 --> 43:41.720] So they're not united. [43:41.720 --> 43:47.840] They may indeed start moving that way in the interest of having one of them, as Mike said, [43:47.840 --> 43:48.840] at the top. [43:48.840 --> 43:50.480] But it's probably not just for everybody. [43:50.480 --> 43:56.240] The volatility we've seen in the polling here and who comes out of these debates, what does [43:56.240 --> 43:57.720] that tell us? [43:57.720 --> 44:02.640] Is it ultimately going to be portrayed as whether Romney can get above that 25 percent [44:02.640 --> 44:03.640] threshold? [44:03.640 --> 44:04.640] Is that not the big issue? [44:04.640 --> 44:06.400] I actually think it's a little deeper. [44:06.400 --> 44:09.160] One of the things that struck me from all the rallies I've seen out here is a sense [44:09.160 --> 44:13.880] the country has gone seriously off course and it's a values thing. [44:13.880 --> 44:17.560] And all the campaigns are trying to tap into this saying we've lost it, let's restore, [44:17.560 --> 44:19.520] let's go back to what we've lost. [44:19.520 --> 44:21.920] And you see that in the crowds when you talk to the people. [44:21.920 --> 44:23.920] But when you ask them, what do you want to do? [44:23.920 --> 44:24.920] No one has a clue. [44:24.920 --> 44:25.920] And so they're bouncing. [44:25.920 --> 44:26.920] Because the problems are so difficult. [44:26.920 --> 44:32.060] And when you feel that anger, it's that wrong track number that we see. [44:32.060 --> 44:33.520] It's the anger against Washington. [44:33.520 --> 44:35.960] Ron Paul early on tapped into that. [44:35.960 --> 44:41.800] I think he really hurt himself on foreign policy and on making himself not electable. [44:41.800 --> 44:46.760] The sense in the polls that we saw, starting with the polls on Wednesday, then our poll [44:46.760 --> 44:52.960] on Friday, and yours today, he's just not acceptable to so many people because of his [44:52.960 --> 44:55.200] foreign policy positions. [44:55.200 --> 44:59.000] And going into South Carolina in particular, that's going to be a very big problem. [44:59.000 --> 45:01.680] My gut is an old Paul has always been the Ron Paul thing's overrated. [45:01.680 --> 45:05.040] And I'll go on the dangerous prediction limb and think he'll be the surprise disappointing [45:05.040 --> 45:06.040] finish. [45:06.040 --> 45:09.920] And a lot of his function is, will new people show up at the caucus? [45:09.920 --> 45:12.720] And we always get seduced by this argument because it's so much fun, a bunch of martians [45:12.720 --> 45:14.400] are going to land, we're going to have a marshal. [45:14.400 --> 45:16.100] Historically, new people don't. [45:16.100 --> 45:19.360] As Republican primary voters and activists, the question is within the range. [45:19.360 --> 45:22.880] I think because of the wrong track energy and frustration, it turned out to be a little [45:22.880 --> 45:23.880] higher than last time. [45:23.880 --> 45:24.880] Not a lot. [45:24.880 --> 45:25.880] Just a little. [45:25.880 --> 45:27.680] The 27% of this poll, our new caucus goes. [45:27.680 --> 45:30.440] And Barack Obama did bring new people into the caucus. [45:30.440 --> 45:33.760] I think that we've got a different electorate than we did in 2008 because the Democrats [45:33.760 --> 45:35.040] don't have a contest. [45:35.040 --> 45:40.400] So you have people who are independents in particular who want a caucus. [45:40.400 --> 45:43.400] And a lot of them are going toward Ron Paul. [45:43.400 --> 45:47.080] He is the least ideological on the social issues. [45:47.080 --> 45:52.240] And also, what we're getting is, I think, a desperation for real change. [45:52.240 --> 45:55.800] And I think a lot of those folks are flocking toward Ron Paul because he is the guy who [45:55.800 --> 45:57.140] is completely different. [45:57.140 --> 45:59.920] I think he was a sentiment, which is what all these polls measure early. [45:59.920 --> 46:01.040] They're a noise meter. [46:01.040 --> 46:02.040] But now it's time for voting. [46:02.040 --> 46:03.040] I don't know if he's a vote. [46:03.040 --> 46:04.040] And I think he collects it. [46:04.040 --> 46:05.760] Can I interject something else into this? [46:05.760 --> 46:10.920] Here's the Sunday New York Times and the lead story is Obama's strategy for 12 election [46:10.920 --> 46:12.120] attack Congress. [46:12.120 --> 46:16.400] Now, White House officials I've talked to say that that was sensationalized, that that [46:16.400 --> 46:20.720] was overwritten, that, yes, the president's going to talk about contrasts with Congress, [46:20.720 --> 46:24.060] but he certainly hopes and will work for cooperation. [46:24.060 --> 46:28.360] But we're beginning to see the outlines already in this contest of what the general election [46:28.360 --> 46:32.840] will look like, the general election campaign, no matter who the nominee is. [46:32.840 --> 46:38.920] Now, here was then-Senator Obama when he won in Iowa back in 2008. [46:38.920 --> 46:39.920] This is what he said in part. [46:39.920 --> 46:48.120] The time has come for a president who will be honest about the choices and the challenges [46:48.120 --> 46:55.280] we face, who will listen to you and learn from you even when we disagree, who won't [46:55.280 --> 47:01.480] just tell you what you want to hear, but what you need to know. [47:01.480 --> 47:05.840] And Mitt Romney on the campaign trail this week is actually shadowing where President [47:05.840 --> 47:10.160] Obama then-Senator Obama campaigned in Iowa, and he's got a very different message. [47:10.160 --> 47:12.280] This is it in part. [47:12.280 --> 47:17.600] Four years ago this week, the Barack Obama visited Davenport, and he gave a speech right [47:17.600 --> 47:19.160] down the street. [47:19.160 --> 47:23.280] And like most of his campaign speeches, it was long on promises. [47:23.280 --> 47:27.840] He promised that he was going to bring people together, and then he closed his speech with [47:27.840 --> 47:28.840] these words. [47:28.840 --> 47:33.000] He says, this is our moment, this is our time. [47:33.000 --> 47:37.600] Well, Mr. President, you've had your moment. [47:37.600 --> 47:39.520] We've seen the results. [47:39.520 --> 47:43.000] And now, Mr. President, this is our time. [47:43.000 --> 47:47.000] So here's the contrast, Mark Halpern. [47:47.000 --> 47:51.120] The argument is that the transformational leader that President Obama was supposed to [47:51.120 --> 47:54.620] be, the truth teller, was going to tell Americans what they needed to know, not what they wanted [47:54.620 --> 47:57.180] to know, that that leader has failed to show. [47:57.180 --> 48:01.320] It's clearly the strongest message any Republican can have, and Mitt Romney has driven it better [48:01.320 --> 48:03.000] than anyone else in the field. [48:03.000 --> 48:08.480] He also has run, by every metric you can use to judge a campaign, fundraising, opposition [48:08.480 --> 48:12.560] research, tactic strategy, far and away the best campaign of anyone in the race. [48:12.560 --> 48:13.840] And the White House is ready for him. [48:13.840 --> 48:19.720] Last night, New Year's Eve, Romney, in a late-day event, says he would veto the DREAM Act, giving [48:19.720 --> 48:22.780] more opportunity to immigrants to this country. [48:22.780 --> 48:24.560] The White House jumped on that. [48:24.560 --> 48:28.480] New Year's Eve, David Axelrod, the president's advisor, tweeting about it, DNC putting out [48:28.480 --> 48:29.600] a press release. [48:29.600 --> 48:31.100] They are very aggressive. [48:31.100 --> 48:32.520] They are very skilled. [48:32.520 --> 48:36.200] If you're looking for electability, though, again, the only operation out there right [48:36.200 --> 48:40.320] now that's got anything like the potential to have the scale that the president will [48:40.320 --> 48:41.880] bring to this is Mitt Romney. [48:41.880 --> 48:43.680] I would say he's got the organizational scale. [48:43.680 --> 48:46.040] His events are like big aircraft carriers. [48:46.040 --> 48:48.080] I have a little problem with the messaging, though. [48:48.080 --> 48:49.240] Here it's all patriotism. [48:49.240 --> 48:50.240] It's Tom Sawyer. [48:50.240 --> 48:51.240] I love America. [48:51.240 --> 48:52.520] I used to drive through a lot of national parks. [48:52.520 --> 48:53.520] You love America. [48:53.520 --> 48:57.080] And the subtext is, you know, you might think I'm a rich guy with a strange religion, but [48:57.080 --> 48:58.240] I'm just like you. [48:58.240 --> 49:02.680] I actually think that's probably not enough to win in a country where people feel it's [49:02.680 --> 49:06.920] in decline, that the scope of his plans are not as big as the scope of the problems. [49:06.920 --> 49:07.920] A problem that also applies to Barack Obama. [49:07.920 --> 49:08.920] But it's enough for this week, though, right? [49:08.920 --> 49:09.920] Potentially. [49:09.920 --> 49:10.920] Potentially, yeah. [49:10.920 --> 49:13.920] Well, and the president is not going to be silent, also. [49:13.920 --> 49:20.160] Andrea, take that on, because this is a big issue about whether President Obama has measured [49:20.160 --> 49:21.160] up as a leader. [49:21.160 --> 49:27.160] I mean, there's real fears of national decline, a sense that the country's on the wrong track. [49:27.160 --> 49:30.960] This is a campaign about big things, ultimately, for voters. [49:30.960 --> 49:32.920] And the president is trying to respond to that. [49:32.920 --> 49:36.640] He's actually doing a video message to all of the Democratic caucus-goers. [49:36.640 --> 49:38.920] He wants to be present in some fashion. [49:38.920 --> 49:44.400] So he is going to have Democratic caucusing with a presidential message by video. [49:44.400 --> 49:47.740] But the point is that he has not yet found a way. [49:47.740 --> 49:49.200] He has not found his voice. [49:49.200 --> 49:53.560] And they say that the New York Times story is overwritten, that he's running against [49:53.560 --> 49:54.560] Congress. [49:54.560 --> 49:56.280] That has worked for him in the payroll tax fight. [49:56.280 --> 49:59.760] But he still has to find that message for the State of the Union, for whatever his next [49:59.760 --> 50:00.760] platform is going to be. [50:00.760 --> 50:02.840] That is obviously the next one. [50:02.840 --> 50:07.740] To tell people how the country can be better at a time where his only economic message [50:07.740 --> 50:10.840] can be, it's not as bad as it could have been. [50:10.840 --> 50:11.840] It's better than it was. [50:11.840 --> 50:13.520] And the Republicans will make it worse. [50:13.520 --> 50:14.520] They'll take you back. [50:14.520 --> 50:17.840] Yeah, I think, off David's point, there's a really interesting question for Mitt Romney [50:17.840 --> 50:18.840] next week. [50:18.840 --> 50:20.880] I think it's highly likely that Stanton will come out here with a lot of energy. [50:20.880 --> 50:21.880] I don't mean second or first. [50:21.880 --> 50:25.280] But it'll settle down to, that'll be what the media wants, so it'll be the race. [50:25.280 --> 50:27.200] And Rick will come at it from the right, particularly the social right. [50:27.200 --> 50:29.560] If you're running the Romney campaign, you've got a choice. [50:29.560 --> 50:32.220] You either just grind it out and have a contest on the right. [50:32.220 --> 50:35.400] You say you're pro-life, gay marriage, I say I'm pro-life. [50:35.400 --> 50:38.660] The White House is going to be giggling for three months at that. [50:38.660 --> 50:42.080] Or do you know you've got the organizational strength and the depth, Santorum, it'll be [50:42.080 --> 50:45.900] like drinking from a fire hose for him to try to catch up if he comes out of here. [50:45.900 --> 50:47.200] Do you triangulate a little bit? [50:47.200 --> 50:50.960] Do you take a few risks in the primary, but do you bounce off Santorum to grab the middle [50:50.960 --> 50:54.440] again, which is a much better general election strategy, it's a little risky in a primary. [50:54.440 --> 50:59.080] I want to get back to tactics in just a second, but David Brooks, stay on this larger theme, [50:59.080 --> 51:03.280] which is the White House, I talked to senior advisors who say, look, we can win the broader [51:03.280 --> 51:05.800] vision of where the country is going and where it should go. [51:05.800 --> 51:08.280] We can win independent voters on that message. [51:08.280 --> 51:11.160] What is the vision that we're learning about of this Republican party? [51:11.160 --> 51:13.800] Well, it's a vision that thinks government is too big. [51:13.800 --> 51:15.720] It's become the government party. [51:15.720 --> 51:19.400] And the thing which I think Santorum brings to the table, which the others don't talk [51:19.400 --> 51:22.880] about as well, is community and values. [51:22.880 --> 51:26.160] He was a big anti-poverty guy when he was in the Congress. [51:26.160 --> 51:29.600] He really talks about families and ties that to business a little better. [51:29.600 --> 51:35.320] That's been lacking from what has become a very libertarian, anti-tax, economics only [51:35.320 --> 51:36.320] party. [51:36.320 --> 51:38.040] And it is in danger of reverting back into that sort of thing. [51:38.040 --> 51:41.560] So, Kathy, what are the storylines that come out of Tuesday as you see them? [51:41.560 --> 51:43.460] Well, I think that there's a couple of things. [51:43.460 --> 51:47.600] One that we're very interested in here in Iowa is just how are the Iowa caucuses viewed [51:47.600 --> 51:48.640] nationally? [51:48.640 --> 51:51.800] And the results here will feed into that discussion. [51:51.800 --> 51:56.600] Once somebody comes out of Iowa that people perceive has very little chance of being the [51:56.600 --> 52:00.880] nominee like Ron Paul or Rick Santorum, that's something that we're worried about. [52:00.880 --> 52:03.040] And some Republicans are worried about that. [52:03.040 --> 52:09.400] And finally, I think that the question then is how do the conservatives fare in the future [52:09.400 --> 52:10.400] here in Iowa? [52:10.400 --> 52:11.760] Mark Halperin? [52:11.760 --> 52:15.880] Every time Mitt Romney's been challenged in this process, his very well-skilled opposition [52:15.880 --> 52:18.920] research team has killed the person who's challenged them. [52:18.920 --> 52:19.920] They killed Rick Perry. [52:19.920 --> 52:20.920] They killed Newt Gingrich. [52:20.920 --> 52:23.040] They even lifted a finger to kill Rick Santorum. [52:23.040 --> 52:26.080] And if he does come out of here, as Mike's right, it's perceived at least in the short [52:26.080 --> 52:30.000] term as a two-person race, he may not have to choose between triangulation and competing [52:30.000 --> 52:31.000] on the right. [52:31.000 --> 52:34.760] They may just tactically kill Rick Santorum with an opposition research file that's like [52:34.760 --> 52:35.760] this. [52:35.760 --> 52:36.760] That's what I predict will happen. [52:36.760 --> 52:38.400] And then the question will be can Santorum survive that? [52:38.400 --> 52:42.280] Does he have the skill and the ability to fight back because he won't have the infrastructure, [52:42.280 --> 52:45.720] he won't have the money, as he's talked about with you, he won't have the big endorsements [52:45.720 --> 52:47.400] and the people backing him to help him. [52:47.400 --> 52:52.840] I mean, almost $17 million spent in blanketing the airwaves here in Iowa. [52:52.840 --> 52:55.960] These outside groups, these super PACs are pounding. [52:55.960 --> 52:59.400] And they did it without Romney having to lift a finger. [52:59.400 --> 53:02.960] And the fact that Romney is not perceived, there is no blowback as there has been in [53:02.960 --> 53:08.720] past campaigns because of the Citizens United Supreme Court decision, which now has opened [53:08.720 --> 53:14.080] the door for these super PACs to come in and they just killed Gingrich, just pummeled him. [53:14.080 --> 53:20.040] Not that he might not have self-destructed anyway, but they just went after him hammer [53:20.040 --> 53:22.520] and tong and Mitt Romney doesn't get the blame. [53:22.520 --> 53:25.100] Santorum's good for Mitt Romney right now. [53:25.100 --> 53:28.240] The minute he's no longer good for him, the super PACs will shift their focus. [53:28.240 --> 53:30.240] What's the storyline Wednesday morning that we're covering? [53:30.240 --> 53:33.120] Who the hell is Santorum? [53:33.120 --> 53:34.120] But there's a point about this. [53:34.120 --> 53:35.120] It's not just the super PACs. [53:35.120 --> 53:39.520] And easier to crush a guy of negative ads in one state than in ten, Santorum is I think [53:39.520 --> 53:42.100] a lot more competitive than Ron Paul would be. [53:42.100 --> 53:43.100] But it's the media. [53:43.100 --> 53:47.400] The media works like the Jurassic Park dinosaurs, 30 feet tall, huge teeth, with all due respect, [53:47.400 --> 53:49.920] not always the biggest brain, and it follows movement. [53:49.920 --> 53:54.320] And when it sees movement, Rick Santorum stomps over there and tries to eat Rick Santorum. [53:54.320 --> 53:55.760] And that's what next week is going to be like. [53:55.760 --> 53:58.240] He's going to be the happiest guy in the world I think Tuesday night. [53:58.240 --> 54:02.120] Wednesday, he's got a stand on his head, drink from a fire hose without drowning, and learn [54:02.120 --> 54:04.880] Chinese in one week to roll this thing out nationally. [54:04.880 --> 54:05.880] Not impossible. [54:05.880 --> 54:07.960] It's going to be hard and he's going to get looked at hard. [54:07.960 --> 54:11.640] One of the weird things, I mean, Mike thinks we have small brains, but Rick Santorum really [54:11.640 --> 54:13.160] hates us sometimes. [54:13.160 --> 54:17.000] And when Santorum ran a bad campaign, which he did when he tried to get reelected in Pennsylvania, [54:17.000 --> 54:22.000] it's because he got obsessed with the media, he got very sour, and then he self-destructed. [54:22.000 --> 54:24.140] And we'll see how temperamentally he reacts to this sort of thing. [54:24.140 --> 54:27.560] Where does this thing get decided, Andrea? [54:27.560 --> 54:32.600] It could get decided in South Carolina or Florida, if not sooner. [54:32.600 --> 54:36.480] Let's look at the calendar to remind people where we go as we move forward. [54:36.480 --> 54:43.000] Tuesday, of course, the Iowa caucuses, New Hampshire primary is January 10th. [54:43.000 --> 54:48.080] The following Tuesday, January 21st is South Carolina, January 31st, Florida. [54:48.080 --> 54:50.600] Mark, this is a busy January. [54:50.600 --> 54:55.680] Does this auger for it being wrapped up in January, or does this become a drawn out 2008 [54:55.680 --> 54:56.680] like affair? [54:56.680 --> 55:01.900] Unless someone can beat Mitt Romney in one of the first four, or two of the first four, [55:01.900 --> 55:04.240] I think it's wrapped up by the State of the Union. [55:04.240 --> 55:07.720] If he's caught and he shows a lot of weakness, that's a different story. [55:07.720 --> 55:10.440] But there's no indication of that right now. [55:10.440 --> 55:15.200] If he wins New Hampshire and he wins Florida, that's a neck breaker on everybody else. [55:15.200 --> 55:18.320] Not impossible to win the delegate count as later, but I think he is the commanding front [55:18.320 --> 55:20.680] runner today after the Florida primary if he has a strong victory. [55:20.680 --> 55:23.160] How vulnerable is President Obama? [55:23.160 --> 55:24.160] He's vulnerable. [55:24.160 --> 55:27.160] I'd say he's now a slight underdog, very slight. [55:27.160 --> 55:28.160] The economy's going to be terrible. [55:28.160 --> 55:29.920] Who knows what's going to happen to Europe? [55:29.920 --> 55:30.920] So he's vulnerable. [55:30.920 --> 55:32.920] He doesn't have the strongest opposition in the world. [55:32.920 --> 55:34.840] Kathy, you're on the ground here in Iowa. [55:34.840 --> 55:35.840] Who's going to win this thing? [55:35.840 --> 55:38.280] You know, I can't predict it. [55:38.280 --> 55:41.800] It's too fast moving, but I will predict that a lot of people are going to make up their [55:41.800 --> 55:45.520] mind on caucus night, and very well could be a surprise. [55:45.520 --> 55:46.520] All right. [55:46.520 --> 55:47.520] We'll leave it there. [55:47.520 --> 55:48.520] Thank you all very much. [55:48.520 --> 55:49.880] Before we go, a programming note. [55:49.880 --> 55:55.200] Next Sunday morning is our live NBC News Facebook Republican presidential debate right here [55:55.200 --> 55:59.040] on Meet the Press, the final debate before the New Hampshire primary. [55:59.040 --> 56:02.560] For the past month, we've been asking New Hampshire Facebook users what the most important [56:02.560 --> 56:04.560] issue is for the primary. [56:04.560 --> 56:09.200] An overwhelming majority, as you might suspect, 58 percent say it is in fact the economy. [56:09.200 --> 56:13.480] So if you have a question you'd like asked in the debate, go to our Facebook page. [56:13.480 --> 56:17.760] That's at Facebook.com slash Meet the Press, and you can post it there. [56:17.760 --> 56:18.760] That is all for today. [56:18.760 --> 56:21.680] I'll be on the ground here in Iowa through the caucuses, and then on to New Hampshire [56:21.680 --> 56:23.340] reporting on the primary. [56:23.340 --> 56:27.360] We'll be back next week with our live presidential candidate debate. [56:27.360 --> 56:36.960] If it's Sunday, it's Meet the Press. [56:36.960 --> 56:42.440] Right now it's buy one, get one free on everything in the store, including big and tall sizes. [56:42.440 --> 56:46.160] You're going to like the way you look, I guarantee it. [56:46.160 --> 56:47.960] I have a cold. [56:47.960 --> 56:50.160] I took DayQuil, but my nose is still runny. [56:50.160 --> 56:52.360] Truth is, DayQuil doesn't treat that. [56:52.360 --> 56:53.360] Really? [56:53.360 --> 56:56.920] Alka-Seltzer Plus fights your worst cold symptoms, plus it relieves your runny nose. [56:56.920 --> 56:57.920] Awesome. [56:57.920 --> 56:58.920] Yes, it is. [56:58.920 --> 57:01.600] That's the cold truth. [57:01.600 --> 57:03.920] Who is Nutri System Success for? 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