Santorum May Be Winning By Not Losing
Mitt Romney and CNN moderator John King have tried their best to shatter Santorum's cool, and the former Pennsylvania senator has been roughed up on issues like earmarking and spending. But Romney looks tired, and defensive at times, and he is not giving Santorum the bruising that he gave Newt Gingrich in Florida.
Santorum was helped by the focus, in the opening 45 minutes, on economic and fiscal issues. It allowed him to speak like a reasonable conservative, about debt and Social Security and the evil of the Wall St. bailout, without scaring independent voters with his pronounced views on faith, sex and reproductive freedom.
Santorum closed the first hour by assuring voters that, no matter what his own feelings were about sexual morality, he would not use the power of government to impose his beliefs on his fellow countrymen. Liberals don't understand that, Santorum said, because "that is what they do. That's not what we do."
It was a nice moment. Santorum could have spent the first half explaining his controversial remarks about Satan, public schools and Barack Obama's faith. Instead, he is exchanging routine salvos with the others. By not losing, maybe he's winning.

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