By Maggie Gallagher
On Tuesday night in Iowa, he stood before the cheering throngs like a Republican Rocky, or better yet, a latter-day Rudy suddenly lifted above his Notre Dame teammates in a fantastic storybook finish.
On Tuesday night, for the first time, Rick Santorum was a contender.
And a contender like nobody has yet seen in this race.
Santorum stood before the cameras, the living embodiment of a certain Northeastern Catholic sensibility: tough, hardworking, less than slick, often underestimated, the kind of guy who has to work hard to get respect because life is tough, not fair — the kind of man who gets knocked down but who will always get up again.
As he recalled his immigrant coal-miner grandfather’s funeral, Santorum’s words sang: “I knelt next to his coffin, and all I could do was look at his hands. They were enormous hands. And all I could think was: ‘Those hands dug freedom for me.’
“My grandfather taught me basic things that my dad taught me, over and over again,” he continued. “Work hard. Work hard. And work hard.
“What wins in America,” he said, “are bold ideas, sharp contrasts, and a plan that includes everyone.”
If Republicans have a candidate who can “appeal to the voters who have been left behind by a Democratic Party that wants to make them dependent instead of valuing their work, we will win this election,” Santorum said.
“Those are the same people who President Obama claims cling to their guns and their Bibles,” he said, then paused. “Thank God they do.”
Santorum, seizing this opportunity — his first chance to introduce himself to the broader American electorate — finished as he began, with a salute to family, to faith against long odds, to a core overarching principle that unites his social and economic vision:
“People ask me what motivates me. I say the dignity of every human life.
“Whether it’s the sanctity of life in the womb, or the dignity of every working person in America to fulfill their potential, you will have a friend in Rick Santorum.”
I have not yet endorsed anyone in this presidential race. And unlike some values voters, I am not anti-Mitt Romney. Romney is a fundamentally decent, extremely capable man, who fought hard for marriage in Massachusetts. If he is the GOP nominee, I can vote for him with great good will and a clean conscience.
But when the guy who has taken more hits than any other for standing up for life and marriage fights his way with nobody’s help from nowhere to, well, Tuesday night — you have to cheer.
The left, which thought it had buried Santorum years ago, is going to go after him with a hatred unlike anyone else has yet generated in this race. They hate him with that special ire reserved for his virtues, not his vices.
They will go after him not just to defeat him, but to smear his good name, to associate it with their own muck, to take a decent and honorable man and try literally to make his name mean mud.
They will not succeed.
Let me promise you one thing: The American people are not going to reject a man as a candidate for president because he believes a man should protect his children, born and unborn, commit to sex only in the context of a lifelong, loving marriage to a woman, and devote himself to being a good dad.
Most young people may not agree with Santorum’s traditional Catholic views on sex and marriage. Wistfully, they may not believe the life he lives is possible for them. But they will admire him for it — and many will long for it for themselves.
I am not anti-Romney. But after Tuesday night’s victory, count me as pro-Rick.
Maggie Gallagher is the founder of the National Organization for Marriage and has been a syndicated columnist for 15 years.
Originally posted at Caffeinated Carolina