Rick Santorum

Politician

Rick Santorum was born in Winchester, Virginia, United States on May 10th, 1958 and is the Politician. At the age of 65, Rick Santorum biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
May 10, 1958
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Winchester, Virginia, United States
Age
65 years old
Zodiac Sign
Taurus
Networth
$5 Million
Profession
Lawyer, Politician
Social Media
Rick Santorum Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 65 years old, Rick Santorum physical status not available right now. We will update Rick Santorum's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

Height
Not Available
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
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Measurements
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Rick Santorum Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Pennsylvania State University, University Park (BA), University of Pittsburgh (MBA), Dickinson School of Law (JD)
Rick Santorum Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Karen Garver ​(m. 1990)​
Children
8
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Rick Santorum Life

Richard John Santorum (born May 10, 1958) is an American politician, advocate, and political commentator.

He served as a member of the Republican Party from 1995 to 2007 and was the Senate's third-ranking Republican from 2001 to 2007.

Santorum ran for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, finishing second behind Mitt Romney in second place.

In January 2017, he became a CNN senior political commentator. In 1994, Santorum was elected to the United States Senate from Pennsylvania.

He served two terms before losing his 2006 reelection bid.

Santorum, a Roman Catholic, is a social conservative who condemns abortion and same-sex union and embraced a cultural warrior image during his Senate tenure.

Santorum authored the Santorum Amendment while serving as a senator, which would have promoted the study of intelligent design.

He was a leading promoter of the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, which was introduced in 2003. Santorum has served as a consultant, private practice advocate, and a newspaper contributor in the years since being barred from the Senate.

In the 2012 US presidential race, he ran for the Republican nomination.

Santorum beat hopes by winning 11 primaries and caucuses and receiving nearly four million votes, making him the runner-up to eventual candidate Mitt Romney before suspending his campaign on April 10, 2012.

Santorum ran for president again in 2016, but he resigned in February 2016 after a weak showing in the Iowa caucuses.

Early life and education

Richard John Santorum was born in Winchester, Virginia. He was the middle of the three children of Aldo Santorum (1923-2011), a clinical psychologist who immigrated to the United States at the age of seven from Riva, Trentino, Italy, and Catherine (Dughi) Santorum (1918–2019), an administrative nurse of Italian and Irish origins.

Santorum grew up in Berkeley County, West Virginia, and Butler County, Pennsylvania. His family was housed in an apartment provided by the Veterans Administration in West Virginia. Santorum attended Butler Catholic School in the beginning and then moved to Butler Senior High School. He was referred to as "Rooster" in rumors for both a cowlick strand of hair and an assertive personality, particularly on critical political topics. Santorum attended the Roman Catholic Carmel High School in Mundelein, Illinois, graduating in 1976. His parents were transferred to the Naval Station Great Lakes in northern Illinois.

Santorum attended Pennsylvania State University for undergraduate studies, served as chairman of the University's College Republicans chapter, and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts. In 1980, I received a degree in political science. Santorum joined the Tau Epsilon Phi fraternity at Penn State. He then completed a one-year M.B.A. program at the University of Pittsburgh's Joseph M. Katz Graduate School of Business, graduating in 1981. Santorum received a J.D. in 1986. From Dickinson School of Law, he received a degree with honors.

Personal life

When Karen Garver (born 1960), Santorum's future wife, was a student at the University of Pittsburgh, and he was looking for summer interns for Kirkpatrick & Lockhart. They married in 1990 and have seven children.

Gabriel, the Santorums' son, was born prematurely after 20 weeks of pregnancy and died in the hospital two hours later. Karen and Rick slept with Gabriel's body in the hospital that night and took his body home the next day so their other children would see him. In January 2012, the Santorums' four eldest children appeared on Piers Morgan Tonight with their parents. Elizabeth, who was five years old at the time of Gabriel's death, was glad to have seen him again and that he had a special place in her heart.

Santorum travelled to Rome in 2002 to speak at a Centennial celebration of Saint Josemara Escrivá, the father of Opus Dei. In a ceremony at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York on November 12, 2004, he and his wife were crowned Knight and Dame of Magistral Grace of the Knights of Malta.

Santorum's net worth has been estimated between $880,000 and $3 million, which is mainly held as five rented houses around Penn State University, two personal homes in Great Falls and Penn Hills, and some IRAs. Santorum bought a three-bedroom house in Penn Hills, Pittsburgh. In 2001, he bought a $640,000 house in Leesburg, Virginia, sold it for $850,000 and purchased a $2 million house in Great Falls, Virginia.

Santorum has paid $50,000 per year in medical expenses not covered by insurance for his daughter Isabella, according to The Washington Post. Isabella airlifted from a Virginia hospital to a children's hospital in Philadelphia cost the Santorums $25,000.

Santorum is an avid fantasy baseball fan in his spare time.

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Rick Santorum Career

Early career

Santorum first became interested in politics in the 1970s by volunteering for Senator John Heinz, a Pennsylvania Republican from Pennsylvania. In addition, Santorum served as Executive Assistant to Republican state senator Doyle Corman from 1981 to 1984, then Executive Director of the Pennsylvania Senate Local Government Committee from 1981 to 1984, then Executive Director of the Senate Transportation Committee while in law school.

Santorum was admitted to the Pennsylvania legislature and practiced law for four years at the Pittsburgh law firm Kirkpatrick & Lockhart, a Pittsburgh law firm known for raising political candidates and lobbyists (later K&L Gates). As an associate, he successfully campaigned on behalf of the World Wrestling Federation to defame professional wrestling, arguing that such restrictions should be exempted from federal anabolic steroids because it was entertainment, not a sport. After being elected to the House of Representatives, Santorum stopped his private law practice in 1990.

Post-Senate career

Santorum joined the Ethics and Public Policy Center, a Washington, D.C.-based conservative think tank, in January 2007 as the head of its America's Enemies Program, which was focusing on foreign challenges to the United States, including Islamic fascism, Venezuela, North Korea, and Russia. He signed a deal in February 2007 to become a Fox News Channel contributor, giving commentary on politics and public policy. He joined Eckert Seamans, where he primarily practiced law in the firm's Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C. offices, providing strategic and strategic support to the firm's clients in March 2007. He joined the Board of Directors of Universal Health Services, a hospital consulting firm headquartered in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, in 2007. For The Philadelphia Inquirer, he began writing "The Elephant in the Room," an op-ed column.

Santorum's earnings increased by $1.3 million in 2010 and the first half of 2011. Consol Energy and American Continental Group were among his clients' profits, which arose from his work as a consultant for industry interest groups, including Consol Energy and American Continental Groups. Universal Health Services and Santorum's stock options were also earned $395,414 in corporate director's fees and stock options from Universal Health Services, which included $217,385 in income from the Ethics and Public Policy Center. In 2010, the Philadelphia Inquirer paid him $23,000 for his work as a columnist.

Santorum became a CNN senior political commentator in January 2017. "There isn't much Native American culture in American culture," he said at a Young America's Foundation function on April 23. We arrived here and started with a blank slate. A nation was born. From nothing. "I was nowhere here," says the author. Santorum's racial remarks prompted calls for CNN to end his employment, which CNN responded days later.

Santorum was often referred to as a potential 2008 presidential candidate prior to the 2006 election. During the 2006 campaign and in the face of poor poll numbers in his Senate campaign, he declared that if elected, he would serve a full term. Santorum has also ruled out a presidential bid after losing, but not this time.

Santorum said on February 1, 2008, he would vote for Mitt Romney in the 2008 Republican presidential primary. Santorum blasted John McCain, criticizing his anti-abortion voting record and conservative values. Santorum later said he endorsed Romney because he perceived him as the "best chance to stop John McCain" after he was too conservative. Santorum expressed his support for McCain as the nominee in September 2008, quoting McCain's choice of Sarah Palin as his running mate as a step forward.

In 2010, Santorum was identified as a candidate for governor of Pennsylvania. At one time, he was said to have "quietly but effectively put his fingerprints on a number of conservative causes in the state." Santorum declined to apply for the gubernatorial nomination and instead endorsed eventual winner Tom Corbett.

Santorum spoke at the University of Dubuque on the economy in the fall of 2009, fueling rumors that he would run for president in 2012. "It got a lot of buzz on the internet," Santorum later reported, "It gets a lot of buzz on the internet, so I thought, 'Well, maybe there's some curiosity.' Following numerous conversations with his wife, who was not upbeat at first, he decided to run.

Santorum spoke with Catholic figures in Orlando, Florida, on September 11, 2009, saying that the 2012 presidential elections would be "a real chance for success." He has since scheduled several appearances in Iowa with political non-profit groups.

"I'm sure that conservatives need someone who will not only stand up for our beliefs, but also who can articulate a conservative vision for our country's future," Santorum said in an email and letter on January 15, 2010. "I just don't see anyone rising to the plate right now," the engineer said. I have no ardent desire to be president, but I do have a burning desire to have a different president of the United States. On April 13, 2011, he established a presidential exploratory committee. Santorum also referred to his grandfather's historical involvement with Italian fascism as a source for his presidential campaign.

On ABC's Good Morning America, he officially announced his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination on June 6, 2011. He started lags in the polls but increased as other conservative candidates fell. Polls found him in the top three by the weekend's caucuses, as well as Romney and Ron Paul. The Des Moines Register also stated that Santorum had a lot of momentum. Romney was crowned by eight votes in the best finish in the Iowa caucuses, but the final results revealed two weeks later showed Santorum had won by 34 votes. Santorum later honed in on the states holding elections on February 7, a gamble that paid off, as he secured all three of them. Santorum soared in polls taken shortly after, placing first in some cases and a close second in others. Santorum barely won both Mississippi and Alabama in the March 13 primaries, and followed up with a win in Louisiana on March 24.

Santorum's campaign was suspended in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, following his daughter Bella's hospitalization and attacks in Wisconsin, Maryland, and the District of Columbia. He had won 11 state primaries and almost 4 million votes, more than any other candidate except Romney. For a brief time, Santorum topped Romney in polls. Romney branded Santorum's campaign "an important voice" in the Republican Party at the end of his tenure.

At the 2012 Republican National Convention, Santorum received a prime time speaking slot. He had been supposed to speak early in the evening, but convention promoters had him moved to 9 p.m. with Ann Romney and convention keynote Chris Christie, who were already popular speakers of the evening. Santorum related to the American dream that his immigrant grandfather gave his family, but that Obama turned the dream into a nightmare. He talked about his experiences on the presidential campaign trail, emphasizing his feelings about his daughter Bella and visiting disabled people and their families. He emphasized the importance of strengthening marriage and families. He also condemned Obama's work on the welfare reform bill, which he was one of the chief advocates in Congress, as well as his teaching practices, including school choice and student loans. Santorum's address came after he received a standing ovation.

Santorum founded Patriot Voices, a 501(c)(4) non-profit founded in June 2012 with the intention of "mobilizing conservatives around this world committed to supporting causes and candidates around the country. Ted Cruz of Texas and Richard Mourdock of Indiana both won in their respective Republican primaries; both won. Patriot Voices endorsed eight Senate candidates and four House candidates in the general election. Santorum lent support to "NO Wiggins" in Iowa's 2012 retention race to depost Iowa Supreme Court Justice David Wiggins, who, according to the court, who has pursued a personal political agenda. They have also protested the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, arguing that it undermines parental rights and national sovereignty. Santorum became a Senior Advisor to the Convention of States Project of Citizens for Self-Governance in August 2021. "As Senior Advisor Rick, who is advising us on strategy, will campaign as a public voice for the burgeoning Convention of States movement, and he will concentrate his attention on rebuilding our country and returning the proper balance to our republic," said Mark Meckler, project leader.

Santorum, a Dallas-based Christian film firm, became Chairman and CEO of EchoLight Studios in June 2013. The Christmas Candle and the Religious liberty film One Generation Away are two of Santorum's Christmas-themed films.

He is a member of Plasma Technologies LLC.

Santorum, who appeared on NBC's Meet the Press on August 4, 2013, said, "I'm open to investigating a presidential bid in 2016." In an interview with The Washington Post, he discussed his candidacy in a potential 2016 bid and officially announced his candidacy on May 27, 2015. Santorum's campaign came to an end on February 3, 2016, after he failed in the Iowa caucuses, and he endorsed Florida senator Marco Rubio. Santorum endorsed Donald Trump after Rubio suspended his campaign.

Santorum was barred from CNN in May 2021 for remarks about Native American culture, which were thought to be racial in character, with some reactions referring to them as "classic white supremacist rhetoric" and being "dangerous manipulation." Santorum responded by saying he had "misspoke" and denied that he was "attempting to deny [the genocide of] Native Americans."

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After Trump stunned the United States with a victory underdog in the 2012 Iowa Republican caucus, Rick Santorum reveals how candidates will 'wound' the '800-pound gorilla' Trump

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 13, 2024
Rick Santorum, a twelve-year-old Republican, pulled off one of the worst political upsets in history by riding around Iowa in a friend's pickup truck for months and talking to every single person he encountered. He spent less than $23,000 on TV ads, remained in single digits in the polls, and was almost ignored by the so-called experts. But with a late surge, he upended the political establishment, debating Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich, among other Republican Party luminaries. In 2024, other campaigns would opt for a piece of Santorum magic as they lurch in the wake of Donald Trump's demise. If anyone wants to catch Trump, the former Iowa victor told DailyMail.com that it would be about last-minute energy.

2024, Iowa's Republican Caucus: What is it to when we will hear the results, from what is it to when we will hear the results

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 13, 2024
Thousands of Iowa voters will vote for president on Monday from 1,657 precincts in the chilly, snow-covered state. They will gather at churches, high schools, gym, and golf courses at 7 p.m. Central Time (8 p.m. Eastern) to write their preferred candidate's name on a blank piece of paper in a tradition that dates back to 1972. Iowa's position at the start of the primary calendar makes it and its three million people, an outsized but highly influential vote in determining the Republican nominee. In key states, the winner gains traction and climbs to 40 delegates for the convention.

Coin tosses, shock winners, votes held in kitchens, and can ANYONE actually beat Trump?With eight days to go the Daily Mail answers key questions about the Iowa caucuses, the starting point for the race to the White House

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 7, 2024
On January 15, the 2024 Republican presidential race in the rural farm state of Iowa will officially begin as voters announce their choice for who should be the Republican nominee. Unlike other states, Iowa uses a 'caucus' system, which requires residents to arrive at a designated time at a designated location at a predetermined time. Iowa's position in the primary calendar and the three million people it represents, gives it a disproportionate vote in the presidential nominating competition.
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