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NY Times' Brooks lauded Santorum's anti-poverty work, ignored his charity-related controversies

October 30, 2006 7:09 pm ET

SUMMARY: In a recent column, David Brooks wrote that if Sen. Rick Santorum loses his Pennsylvania Senate seat, it's "probably good news in Pennsylvania's bobo suburbs" but "certainly bad for poor people around the world." Brooks, however, did not mention the controversy surrounding Santorum's own charity, or his attacks on prominent international humanitarian groups.

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In his October 29 column (subscription required), New York Times columnist David Brooks wrote: "Every poll suggests that Rick Santorum [R-PA] will lose his race to return to the U.S. Senate. That's probably good news in Pennsylvania's bobo suburbs, where folks regard Santorum as an ideological misfit and a social blight. But it's certainly bad for poor people around the world." Brooks explained that "almost every time a serious piece of antipoverty legislation surfaces in Congress, Rick Santorum is there playing a leadership role," and that "after Election Day, the underprivileged will probably have lost one of their least cuddly but most effective champions." Brooks made no mention, however, of the controversy surrounding Santorum's own charity, which reportedly uses 60 percent of its donations for its own overhead, employs "some of the same people who have worked for his campaign," and received $25,000 in donations from a development company on whose behalf Santorum was working to obtain federal aid. Nor did Brooks mention Santorum's attacks on prominent international humanitarian groups as having a "solid record of anti-abstinence, pro-prostitution, and anti-American activities."

On February 24, the Associated Press reported that Santorum's charity, Operation Good Neighbor Foundation, which seeks to provide "financial assistance to organizations engaged in faith-based, social welfare work," spent far less on charitable donations between 2001 and 2004 (as a percentage of total expenditures) than is typically expected of charitable organizations, and that the money it did not spend on donations went to overhead costs, including payments to Santorum campaign staffers who were also on the charity's payroll. According to the AP:

Sen. Rick Santorum's charity donated about 40 percent of the $1.25 million it spent during a four-year period, well below Better Business Bureau standards paying out the rest for overhead, including several hundred thousand dollars to campaign aides on the charity payroll.

The charity, Operation Good Neighbor, is described on its Web site as an organization promoting "compassionate conservatism" by providing grants to small nonprofit groups, many of them religious.

The Better Business Bureau's Wise Giving Alliance says charitable organizations should spend at least 65 percent of their total expenses on program activities.

Operation Good Neighbor is based at the same address as Pennsylvania Sen. Santorum's campaign office in suburban Philadelphia, and some of the same people who have worked on his campaign are working for his charity and collecting money from it, records show.

On March 2, the Philadelphia Daily News reported that the largest donor to Operation Good Neighbor, a real estate development company, gave $25,000 to the charity at the same time that Santorum "was working to win as much as $8.5 million in federal aid for the donor's project in Delaware County," Pennsylvania:

Federal tax records show that Preferred Real Estate Inc., the developer of the Wharf at Rivertown project in Chester, wrote the check to Santorum's Operation Good Neighbor Foundation in 2002.

On his campaign Web site, Santorum boasts of winning $8.5 million in federal aid for the riverfront redevelopment of an abandoned Peco Energy plant -- an effort that culminated in the earmarking of $6 million in highway money last year.

But good-government experts were troubled by the appearance of a developer giving money to the senator's charity at the same time it was lobbying for federal dollars. Unlike a campaign contribution, checks to a charity can be written by a corporation and are not subject to any limit.

The Baltimore Sun reported on August 28, 2005, that Santorum was part of a campaign by the religious right to deny federal funds to humanitarian groups that deal with prostitutes in their efforts to curb the spread of AIDS, and attacked several charities in a letter to the State Department:

An anti-prostitution crusade by the religious right has collided with public health groups' efforts to prevent HIV infection in the world's red-light districts.

The battle, taking place largely out of public view, has intensified as some conservatives have attempted to gain greater control of the process through which aid groups working overseas get federal money.

[...]

Conservative lawmakers have moved to beef up the policy. On July 20, the House passed a bill sponsored by Rep. Steve King, an Iowa Republican, that would require each group to give details of dealings with prostitutes. And a House subcommittee wants agencies to furnish a list of groups working with prostitutes. Meanwhile, two senators have written Bush, attacking several federally funded groups. In a May 31 letter, Sen. Rick Santorum, a Pennsylvania Republican, accused the widely known charity, CARE, and several other groups of having a "solid record of anti-abstinence, pro-prostitution, and anti-American activities."

The letter was addressed to Bush and to Andrew S. Natsios, the head of U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), which handles about half of federal AIDS funding.

CARE denies the accusation. "We do not promote prostitution or sex trafficking in any way," said spokeswoman Beatrice Spadacini.

An observer familiar with public health policy said HIV prevention groups are alarmed. "This is a McCarthyite environment," said Jodi Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Health and Gender Equity, a nonprofit watchdog organization. "These groups are under incredible attack. They're all afraid of losing their funding."

CARE describes itself as "a leading humanitarian organization fighting global poverty."

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    • Author by MickD (October 30, 2006 8:02 pm ET)
         

      ...will never let a little fact get in the way of his phraseology ("bohos" isn't he clever!) and lap dogging of the Repubs.

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    • Author by halfaworldaway (October 30, 2006 8:50 pm ET)
         

      so if he loses the race thats it no more charity work emotional blackmail weapon number 2345 in the right wing arsenal

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    • Author by Watcher_IL (October 30, 2006 9:05 pm ET)
         

      Makes me wonder. Shouldn't there be an investigation into the whole "Santorum compaign staffers are paid by the charity which the Senator runs out of his campaign office,which received a $25,000 donation from a developer who trying to get federal dollars"? Is Santorum's campaign getting money from the feds via his charity? Mapping the money trail might plot a very fascinating course.

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      • Author by HuntingtonBeachLefty (October 30, 2006 10:04 pm ET)
           

        not attached to some slimy or nutty facts.Every time I hear his name, it's something that sounds like a killing blow.

        How do these people remain in office?

        I'm pretty far from Pennsylvania, who is this guys base?

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        • Author by worrierking (October 31, 2006 9:37 am ET)
             

          I've heard PA described as Philadelphia and Pittsburgh with Alabama in between. No offense to the people of PA or Alabama. I was born in PA and have spent time in Alabama.

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          • Author by redking75687 (October 31, 2006 2:29 pm ET)
               

            I have seen the 2004 voter registration numbers for Pennsylvania...the Dems have 3.8 million, the Repubs 3.2 million, and about 900,000 independents and minor party registrations. I still can't figure out why the official numbers are so high, 8 million registered out of 11 million people? I'd like to check the Dem and Repub registrations for fraud.

            There are a lot of NASCAR watching, Nashville loving rednecks in Pennsylvania, sadly. But the real Repub base seems to come from people in brand new SUVs sporting W-04 stickers on the back, the same "I wanna be a sociopathic millionaire" crowd that funds Bush, mainly small businessmen, investors, right wing yuppies, conservative housewives who bought all the bs about "America the Perfect", etc.

            Saddest thing of all is that the Dem candidate for the Senate, Casey, is Santorum with a D behind his name. Same exact platforms.

            The Democrat Party here has run most of the Green Party candidates off the ballots with lawsuits over signatures, throwing them out for the slightest technicality. Most candidates had to give up without a fight because of the court costs, the Senatorial candidate fought and lost and was stuck with a $90,000 court bill, thanks to the supposedly "liberal" Democrats and their lack of a commitment to democracy.

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            • Author by HuntingtonBeachLefty (October 31, 2006 3:02 pm ET)
                 

              I wasn't trying to insult PA, I've never been there and am as geographically/demographically ignorant as the next American.

              Actually, it was more positive, I've probably met more people from Pittsburgh and Philly than in between them, and I tend to forget who makes up most of this country.

              It's like when I used to watch those Jerry Springer type shows, and they'd have on a group that was a combo of the Texas Chainsaw family and one of those televangelist families, and when asked where they lived, they say "New York".

              Most people, when they think of California, think of L.A., San Francisco , beaches, or where I live, Orange County (Wealthy, conservative, superficial as L.A., but with even less culture). My in-laws are in the central valley, and I still forget I'm in CA when I visit there. 3 or 4 hours from L.A., everybody inexplicably has Southern accents and cowboy clothes.

              I wondered where all that produce in my grocery store came from.

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    • Author by larman (October 31, 2006 10:14 am ET)
         

      I happen to live in what charlatan David Brooks calls the "bobo suburbs" of Philadelphia. I always thought "bobo" was a cheap kind of sneaker...? Anyway, I can't wait to vote against Santorum, for his Taliban-like religious beliefs and for his lie (quickly dropped when challenged) that WMD had been found in Iraq. And now I know never to read David Brooks!

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