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View Full Version : Senator Santorum Re-examines Death Penalty Stance


classicman2
03-24-05, 09:10 AM
CNN:

PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania (AP) -- Sen. Rick Santorum, a longtime death penalty supporter, said he is re-examining his stance but not to the point of saying it is wrong in all cases.

"I still support the death penalty, but what I'm suggesting is, number one, we have to be more cautious," he said Tuesday, saying capital punishment should be limited to the "most horrific and heinous of crimes."

Santorum, who is running for a third term, said he is "not saying that I fundamentally believe the death penalty is wrong."

In an interview published in Tuesday's Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Santorum, a Roman Catholic, said he agrees with the pope that the use of the death penalty should be limited.

Asked to elaborate by The Associated Press, the conservative Republican said: "I could see a legitimate rationale for not executing juveniles" as long as the offender was sentenced to life in prison without the chance of parole.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on March 1 that execution of those who kill as juveniles is unconstitutional.

"There are reasons that we execute people: for the sake of protecting society and exacting justice" and as a deterrent, he said. "This is not the taking of innocent human life. ... In many respects, you could look at the death penalty as self-defense."

State Treasurer Robert P. Casey Jr., who said he plans to seek the Democratic nomination to challenge Santorum, supports the death penalty.

Santorum has been re-examining his views at a time when recent polls find Catholic support for the death penalty diminishing. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which has announced a new campaign against the death penalty, released surveys from last November and this month showing that adult church members, once supportive of the death penalty, are now evenly divided on the issue.
__________________

If I were a ungracious lout, I might say......, but I won't. ;)

Red Dog
03-24-05, 10:04 AM
Interesting timing.

wendersfan
03-24-05, 10:44 AM
Hmm...

:hscratch:

If Senator Santorum is trying to head towards the middle, at this rate he might make it by, oh, 2044... :lol:

VinVega
03-24-05, 11:44 AM
Well, he seems to be trying to "err on the side of life" in his beliefs. That's something I guess. :lol:

Geofferson
03-24-05, 12:08 PM
"I still support the death penalty, but what I'm suggesting is, number one, we have to be more cautious," he said Tuesday, saying capital punishment should be limited to the "most horrific and heinous of crimes."
Sans a definition of what he considers to be the most horrific and heinous of crimes, what were his death penalty beliefs prior to this self re-examination?

Tracer Bullet
03-24-05, 12:36 PM
Sans a definition of what he considers to be the most horrific and heinous of crimes, what were his death penalty beliefs prior to this self re-examination?

Kill 'em if ya got 'em?

sfsdfd
03-24-05, 01:24 PM
Well, he seems to be trying to "err on the side of life" in his beliefs. That's something I guess. :lol:
[southern accent] cultchure of lahf... :jedi-hand-motion: cultchure of lahf... :jedi-hand-motion: [/southern accent]

But I vehemently support the right of people to change their minds, so I have no problem with this. In fact, those who hold permanent and unswerving beliefs in things tend to scare me.

- David Stein

JasonF
03-24-05, 01:28 PM
Hmm...

:hscratch:

If Senator Santorum is trying to head towards the middle, at this rate he might make it by, oh, 2044... :lol:

I don't think Sen. Santorum is heading toward the middle. Rather, I think he's retrenching his positions so that he can use "culture of life" rhetoric to support his strong anti-abortion, anti-embryonic-stem-cell, etc. positions without having to worry about an attack on his flank based on a perceived inconsistency with his death penalty views.

Goldblum
03-24-05, 01:50 PM
I don't think Sen. Santorum is heading toward the middle. Rather, I think he's retrenching his positions so that he can use "culture of life" rhetoric to support his strong anti-abortion, anti-embryonic-stem-cell, etc. positions without having to worry about an attack on his flank based on a perceived inconsistency with his death penalty views.
Agreed. This is a political tactic to ultimately gain more support for his other positions. I doubt he truly feels different about the death penalty.

Red Dog
03-24-05, 01:58 PM
I don't think Sen. Santorum is heading toward the middle. Rather, I think he's retrenching his positions so that he can use "culture of life" rhetoric to support his strong anti-abortion, anti-embryonic-stem-cell, etc. positions without having to worry about an attack on his flank based on a perceived inconsistency with his death penalty views.


Exactly. It is why I wrote 'interesting timing' - alluding to the comments he has made about Schiavo.

Ranger
03-24-05, 02:15 PM
The death penalty and abortion should be strictly a states' right issue. The SCT.'s interference with the juvenule death peanlty was absolutely inexcusable (you can talk to me til you're blue in the face about that one), but so was Congress' recent abortion restrictions.

classicman2
03-24-05, 02:20 PM
We need an amendment to repeal the The Tenth Amendment.

Oh, I forgot - we already have it - The Fourteenth Amendment. ;)