What do you know? We actually got some pushback for once from David Gregory on this week's Meet the Press when a Republican came on the air and just outright lied.

GOP presidential candidate Rick Santorum was giving the usual spiel about how President Obama is some great divider and doesn't want to work with Republicans -- which frankly, takes a lot of gall after the unprecedented level of vitriol, name calling and obstruction we've seen from the GOP, but then projection does seem to be the one thing they're good at -- and then claimed that Obama had hasn't met with Republicans in six months.

As Gregory reminded Santorum, the debt ceiling talks "over the summer were a constant set of meetings, so that can't be accurate." To which Santorum immediately backtracked and said that it was a few months since he's met with them instead.

Sadly what we did not get from David Gregory here is pointing out the record number of filibusters and Republicans refusing to vote for things that they claim they once supported and the fact that they're more worried about making President Obama a one term president than ever cooperating with him on anything. Instead he allowed Santorum to rant and rave about how the President hasn't been talking nicely enough to them, while in the mean time they're out calling him a Socialist and a Marxist and turning the definition of "class warfare" on its head when it's their party that's waging it.

Transcript below the fold.

GREGORY: One of the things you look at as an insurgent party trying to, to beat an incumbent president, you've said that a second term for President Obama would be dangerous for the country, is that you look at the party that's making the challenge. And here's the reality.

Disapproval for the Republican Party right now in Congress, I should say, approval of Republicans in Congress stands at 26 percent. That's far less than the president's approval rating. And Dan Balz writes this in The Washington Post in his column on Tuesday, "For GOP candidates, worries about the party's brand. A year ago, after their big victory in the midterm elections, Republicans were full of confidence and anticipation.

As Americans look toward next November, the question that many will be asking is: Are the Republicans really ready to lead? In three political arenas--Congress, the states and the presidential campaign trail--Republicans have left a checkered record in the past year." In Congress it was the debt debacle forcing a near shutdown of the government, the payroll tax debate that looked to go in the president's favor.

You had the fight with the unions in the states like Wisconsin. Do you fault Republican leaders in Congress for not doing more to make government work better through more compromise with the president?

SANTORUM: Well, you, you have to have someone you can work with, and this president has done more to divide than any other president that I've ever witnessed in my lifetime. This president goes out and gives speech after speech after speech trying to divide America between class, between income group, between racial and ethnic groups.

This is, this is the great divider in chief. And it's very difficult when you're being lampooned by the president on a regular basis, not just as a party but individually, to then--and the president, who I don't believe has met with Boehner or any of the Republican leadership in now six months, hard to compromise and work with someone who won't meet with you, who won't sit down and try to, try to negotiate things and try to talk. And so I'm not, I'm not surprised at all the Republicans are having a difficult time with someone who has no interest...

GREGORY: Clearly, he's met with him. I mean, even the debt fight over the summer was a constant set of meetings, so that can't be accurate.

SANTORUM: Well, well, if you, if you look at it, the last time he's had meetings, I know it's been several months. And I know that President Bush, when I was there, and President Reagan, routinely met on a regular basis with, with the other side and developed relationships.

You know, it's--this is about trust. You don't build trust by going up and running around the country beating up on your opponent. He's the president of everybody in this country. As president of the United States, I would be someone who would meet regularly, who would talk and try to build relationships of trust.

GREGORY: So you don't fault...

SANTORUM: And this president has not done that.

GREGORY: You don't fault Republicans for intransigence on taxes or spending or other areas of potential compromise with the president?

SANTORUM: Again, we go back to the, to the basic fact. The federal government now is spending about 25 percent of GDP. That's--historically the average is about 18 percent. We have an explosion of spending. And the problem in this country is government oppression, spending and, that's leading to huge debts and deficits.

What the Republicans have said is no more. We're going to move in the direction of smaller government. And President Obama has no interest in doing that. I think Republicans are right to stand and fight on this. And the president seems to be absolutely disinterested in listening to what the American public said in the last election, which is we want more limited government. He did not get the message. I guess he's going to have to get this message, hopefully, in November.