Santorum finds a niche:

Q: "[Daniels] came out and said again we’ve got to hit the mute button on social issues in this campaign. And he’s done it before. And I really respect the governor of Indiana. What do you think about that?

SANTORUM: "I think he is as far off base…I don’t think he understands what conservatism is all about. I don’t think he understands that Reagan’s three-legged stool is not just that we have three legs of the stool, the social conservative, the fiscal conservative and national security conservatives, but that the material made of all three parts of the stool is the same. And it’s a moral and cultural heritage of this country, is what that stool, the material itself that the stool is made of. And if we deny that, if we don’t understand that those issues are intertwined, and that without a strong and good and moral culture, we can’t have limited government, you can’t have lower taxes, you can’t, you don’t have the freedoms that we enjoy unless we have a moral code by which can all agree to live by. And for him to say that those issues need to be put in the background, I just, I’m stunned by it. The fact that he’s repeated it and other candidates who are thinking about, other potential candidates are saying the same thing means they’re listening to the folks who raise the money in the Republican Party. I’m just going to be straight out about it. When you go to the big cities, where the big money is, the Republican donors say shut up about those issues, or we’re not going to help you. And I don’t know if you saw George Will’s piece today, but it’s pretty clear I’m not shutting up about those issues. I think they’re important issues. Obviously, the economic issues are front and center. But you have to talk about the economic issues even in the cultural and moral context.