I'm not suggesting that it shouldn't be a huge deal, and I'm not suggesting... that somehow there's a moral equivalency between what Donald Trump did 10 years before he was President and what Bill Clinton did in the White House with an intern.
Editor's note · Context
Santorum addresses the differences between Trump's and Clinton's situations regarding moral implications.
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I think he's going to be a disruptive force. And he's going to be a disruptive force at a time when the President feels like there are people in, you know, in and around who have, you know, not had his back and not been fair to him.
The only reason this was a contentious issue is because there were two different parties and there are two different branches.
I think a lot of people sort of baked it into the cake that the President is -- you know has some dealings that are, let's just say, not ordinary and that those are things that they've sort of already figured out.
I believe that there are lots of legitimate grounds to protest this election.





