SMACK- DOWN
- Share via
Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Rick Santorum’s new book, “It Takes a Family,” takes a swipe at New York Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton’s 1996 bestseller, “It Takes a Village.”
Critics say the titles reflect the two high-profile senators’ ideological split. But what does it really take to be a party paragon?
Here’s a look at some of the recent bills and resolutions Clinton and Santorum have pushed.
Clinton:
* Handgun clampdowns (Senate Bill 578, a bill to notify counterterrorism officials when suspected terrorists or gang members attempt to buy firearms)
* Contraception protection (SB 844, to guarantee and expand access to contraception)
* Labor unions (SB 842, to make it easier for workers to organize)
* Glass-ceiling wipes (SB 841, to beef up the study of gender pay inequity)
* War wounds (Senate Resolution 39, calling for a National Purple Heart Recognition Day)
* Universal healthcare (SR 49, urging access to healthcare for all Americans by 2010)
* Women (SR 74, designating March 8, 2005, as International Women’s Day)
* Woodpeckers (SB 1410, to pump up spending on neo-tropical migratory bird conservation)
Santorum:
* Gun makers (SB 397, to protect gun makers from civil liability actions)
* Tax cuts (SB 1524, to make capital gains reductions permanent)
* Red meat (SB 1333, to establish a voluntary program for country-of-origin labeling of meat)
* Healthcare for kids (SB 1049, to promote state health insurance programs for children)
* Charity (SR 15, to encourage Americans to increase their charitable giving by 1%)
* Boy Scouts (SB 642, to protect federal funding for national youth organizations)
* Historically black colleges (SR 158, to make the week beginning Sept. 11 National Historically Black Colleges and Universities Week)
* Regime change in Iran (SB 333, to maintain sanctions and support democracy activists in Iran)
* Aspirin (SB 1450, to suspend the duty on aspirin)
-- STEPHEN W. STROMBERG
More to Read
Sign up for our Book Club newsletter
Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.