Correction:

An earlier version of this article incorrectly said that less than 30 percent of the U.S. population over 25 years old has a college degree. The statistic applies to those 25 and older, and the proportion rose to just over 30 percent in 2011, according to the Census Bureau, which released the new numbers in the last week of February. This version has been corrected.

Rick Santorum takes heat for ‘snob’ comment against President Obama

Video: The Post's Election 2012 blogger Felicia Sonmez looks ahead to how Rick Santorum's play for voters without college degrees may impact the Michigan primary.

Rick Santorum calls it snobbery to suggest that students ought to go to college. On Monday, several of his fellow Republicans — and President Obama — begged to differ.

Some GOP governors in Washington for the National Governors Association took issue with Santorum’s remark, which he made Saturday as he mounted a last-minute sprint for votes before Tuesday’s primary in Michigan.

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Education and unemployment

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“I wish he’d said it differently,” Virginia Gov. Robert F. McDonnell said of Santorum. “When you look at what’s going on in other countries, China, India, the premium they put on higher education — we’ve got to do better if we still want to be the global leader we are.”

McDonnell, who has endorsed former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, was echoed by Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, another Romney supporter, as well as Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, who have not endorsed any of the remaining candidates in the presidential race.

Santorum also drew a tacit rebuke from the president, who defended his education policies Monday in an address to the governor’s group. He said his higher education plan includes a vision for those students who do not attend traditional universities.

“I’m not only talking about four-year degrees,” Obama said. “I’m also talking about going to community college to get a degree for a manufacturing job where you have to walk through the door to handle a million-dollar piece of equipment.”

The dust-up comes at a critical juncture for Santorum, who is trying to maintain his momentum in the Republican presidential race in the face of increased scrutiny since his surprising victories this month in Minnesota, Colorado and Missouri.

Michigan is prime territory for Santorum, a social conservative who has tried to play up his working-class roots. Throughout his campaign, he has painted Obama and Romney as Washington elites who are trying to impose their values on those who spend weekdays working in factories and Sunday mornings in church.

It was an extension of that cultural attack when he criticized Obama on Saturday as a “snob” for wanting “everybody to go to college.” He went on to say that Obama wants students to attend liberal universities so that they can be inculcated in the same values that drive the president.

“Not all folks are gifted in the same way,” Santorum told a crowd of more than a thousand activists at the Americans for Prosperity forum in Troy, Mich. “Some people have incredible gifts with their hands. . . . President Obama once said he wants everybody in America to go to college. What a snob.”

His message has resonated with some conservative voters, whose support has pushed Santorum into a competitive position against Romney.

“I think the president is an elitist, and he thinks he knows what’s best for everyone,” Eric Maynard, 40, a pastor from Flushing, Mich., said at a Santorum event Monday. “In Michigan, we have a large blue-collar population, and what senator Santorum said is right. Not everybody can go to college.”

But to some critics, this latest attack goes beyond his typical
anti-elite rhetoric and flies in the face of what has long been drilled into American families: that a college education is the most certain path to a brighter future for students as well as the country.

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