Author Topic: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread  (Read 33481 times)

Soul Crusher

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #225 on: April 08, 2011, 07:01:26 PM »
How Michele Bachmann Can Win
Daily Beast ^ | 04/08/2011 | Mark McKinnon



The Minnesota firebrand could parlay her Tea Party support, fundraising skills, and message discipline into a serious run for the White House. She has the fire in the belly, Mark McKinnon writes.

Though prone to gaffes and non-answer answers, she is a formidable fundraiser, an icon among Tea Party enthusiasts, draws cameras like flies, and her detractors are legion. And it's looking more and more likely she will run for president. Also, it's not a stretch to see how she could very likely win Iowa and we know what happens after that.

No, not Sarah Palin. Get ready for a conservative firebrand from Minnesota who may make memories of Palin pale quickly. We are talking about Rep. Michele Bachmann who, while Palin hesitates, has aggressively jumped into the fray. And while she's not my cup of tea (party), Bachmann would arguably be a stronger GOP candidate for president than Palin in 2012. She works harder, she's smarter, she has more discipline, more focus and, perhaps most important, she has fire in her belly.

Chair of the House Tea Party caucus and an outspoken champion of the movement, Bachmann raised more campaign cash in the 2010 congressional midterm elections than any other candidate. And her $2.2 million haul in the first quarter of 2011, mostly from small donors and before she has officially entered the race, tops former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney.

Her “positive intensity” among Republicans and right-leaning independents, as measured by Gallup, is higher than Palin’s, even though her name recognition is far lower. Though political pundits pounce on her every misspeak and mangled factoid, while being far more forgiving of the president’s mispronunciations, and historical inaccuracies, she electrifies crowds and displays unnerving message discipline.

Her upstaging of the GOP’s response to the State of the Union address created consternation within the party, but got at least twice the attention and coverage as did Paul Ryan, who delivered the party’s formal response. Ninety percent of politics is showing up. And Bachmann is showing up in Iowa. And she's creating a lot of excitement among the conservative faithful. And Bachmann would fill the void left by Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN), who decided not to run for president in 2012: She is both a fiscal and social conservative, which is what Iowa Republican primary voters like. If Mike Huckabee doesn't run, and Palin doesn't run, that leaves Rick Santorum as Bachmann's only real competition among these core voters. And he lost his last election by 16 points.

Bachmann’s wooing of the Tea Party vote may pay dividends beyond the base. Rasmussen reports that 48 percent of likely voters say their views on major issues are closer to the average Tea Party member than to the average member of Congress, with 30 percent unsure.

Even with all of the advantages of incumbency, President Obama is vulnerable. With the unpopularity of his health-care agenda, the budget battles in the states, and the coming entitlement crisis, there is a remarkable opportunity for the right candidate—perhaps even a surprising candidate—to win voters from across the political spectrum who are plagued by “persistent fatigue” from the faltering economy and the president’s failure to lead.

Assessing Bachmann’s strength as a candidate, Karl Rove said to Fox’s Bill O'Reilly: "She's smart, she's tough, she's funny, she's got a lot of personality and all of that will help her if she throws her hat in the ring."

However, even with Bachmann’s terms as a state senator and two terms as a U.S. representative, voters may be skeptical of her experience, Rove said. He noted that “people who are going to be inclined to vote against Barack Obama are going to look back and say you know what? We took the untested guy who had no significant achievements and it didn't work out so well.” And Rove said every candidate “has got to create a narrative that at the end of the day says this is why it shouldn't be Obama and this is why it should be me.”

Sarah Palin can't be happy to be suddenly sidelined by a new political American Idol. So, don't be surprised to see her come out swinging hard and soon to reclaim the stage. She will not give up her crown easily.

This could get very entertaining.

-- As vice chairman of Hill & Knowlton and Public Strategies, and president of Maverick Media, Mark McKinnon has helped meet strategic challenges for candidates, corporations and causes, including George W. Bush, John McCain, Ann Richards, Charlie Wilson, Lance Armstrong, and Bono. McKinnon is co-founder of No Labels and co-chair of Arts & Labs.



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chadstallion

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #226 on: April 09, 2011, 06:42:28 AM »
would like to see Sarah swinging.  ;)
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Dos Equis

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #227 on: April 09, 2011, 11:42:25 AM »
Bachmann Voted Against $39 Billion Deal
Saturday, 09 Apr 2011 10:31 AM

House Speaker John Boehner and President Barack Obama are hailing Friday night's last-minute budget deal that averted a government shutdown. But Republican Rep. Michele Bachmann is not a fan of the agreement that will slice $38.5 billion in spending, calling it a "disappointment."

After the deal was struck Friday night, Bachmann voted against a stopgap meaure that will keep the federal government operating until final details in the budget deal can be hammered out, Politico reports. A final vote on the deal should come by the middle of next week. Bachmann says she also will vote against that.

“The deal that was reached tonight is a disappointment for me and for millions of Americans who expected $100 billion in cuts, who wanted to make sure their tax dollars stopped flowing to the nation’s largest abortion provider, and who wanted us to defund Obamacare," she said in a statement issued to the media.

http://www.newsmax.com/InsideCover/MicheleBachmann-GovernmentShutdown/2011/04/09/id/392343

chadstallion

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #228 on: April 09, 2011, 01:47:35 PM »
Bachmann Voted Against $39 Billion Deal
Saturday, 09 Apr 2011 10:31 AM

.

“The deal that was reached tonight is a disappointment for me and for millions of Americans who expected $100 billion in cuts, who wanted to make sure their tax dollars stopped flowing to the nation’s largest abortion provider, and who wanted us to defund Obamacare," she said in a statement issued to the media.

http://www.newsmax.com/InsideCover/MicheleBachmann-GovernmentShutdown/2011/04/09/id/392343

i'm not disappointed and i don't mind any of my tax dollars going for abortions. thankfully, she doesn't speak for all of us.
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Soul Crusher

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #229 on: April 09, 2011, 02:56:36 PM »
Fine. Than you send your own dollars for others' abortions.  Leave my wallet alone! 

Dos Equis

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #230 on: April 09, 2011, 07:13:12 PM »
i'm not disappointed and i don't mind any of my tax dollars going for abortions. thankfully, she doesn't speak for all of us.

You're slipping 99 . . . .

Dr Loomis

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #231 on: April 09, 2011, 07:29:58 PM »
I agree with Chad, I'd rather pay for a one shot abortion than feed and cloth their kid for 18 years. Better of 2 evils.

chadstallion

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #232 on: April 10, 2011, 01:10:21 PM »
I agree with Chad, I'd rather pay for a one shot abortion than feed and cloth their kid for 18 years. Better of 2 evils.
the fetus is considered sacred until its born; then its a burden on welfare. irony there.
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garebear

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #233 on: April 11, 2011, 04:59:05 AM »
Stupid thread. End of thread.
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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #234 on: April 11, 2011, 05:00:20 AM »
Stupid thread. End of thread.

Drinking before 8 am again?

chadstallion

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #235 on: April 11, 2011, 06:26:49 AM »
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Dos Equis

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #236 on: April 11, 2011, 01:46:27 PM »
Bachmann: A one-term president
By: CNN Political Producer Alexander Mooney

Washington (CNN) – Michele Bachmann just may be a one-term president.

That's what the Minnesota Republican is pledging should she ultimately decide to run for president and win the White House, providing she "turn things around" in that time frame.

"I'm a principled reformer, and my goal is to see the country turn around," Bachmann told the Des Moines Register in an interview published Monday. "I'm also committed to being a one-term president if that's what it takes in order to turn things around, because this is not about a personal ambition."

"It's about getting our financial house in order and to become respected again in the world on an international scale," she added.

Bachmann's comments come the same day she is in the Hawkeye State to deliver a speech to social conservatives in Pella.

On Monday, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann and Texas Rep. Ron Paul will deliver speeches in Iowa, she to social conservatives in Pella and he to a Family Leader group in Sioux Center.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/04/11/bachmann-a-one-term-president/#more-153866

Soul Crusher

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #237 on: April 11, 2011, 01:48:08 PM »
Bachmann is awesome.   She is a gutsy street fighter who will kic obama's kenyan/islamist/communist/ ass all over the electoral map.   

240 is Back

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #238 on: April 11, 2011, 04:00:57 PM »
bachmann was awesome on hannitys radio show today.

she said the repubs are probably going to blink on the debt ceiling and they don't have to!

They should cut the non-essentials, and then pay our darn bills.  She is 100% right.

garebear

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #239 on: April 12, 2011, 03:05:39 AM »
33, you are an avid fan of the two stupidest people in politics.

It does not bode well for you.
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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #240 on: April 12, 2011, 03:31:23 AM »
You voted for obama.  Enough said.  Anyone who voted for obama is perhaps in the worst position to pass judgment on others.

Dr Loomis

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #241 on: April 12, 2011, 08:42:52 AM »
Bachmann: A one-term president
"I'm a principled reformer, and my goal is to see the country turn around," Bachmann told the Des Moines Register in an interview published Monday.

"It's about getting our financial house in order and to become respected again in the world on an international scale," she added.

same old jibber jabber mumbo jumbo. Absolutely no idea how to fix it, but by gum, vote her in and she'll do it. What a true, dedicated, non Washington stereotypical, mavericky politician.   ::)

Can't someone in the land o' lakes find her some more kids to babysit to keep her busy   ???

Dos Equis

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #242 on: April 12, 2011, 10:58:22 AM »
Bachmann wins conservative straw poll
By: CNN Political Producer Alexander Mooney

Washington (CNN) - Rep. Michele Bachmann is the winner of a recent straw poll among evangelical and Christian conservative voters, the latest sign the Minnesota Republican may enjoy significant support from that key voting bloc if she decides to run for president.

Bachmann took 23 percent of the vote in a Liberty University straw poll conducted after a two-day gathering of evangelicals at the Christian college that addressed a range of issues, including "abortion, the economy, religious liberty, marriage and homosexuality, [and] Sharia Law," according the school's website.

Bachmann did not appear at the event in person but delivered a video-taped address. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who also did not appear at the event, garnered 22 percent in the straw poll while former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who addressed the crowd Friday, received 21 percent.

Meanwhile, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum was the victor in a straw poll at the Greenville County Republican Party convention over the weekend.

Santorum was one of three potential candidates to address Saturday's convention. Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour and Gingrich also spoke there.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/04/12/bachmann-wins-conservative-straw-poll/#more-153987

Benny B

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #243 on: April 12, 2011, 09:06:22 PM »
Bachmann wins conservative straw poll
By: CNN Political Producer Alexander Mooney

Washington (CNN) - Rep. Michele Bachmann is the winner of a recent straw poll among evangelical and Christian conservative voters, the latest sign the Minnesota Republican may enjoy significant support from that key voting bloc if she decides to run for president.

Bachmann took 23 percent of the vote in a Liberty University straw poll conducted after a two-day gathering of evangelicals at the Christian college that addressed a range of issues, including "abortion, the economy, religious liberty, marriage and homosexuality, [and] Sharia Law," according the school's website.

Bachmann did not appear at the event in person but delivered a video-taped address. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who also did not appear at the event, garnered 22 percent in the straw poll while former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who addressed the crowd Friday, received 21 percent.

Meanwhile, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum was the victor in a straw poll at the Greenville County Republican Party convention over the weekend.

Santorum was one of three potential candidates to address Saturday's convention. Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour and Gingrich also spoke there.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/04/12/bachmann-wins-conservative-straw-poll/#more-153987

Best news dems could possibly hear. Go Bachmann, go!   :)

!

Soul Crusher

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #244 on: April 14, 2011, 01:12:39 PM »
latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-bachmann-campaign-20110408,0,5155521.story

latimes.com
Michele Bachmann has niche appeal


The conservative Minnesota congresswoman is considering a presidential bid. She would rely on home-schoolers, 'tea party' advocates and antiabortion activists. But she's trying to woo voters in the first caucus state of Iowa as a hometown girl.


By Paul West, Los Angeles Times

4:02 PM PDT, April 7, 2011

Reporting from Des Moines

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She suggested Barack Obama was anti-American, condemned the president's healthcare law as "the crown jewel of socialism," called Washington a "gangster government" and state judges who affirm gay marriage "black-robed masters." She has tormented her own party's leaders, complaining that GOP insiders are resisting her efforts to roll back $105 billion in healthcare spending.

But as she nears a bid for the Republican nomination for president, Michele Bachmann is campaigning only partly as "tea party" provocateur — and partly as hometown girl.

Iowa voters hear it time and again: The Minnesota congresswoman was born in the first caucus state, and spent her early years here before moving under protest to the next-door state she now represents. More than that, Bachmann takes pains to point out that she is an "Iowegian" — a distinction with political significance in northern parts of the state, thick with voters of Norwegian descent who helped the Iowegian governor win office. She is one of them.

"I am a w-a-a-y conservative," she told a Des Moines audience of several hundred home-schooling families who share the same moorings, adding, "I may be 5 foot 2 … but I am one tough lady."

Nationally, Bachmann may be best known lately for faux pas — a widely released video of her tea party response to Obama's State of the Union address, in which she aimed her gaze at another camera; more recently, she mistook Concord, N.H., for the Massachusetts launching site of the Revolutionary War.

Yet in Iowa, Bachmann is cutting a passionate, sometimes electrifying, figure in a relatively bland field of 2012 contenders. Her deeply conservative profile meshes neatly with the early primary calendar, a potential advantage in a wide-open race and particularly in two early contests in Iowa and South Carolina.

"She has the 'it' factor. There's just something about her. She kind of grabs you," said Ed Failor Jr., an Iowa anti-tax activist who played host to Bachmann at a fundraising event this year.

Yet Bachmann, 55, is a polarizing presence. Her candidacy, should she formalize it, would rely less on broad support than on a fervent embrace from voters who inhabit niches in the Republican fold — home-schoolers, tea party advocates, antiabortion activists. Both Bachmann's strategy and her persona make her trajectory impossible to predict.

She hasn't decided whether to run, she said in an interview, but is already casting a wide net. She's reaching out to fiscal conservatives and seeking to expand her support among evangelicals. In notoriously tax-phobic New Hampshire, the first primary state, she brandishes tea bags and boasts of pressuring Republicans in Washington to make steeper spending cuts.

"The message that I'm talking about is resonating with what people are concerned about, and so the two are meeting," she said in an interview. "To me, that's exciting."

If she runs, she'll jump in in time to compete in an Iowa straw vote this summer. That same early organizing test four years ago helped lift another social conservative, Mike Huckabee, to victory in the state's caucuses, the initial step to the nomination.

"I take calculated risks," Bachmann said. "I always have."

A tax lawyer who ousted a more moderate Republican to win election to the Minnesota Senate in 2000, she attributes her combative spirit to growing up as the only girl in a family of boys. One brother became a popular TV weatherman in Des Moines; another is on the Yale School of Medicine faculty.

In three terms in Congress, Bachmann has built an impressive national donor base; she raised more than $13 million in 2010, a record for a House campaign. Her fans include people like Tina Dicks of Bondurant, Iowa, a home-schooling mother of four who sees her reflection in Bachmann, a fellow home-schooler, mother of five and opponent of gay marriage and abortion rights. Iowa's network of 10,000 home-schoolers could prove extremely valuable in a presidential process where mobilizing as few as 40,000 voters could mean victory.

"She doesn't sound like a politician to me. She seems like a woman who is speaking from her heart. As a conservative and as a mom, I like what she has to say," Dicks said. At this point, she added, she prefers Bachmann to Sarah Palin, to whom the congresswoman is frequently compared. "Sarah Palin talks a little bit more like a politician talks."

Critics, including many Republican politicians, say Bachmann is too extreme to be elected president, or even nominated.

"I'm not sure she has the ability to articulate a convincing argument without appearing shrill," said David Roederer, a strategist whose job as advisor to Republican Gov. Terry Branstad of Iowa will keep him neutral in 2012.

Another problem is Bachmann's repeated gaffes. Bachmann brushes aside questions about self-discipline and calls verbal slips an inevitable result of so much speaking. She says she owns up to mistakes, often with self-deprecating humor.

Humor "is enormously helpful," she said, noting Minnesota's reputation for dry wit. She links herself to humorist Garrison Keillor: They graduated from the same high school, many years apart, and "my mother is in a quilting club with his former mother-in-law." (Keillor hasn't returned the love; he described Bachmann, in a fundraising appeal for her last opponent, as an embarrassment to Minnesotans.)

Bachmann has lined up Iowa state Sen. Kent Sorenson to head her prospective campaign in the state. He earned national attention for his sponsorship of a measure that would have required presidential candidates to supply a birth certificate in order to run. In Iowa Republican circles, he is regarded as a comer, a tea party politician with a network of supporters.

Iowa's most conservative congressman, Republican Steve King, is also viewed as a Bachmann supporter, though he hasn't endorsed yet.

"Face to face, one on one, any size group you want to talk about, she's a great retail politician," King said, highlighting a valuable skill in a state that expects personal attention from candidates.

Among many unanswered questions about 2012 is whether voters who have never been part of the nominating process will turn out. If tea party adherents swell caucus turnout in Iowa, as some expect, Bachmann could benefit.

"It's a boom or bust thing," said Eric Woolson, a longtime GOP strategist working for another Minnesotan, former Gov. Tim Pawlenty, about the caucuses in general and Bachmann in particular. "You just don't know. That's the big unknown."

paul.west@latimes.com

Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times

Dos Equis

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #245 on: April 16, 2011, 12:38:39 PM »
Bachmann assails Obama over Libya
By: CNN Political Reporter Peter Hamby

Bluffton, South Carolina (CNN) - Addressing a crowd of Tea Party activists in South Carolina on Saturday, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann called President Obama's decision to intervene in Libya "foolish" and said the NATO mission could end up boosting al Qaeda.

"We still don't know who the opposition forces are that we're helping," the potential Republican presidential contender said at a morning gathering of the Bluffton Tea Party Patriots.

"The only reports that we have say that there are elements of al Qaeda in North Africa and Hezbollah in the opposition forces," she said. "Let me ask you this: what possible benefit is there to the United States by lifting up and creating a toehold for al Qaeda in North Africa to take over Libya?"

Bachmann, a member of the House Intelligence Committee, said she was speaking carefully so as not to betray any national security secrets and said she was referring to to public testimony and news reports.

She claimed terrorists could easily gain control of Libya's vast oil wealth and wreak havoc on their enemies if Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi is removed from power.

"If Gadhafi is toppled, if al Qaeda of North Africa comes in, and they secure control over the oil revenues, then they will have a permanent source of funding to finance global terror worldwide," she suggested.

Bachmann is spending four days in the Palmetto State as she explores the possibility of a White House bid. South Carolina is one of the four states that will kick off the Republican presidential nominating process early next year.

She did not elaborate on her political plans but made no secret that she is seriously considering a run.

"I would love to debate Barack Obama," she said. "It would be a pleasure."

Bachmann also accused the president of not doing enough to halt the rising cost of gasoline, which is approaching $4 per gallon in South Carolina.

"Whose side is he on?" she asked. "I don't think he's on our side anymore."

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/04/16/bachmann-assails-obama-over-libya/#more-154810
                             

Dos Equis

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #246 on: May 17, 2011, 04:23:33 PM »
Bachmann 2012 announcement, sooner rather than later?
By: CNN Political Unit

(CNN) – Potential presidential candidate Rep. Michele Bachmann may expedite an announcement about her presidential intentions.

"The recent response from people, in terms of Facebook activity and donations, has been amazing," Bachmann said in a statement Tuesday. "And it is forcing us to probably speed up our timing. We were looking at June, but we may make a decision in May."

Bachmann previously said she would make a decision by June, or possibly earlier.

The Minnesota Republican and Tea Party favorite has traveled to early presidential primary and caucus states including Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.

In a recent CNN/Opinion Research Corporation Poll, Bachmann received support from 7 percent of Republicans and independents who lean Republican when pitted against other possible and declared GOP candidates.

She ranked fifth behind former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney who received 23 percent support, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin with 17 percent, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich with 13 percent and Rep. Ron Paul of Texas with 12 percent.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/05/17/bachmann-2012-announcement-sooner-rather-than-later/

240 is Back

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #247 on: May 17, 2011, 04:34:48 PM »
lol...... rather, romney's 10million dollar day.... tells her it's time to ante up, if she wants in on that $.

Dos Equis

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #248 on: May 26, 2011, 10:40:01 PM »
Bachmann announces presidential bid … sort of
By: CNN Political Reporter Peter Hamby

Des Moines, Iowa (CNN) - Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota all but announced a presidential bid in Iowa on Thursday.

Her voice did, at least.

That’s because Bachmann, held up in Washington by a key House vote on the Patriot Act, wasn’t actually at the GOP fundraising banquet she was supposed to headline in Des Moines.

So Bachmann dialed in her appearance at the Polk County GOP's annual Robb Kelley Dinner, first via speaker phone with reporters, and then by a choppy Skype connection, to engage in a question-and-answer session with the ballroom full of party activists.

“We are starting the effort,” Bachmann told reporters who pressed her on how serious she is about mounting a presidential bid. “We already have a hired staff in Iowa, New Hampshire, in South Carolina. We have every aspect that we need in this effort.”

She then went a step further, promising that a presidential announcement will be made in the Iowa town of Waterloo, where she was born.

“When we make that all-important announcement - which will happen in the month of June - that announcement. I am pleased to tell you tonight, will be made in Iowa,” Bachmann said. "And I will also tell you that announcement will be made in the city where I was born, in Waterloo.”

She said that hailing from Waterloo will give her a natural advantage against her rivals in Iowa, which will hold the first contest in the Republican presidential nominating contest.

Being a native Iowan affords her “every advantage a girl would want to have,” she said. “There is no downside to being born in Iowa.”

Though she reserved the right not to run, Bachmann signaled that a full-blown campaign will be announced in the coming weeks is clear that her campaign effort was ramping up. “We are putting plans into place,” she said.

Despite Bachmann’s best efforts to make up for her absence, some Republicans who attended the dinner said that skipping a long-planned event, even for a pivotal vote, might not the best way to endear oneself to the demanding Iowa electorate.

“It would be better if she were here,” said Paul Zietlow, founder of a Des Moines group called the Westside Conservative Club. “But in the long-term she’ll be all right.”

Her D.C.-to-Iowa Skype appearance, beamed into the GOP Dinner over a spotty Marriott internet connection, was a bizarre piece of political theater that resembled a Tea Party version of Chatroulette.

Older members of the audience listened politely but appeared distracted as Bachmann, her voice tinny through computer speakers, blasted the Obama administration’s fiscal record and railed against raising the debt ceiling.

Bachmann’s image repeatedly froze on screen, and the room chuckled when the Skype signal went black and had to be re-established.

But awkward webcam appearances aside, it was clear from several rounds of applause that Bachmann’s socially and fiscally conservative messages resonate with party activists.

Asked about the Skype session, Melcher resident Terry Waterland responded bluntly: “It sucks.”

But Waterland said that Bachmann “has her act together."

“She is fluent on everything,” he said. “We won’t have to bring her up to speed on issues.”

State Sen. Kent Sorensen, the point-person for Bachmann’s early presidential effort in Iowa, said most people at the dinner were “being forgiving” about Bachmann’s absence since she was handling a national security vote.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/05/26/bachmann-announces-presidential-bid-%E2%80%A6-sort-of/

chadstallion

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Re: The Official Michele Bachmann 2012 Appreciation Thread
« Reply #249 on: May 27, 2011, 06:03:06 AM »
i'll buy a ticket to her show.
w