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Michele Bachmann Plans Presidential Announcement In Iowa

Michele Bachmann Sarah Palin

BRIAN BAKST   05/27/11 12:20 AM ET   AP

DES MOINES, Iowa — Republican Michele Bachmann is making plans for a presidential campaign announcement next month in Waterloo, Iowa, the city where the Minnesota congresswoman was born.

Bachmann trickled out the details in a conference call with reporters Thursday night but said she could still reverse course and sit out the 2012 White House campaign.

Bachmann was supposed to speak in person at a GOP dinner in downtown Des Moines, but a vote in Washington turned the appearance into a video message. Hundreds of Republicans watched her via a blurry, choppy Internet feed, where she profusely apologized for her absence and offered a rain check. The feed briefly cut out but aides quickly dialed back in.

Bachmann went on to speak about fighting terrorism, defending America's founding documents and opposing legislation to raise the federal debt ceiling.

The Minnesota congresswoman says she has staff lined up in the states that start the presidential nominating process: Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.

She says strong fundraising and other indicators make her confident about making a run.

It was a bizarre scene for an almost-campaign announcement.

Reporters huddled around a Des Moines hotel podium where Bachmann spoke from Washington.

"The announcement will be made in Iowa, and it will be made in Waterloo," Bachmann said, adding that her Iowa birthplace would give her "every advantage a girl would want to have."

Asked if former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's decision would have any bearing on hers, Bachmann said she was acting "independent of what any other candidate decides, no matter which candidate gets in and which candidate gets out."

Of the Palin-Bachmann political overlap, Bachmann said: "I don't believe that any two candidates are interchangeable. Each one of us brings our own unique skill sets into this race."

If there's any state where Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann could stir the Republican race for president, it's Iowa.

Waterloo gives her a home-field advantage of sorts. The tea party, the GOP's most energized segment, loves her. So do social conservatives, who cheer her forceful advocacy of gay marriage bans, abortion restrictions and home-school rights.

All are certain to play well with a GOP caucus electorate filled with Christian evangelicals who are emboldened by the clout they wielded in 2008 when they helped former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee win the caucuses.

Yet if she does run, Iowa Republicans say she'll have to invest time courting them in intimate settings, not just drop by for big speeches. She scrapped a Thursday night trip to Des Moines, where she was to attend a GOP dinner, so she could be in Washington for a vote on anti-terrorism legislation.

"It's too important for her to miss that vote," her spokesman, Doug Sachtleben, said. Bachmann still planned to make remarks via video hookup.

Bachmann hoped to arrive in Iowa in time for events on Friday, including a lunchtime speech in Davenport.

The three-term congresswoman will announce her 2012 plans as soon as next week, and advisers describe her as inclined to get into the race.

While in Iowa this week, Bachmann was due to hold private meetings with pastors, business leaders and elected officials. Sachtleben said it wasn't immediately clear which of the events would still occur. She was also planning to meet with supporters who have been building a network to facilitate a 2012 bid.

"I don't think it's a matter of if she's going to run, I think it's when she's going to announce," said state Sen. Kent Sorenson, a tea party Republican who would take a lead role in a Bachmann campaign. "The people in Iowa are chomping at the bit and ready for her to jump in with both feet."

She would join a wide-open GOP field that's becoming clearer with each passing week. Tea party favorite Sarah Palin, the 2008 GOP vice presidential nominee, is among those still considering a run, and her candidacy would affect Bachmann because the two would compete for the same pool of voters in Iowa.

If Palin were to run, "Bachmann's star is going to fade," said Jeff Jorgensen, chairman of the Pottawattamie County GOP in western Iowa.

But Palin isn't in the race, leaving Huckabee's network of supporters and donors in Iowa up for grabs. Bachmann has made no secret of her attempts to fill the void the Baptist minister left in the race, and suggested in interviews after he bowed out that she was more likely to run.

Bachmann aides say she would run a populist campaign much like Huckabee's, but with an asset he lacked: the ability to raise enough money to compete in states beyond Iowa if she were to win it. She's raised more than $2.5 million since she's been flirting with a White House bid.

She urged her donor base Wednesday to help her meet a $240,000 goal in the 24 hours leading up to her Des Moines speech.

"My family and I are prayerfully considering what the next 18 months or so may bring," Bachmann wrote in an email pitch. "We've seen incredible support pouring in; the Team Bachmann momentum is building and very encouraging as we look to our next steps."

She'll need more than money to prevail in Iowa, where voters have come to expect personal and repeated outreach from candidates before making their picks.

Activists say that while she's forged strong bonds nationally with the libertarian-conservative network, she doesn't have a local lock on tea party support.

"There's certainly no way she's going to come into Iowa and sweep up the entire tea party movement. There's no way that's going to happen," said Charlie Gruschow, a founder of the Des Moines Tea Party. He's the Iowa state director for former pizza magnate Herman Cain's campaign, and said Texas Rep. Ron Paul also is attractive to tea party members.

Bachmann is certain to face competition for values voters from former Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania and former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, both of whom are stressing their faith and records on issues such as opposition to abortion.

Scott Bailey, president of the Network of Iowa Christian Home Educators, said while Bachmann's experience with home-schooling her own children gives voters "an initial interest and makes them want to know more," the connection won't automatically translate into caucus support.

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DES MOINES, Iowa — Republican Michele Bachmann is making plans for a presidential campaign announcement next month in Waterloo, Iowa, the city where the Minnesota congresswoman was born. Bachma...
DES MOINES, Iowa — Republican Michele Bachmann is making plans for a presidential campaign announcement next month in Waterloo, Iowa, the city where the Minnesota congresswoman was born. Bachma...
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lowlycitizen
Kindness is free, spread liberally
06:45 PM on 05/30/2011
Batman: Robin, she got the Christian vote!
Robin: Holy Teabag!
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GordonNYC
Not for Sale
09:21 PM on 06/06/2011
Start charging for your kindness so we don't have to get it for free.
lowlycitizen
Kindness is free, spread liberally
06:36 PM on 05/30/2011
Who'll win in a race between Bachmann and the tortoise? Not sure, because Bachmann will be playing shotput on the other field.
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DuxMom
Wine merchant, parent, artist
08:09 AM on 05/30/2011
Michelle must be writing a book! Running for prez... She knows she has no shot, no accomplishments to tout, just tea baggy BS that is full of hate for everyone who isn't white, middle-class and Midwestern. Go ahead and announce in Iowa. I think voters there are a lot smarter than they are given credit for. They'll see through this charade in no time. But Michelle may sell some of her books. PS - This is also the reason Palin won't run - dumb, unaccomplished quitter. But she's got a book to sell and a spiffy million dollar home in Arizona to decorate. Bet old Todd is missing his snowmobile already.
10:27 AM on 05/30/2011
What middle-class, by election 2012 there won't be one. The GOP are slowly, systematically doing that now.
OverseasVet
stuck in a 3rd world country called texas
01:54 AM on 05/30/2011
This is the caliber of people the GOP thinks are suitable to be president? Guess their war on education is paying dividends.
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mivogo
Single standard truth and democracy
01:43 AM on 05/30/2011
I'd like to see them both on Leno's "Jaywalking."

Sarah and Michelle, who is buried in Grant's Tomb?

Sarah: Can I get back to you on that?
Michelle: Cary Grant.

See? They're NOT interchangable!

www.newyorkgritty.net
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drwtsn
Could I please get an upgrade to a macro-bio?
01:33 AM on 05/30/2011
Palin and Bachmann each bring their "own unique skill sets into this race."

I've heard women's breasts referred to in many ways, but "skill sets" is a new one.
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SeptimusDSX
Always question the obvious.
11:24 PM on 05/29/2011
Will either of them bag the women vote? If yes, then it is game over. Perhaps a few girls on here can chime in?
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DuxMom
Wine merchant, parent, artist
08:23 AM on 05/30/2011
No way. We are pretty cynical at this point about Palin and Bachmann. They are selling something and it ain't their track record. I think women react negatively to the Palin drivel - don't hold yourself up as a great parent when your kid is a teen mom. And B, you're a quitter. And C, you shot an animal for entertainment - that's gross. And Bachmann? She has nothing to run on, no great accomplishments or ideas, so as I commented elsewhere, she must be selling a book!
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SeptimusDSX
Always question the obvious.
09:31 AM on 05/30/2011
So do you ladies base your decision on family/moral values or other policy issues? Bachmann does not seem as controversial when viewed based on your specific points so do you think she stands a much better chance?
11:21 PM on 05/29/2011
off course you are... all r@c!!sts are interchangeable.
10:21 PM on 05/29/2011
"Not interchangeable"?
Who said that? Was that Bachmann, or Palin? I swear I can't tell them apart.
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10:12 PM on 05/29/2011
Bachmann and Palin are not interchangeable, Sarah wears glasses.
08:40 PM on 05/29/2011
Like it or not, it would appear as if Ms. Bachmann is viewed by most of the country as Sarah Palin-The Sequel.

It's hard to envision a scenario where both would be in the race at the same time. The really interesting scenario would be a Palin-Bachmann ticket, which I wouldn't rule out, even if it ran on a 3rd party platform (presumably the Tea Party platform).
08:38 PM on 05/29/2011
"stupid is as stupid does"
08:37 PM on 05/29/2011
they're not interchang­eable

but they are both really dumb
nothingchanges
too soon old, too late smart
08:17 PM on 05/29/2011
She's right..................they're not interchangeable.

Sarah Palin quit her job.....................Michelle Bachmann never did any work.

Three years in the house. 38 bills sponsored, and NOT A SINGLE ONE made it out of committee for a vote, the weren't even good enough for her own party.

Why is she being paid $174,000 a year? Why is she being considered material for a promotion?

Another difference?

Sarah Palin has made at least some true statements, at least according to rulings by Politifact. In fact she has told the truth about 1/2 the time. 10 true, 6 mostly true, 12 false, 4 pants on fire lies.

Michele Bachmann? 0 true, 0 mostly true, 9 false, 7 pants on fire lies.

Palin is the hands down winner between these two. it's not much of an accomplishment.