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Michele Bachmann Seeks To Broaden Appeal (VIDEO)

By BRIAN BAKST and JIM DAVENPORT   08/21/11 12:27 AM ET   AP

GREENVILLE, S.C. -- Pigeonholed as a right-wing disciple, Michele Bachmann is offering herself as a presidential candidate who can unite the GOP's disparate base and appeal to Republicans of all ideological stripes.

"Fiscal conservatives – I'm one of those. National security conservatives – I'm one of those. Social conservatives – I'm one of those. And the tea party – I'm one of those," the Minnesota congresswoman said repeatedly in South Carolina this past week.

The line, now standard fare as she visits early primary states, provides a window into her strategy of selling herself as more than just a social conservative crusader.

Bachmann's ability to overtake rivals Mitt Romney and Rick Perry in the GOP nomination contest may depend on whether she can attract support beyond her core evangelical and tea party constituencies, which gravitate toward her strong stances on cultural issues.

But this year, economic concerns clearly rate above many others with most voters. If she wins the party nod, she will have to court moderates and independents as well as conservatives.

Throughout her political career, Bachmann has fiercely guarded and worked to bolster her social conservative reputation.

She has had a 100 percent rating from the influential American Conservative Union during her nearly five years in Congress, based on her voting record. Over the past few years, she rode the wave of the rising tea party and used her frequent TV appearances to stoke a national image as a favorite of the right.

As a candidate, Bachmann isn't eager to revisit her past controversial statements even though Democratic and Republican rivals alike use them to paint her as a fringe Republican in the race to challenge President Barack Obama.

During a recent debate, she deftly handled a question about a past remark cited the Bible as instructing wives to be "submissive to your husbands." In a measured tone, she explained it was about showing mutual respect.

A few days later, Bachmann faced tough questions on the Sunday national news shows about previous statements, including a comment about the gay lifestyle being one of "personal bondage, personal despair and personal enslavement." Not addressing such issues directly, she relied on answers such as "I'm running for the presidency of the United States. I'm not running to be anyone's judge."

Bachmann's typical campaign speech illustrates her efforts to broaden her appeal. Or as she put it in Florence this past week: "We are going to make the case that we're the unifying candidate who can beat Obama."

She opened her remarks to conservative South Carolina audiences with a quick rundown of her stances on cultural issues. But she quickly pivoted to jobs, filling a whiteboard with numbers about tax collections and the nation's swelling deficit.

"You cannot spend more money than what you take in. It's a simple fact of life, right?" Bachmann told a receptive crowd at the Greenville convention center. She promised to submit only balanced budgets as president even though critics say that's impossible.

To national security conservatives, she said: "I won't step one toe out of this country and apologize for the United States of America," the rap that Obama's foreign policy approach gets from conservatives.

She also plays up her role on the House Intelligence Committee, stressing how she's trusted with the nation's secrets and apprised of the most pressing threats.

The broader pitch is a necessity given the times.

Gail Randall, 54, is among those who showed up this past week to hear Bachmann and who think social issues are fading.

Said Randall: "It's all about the economy this year, I think, and job creation."

Lois Ross, 42, said she appreciated hearing from Bachmann about foreign affairs, including illegal immigration and the economy because "they are the only issues I'm voting on."

Bachmann's outreach also comes across more subtly.

No matter where she travels, she emphasizes her birthplace of Waterloo, Iowa.

She says it drives home her heartland sensibilities and bedrock values. She shares stories of growing up in a broken home after her parents divorced, sending a message that she can relate to people's personal and economic struggles.

Wherever Bachmann goes, she blares Elvis Presley tunes from her campaign bus.

It's not the first time Bachmann has tried to make such a pivot.

She built a following in Minnesota as a state senator championing social causes such as a proposed constitutional ban on gay marriage. But after dispatching GOP challengers in her first bid for Congress, she focused her fall campaign on financial issues.

She hired a presidential campaign team that knows well the danger of being narrowly defined in a primary.

Several top advisers, including campaign manager Ed Rollins, oversaw Mike Huckabee's 2008 campaign. The ex-Arkansas governor is a former minister and a social conservative who harnessed the organizing ability of pastors, evangelicals and home-school advocates to win the Iowa caucuses. But he never grew his base of support before dropping out.

His campaign had wanted to stress his economic record and sportsman background, too, but never was able to get beyond the caricature that was stamped into voters' minds.

"There's this temptation always – and we're certainly seeing that with Congresswoman Bachmann – to try to make her into a one-dimensional candidate or a one-dimensional person," said Eric Woolson, who was Huckabee's Iowa campaign chief. "That clearly doesn't tell the whole story."

Even if she wins Iowa, Bachmann could flame out in New Hampshire, where there already are doubts about whether her track record and excitable rhetoric are a good fit in the opening primary state.

"I see very little oxygen left for Michele Bachmann in New Hampshire. Though she has some appeal, it is not very broad," said GOP strategist Jamie Burnett, a former Romney backer unaligned with a candidate this time. "To win here, she is going to need to attract support from beyond the tea party in order to compete."

___

Bakst reported from St. Paul, Minn. Associated Press writer Steve Peoples in Littleton, N.H., contributed to this report.

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GREENVILLE, S.C. -- Pigeonholed as a right-wing disciple, Michele Bachmann is offering herself as a presidential candidate who can unite the GOP's disparate base and appeal to Republicans of all ideol...
GREENVILLE, S.C. -- Pigeonholed as a right-wing disciple, Michele Bachmann is offering herself as a presidential candidate who can unite the GOP's disparate base and appeal to Republicans of all ideol...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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larmarch5 01:21 PM on 08/21/2011
From in The New Yorker: "In the case of the former Internal Revenue Service attorney, home-school organizer and mother of five, they are evidence of a God-centered worldview, as the New Yorker piece says, "shaped by institutions, tracts and leaders not commonly known to secular Americans, or even to most Christians."  Read More...
05:22 PM on 08/30/2011
"Fiscal conservatives – I'm one of those. National security conservatives – I'm one of those. Social conservatives – I'm one of those. And the tea party – I'm one of those," Intolerant bigot-I'm one of those...theocratic bible beater-check...crazier than a rat in a drain-pipe-got it covered...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nick Lahanas
Republicans: Robin Hood in Reverse
07:27 PM on 08/25/2011
"Fiscal conservatives – I'm one of those. National security conservatives – I'm one of those. Social conservatives – I'm one of those. And the tea party – I'm one of those," the Minnesota congresswoman said repeatedly in South Carolina this past week

Uh, belonging to the Tea Party is a pretty quick way to get you ignored among moderates.
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mtnlife96
No apology
08:04 PM on 08/24/2011
I live less than 20 miles from the SC state line and have heard way too much about Ms. B on local news including, over and over and over, the I'm not one of those things. It's become a contest around here - like rounds of knock knock jokes - as in not capable of rational thought, I'm one of those; and, not capable of stating any history accurately, I'm one of those. And on and on and on. At least it's better than running around tearing hair out and crying.
08:12 PM on 08/23/2011
now stop picking on her. shes trying just like obama
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andrea Blackwell
Why watch the news? The truth's on Comedy Central!
06:29 PM on 08/23/2011
It would appeal to me if she would just sit down and shut up. She's got the world laughing at us!
Beat Obama? ROFL So far, the GOP hasn't produced a candidate worthy of scraping gum off Obama's shoe.
If they were truly interested in doing right by this country, they would get out of his way!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
peterlisbon
01:30 PM on 08/23/2011
Bachmann could do reasonably well in Iowa and SC -- but then again so could a mollusk if it wore an anti-Obama sign. NH will be her Waterloo -- I am from that state and while there are a lot of anti-tax zealots up there -- they do not care for the fire and brimstone Christian rhetoric that is her stock in trade so I suspect that she will find that tough going. Also, Nevada could also prove tough -- Angle did so well there
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeremy Ailes
renaissance geek
12:11 PM on 08/23/2011
"I'm running for the presidency of the United States. I'm not running to be anyone's judge."

This statement strikes me as odd and avoidance. We clearly know how she feels about gay marriage/gay rights. As POTUS you have the ability to influence federal law! Are we supposed to believe that she just wants to be POTUS and doesn't want to make some serious social changes? I don't think so. She is extreme right, she is fringe, and I really don't see moderates getting behind her.
11:54 AM on 08/23/2011
A comely woman. I wonder how long it takes her to put on her makeup each morning. I hour, 2 hours?
11:13 AM on 08/23/2011
Here's how Michelle can broaden her appeal to reach me: apologize to all gays immediately. Set up a charity to help LGBT youth overcome bullying in her district, to make up for the fact that it currently has one of the highest rates of teen suicides. Then, she can take back her comments on eliminating the minimum wage. Again, in recompense, she should become a supporter of a 'living wage,' which is a dollar amount that is actually high enough to sustain a family working 40 hours a week above the federal poverty line. If she can do these things, I may even consider her to be a Christian, because then she will be demonstrating compassion and love for those that she would seek to lead.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andrea Blackwell
Why watch the news? The truth's on Comedy Central!
06:30 PM on 08/23/2011
and it still wouldn't be enough to even consider her for POTUS.
11:01 AM on 08/23/2011
Michele 2.0 simply means doubling her medication
11:00 AM on 08/23/2011
you know you are far-right when "broadening appeal" only means reaching out traditional republicans.
abhorson
Si Si Chiquita. There's a woman worth her ransom
10:22 AM on 08/23/2011
"2.0" ... please... she was 2.0 like 3.0 years ag.0

she's more like version 5.2.5 (release with major bug fixes not yet finished)
08:12 AM on 08/23/2011
evil
Clevelandinwi
Progressive is good; regressive, not so much.
07:31 AM on 08/23/2011
I liked 1.99 better.
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richj45
politically correct linux vegetarian
06:41 AM on 08/23/2011
According to the population clock there are 312,049,945 people in the U.S... which means there are 312,049,944 people I'd vote for be for I'd ever cast a vote for Bachman
abhorson
Si Si Chiquita. There's a woman worth her ransom
10:23 AM on 08/23/2011
I'm worse ....