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Michele Bachmann Feels Sting From Shot At Rick Perry On HPV Vaccine

Michele Bachmann Hpv Vaccine

AP/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 09/15/11 01:08 PM ET Updated: 11/15/11 05:12 AM ET

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Republican Michele Bachmann is feeling the sting of a presidential campaign jab gone awry, while the target is using the flap to shore up his pro-life credentials.

Bachmann is trying to regain her footing in the race after a late-summer slide. At a GOP debate sponsored by CNN and the Tea Party Express Monday she tried to raise doubts about front-runner Rick Perry among conservatives and libertarian-style tea party members critical to both candidates.

Bachmann criticized Perry, the Texas governor, for signing an order requiring middle-school girls in his state to get vaccinated against the human papillomavirus, known as HPV. But in the following days, she linked the vaccine to mental retardation. Medical experts roundly disputed the claim, calling it irresponsible and dangerous.

Following a fundraiser in Virginia on Wednesday, Perry admitted he "made a mistake in the way I took this forward" in 2007. But he categorized his support for the mandate under the same moral conviction that makes him opposed to abortion.

"I've sat on the side of a bed with a young lady as she was dying of cervical cancer. It had an impact on me," Perry said. "Did I mishandle this law? I've readily admitted that I did."

In post-debate TV interviews, Bachmann said that a tearful woman approached her to attribute her daughter's mental retardation to the HPV vaccine called Gardasil.

In weighing in on Bachmann's remarks on Wednesday, Perry weighed in said, "I think that was a statement that had no truth in it, no basis in fact."

Former Bachmann campaign manager Ed Rollins suggested the same day that the presidential contender "made a mistake" with her comments.

"The quicker she admits she made a mistake and moves on, the better she is," Rollins said during an appearance on MSNBC. "Ms. Bachmann's an emotional person who basically has great feeling for people. I think that's what she was trying to project. Obviously it would have been better if she had stayed on the issue."

The Los Angeles Times reports that former Bachmann chief of staff Ron Carey said during an appearance on CNN, "She reads an awful lot of information, but sometimes I’m afraid that she reads maybe 80 or 90 percent and leaves out or forgets the ten or 20 percent that can change the outcome." He added, "So her impulsive nature coupled with the fact that she sometimes doesn’t digest information as carefully as she should leads to these kinds of impulsive statements that sometimes are just off the mark enough that it makes her into more of a provocative, controversial figure.”

Political observers say Bachmann's comments in the days after the debate muddied her shot at Perry.

"It's an absolute blown hit," said David Welch, an unaligned GOP strategist who worked for nominee John McCain in 2008. "It's the difference between the ready-for-prime-time political candidate and the not-ready-for-prime-time political candidate. You just don't repeat what somebody just told you."

Doctors and other immunization advocates criticized her comments as unfounded, irresponsible and dangerous. Some expressed worry that nervous parents would take the claim as fact and refuse inoculation for their children.

"It's the obligation of politicians to know the facts before they talk about vaccinations. They should understand how they work, how important they are and how much work goes into recommendations for their use," said Dr. Deborah Wexler, executive director of the Immunization Action Coalition, a vaccine information clearinghouse for doctors and the public.

Wexler added in an interview Wednesday, "It harms our vaccination program when public figures make statements that are untrue and do it in an emotional statement."

Bachmann has since ratcheted her comments back.

"I am not a doctor. I am not a scientist. I'm not a physician," Bachmann told Fox News host Sean Hannity when asked if she personally believed a Gardasil injection could cause retardation.

Bachmann wasn't available Wednesday for an interview with The Associated Press, but spokeswoman Alice Stewart said the congresswoman's message was about more than the safety of the vaccine.

"The point she was making dealt with the overreach of executive authority and crony capitalism," Stewart said.

The HPV vaccine issue also simmered in Bachmann's home state of Minnesota, but not wasn't as explosive as in Texas. By the time the issue reached the Legislature in 2007, Bachmann was in Congress. The bill was introduced but never got a hearing.

Minnesota law requires schoolchildren to get vaccines for rubella, diphtheria, tetanus, polio and hepatitis B.

The state's childhood immunization law underwent minor changes while Bachmann was a state senator. She supported all of the revisions, which mostly dealt with timing of previously mandated vaccinations, recordkeeping and requirements that health providers more closely track problems with vaccines.

Opponents of required HPV immunizations draw a distinction between the vaccine and those for other communicable diseases like mumps and polio. They argue parents should have the ultimate say on the HPV because it is aimed at stopping sexually transmitted diseases spread by risky behavior.

Below, video of the exchange between Bachmann and Perry during Monday night's GOP debate.

WATCH:

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ST. PAUL, Minn. — Republican Michele Bachmann is feeling the sting of a presidential campaign jab gone awry, while the target is using the flap to shore up his pro-life credentials. Bachmann is t...
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Republican Michele Bachmann is feeling the sting of a presidential campaign jab gone awry, while the target is using the flap to shore up his pro-life credentials. Bachmann is t...
 
 
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butlercaddie
Fear->Anger->Hate->Tea
01:50 PM on 09/19/2011
In today's "often in error, never in doubt" GOP, once you've admitted you're wrong about one thing, the entire house of cards is at risk. You can never admit a mistake, you can never admit someone else could be right. You can't even admit that their point of view may be valid and worthy of debate. With these tightly-wound personalities, with murky back stories and beliefs manufactured out of whole cloth, admitting the least scintilla of doubt could threaten a meltdown not seen since Noah left his dinosaur at the dock.
09:17 PM on 09/17/2011
My son is a Senior Research Investigator, and drug designer. I asked him if he would give my granddaughters the HPV vaccine? No hesitation, he quickly responded "NO!" I asked him why he felt this way. He simply stated "it's not been tested enough for safety, and side effects!". I don't trust him just because he's my son. I trust him because he saved his Dad's life, and has helped many of our friends survive cancer, RA, and Lupus.
The government should not be involved in a choice such as this one. Parents should receive quality information from their doctors, and they make their own choices.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jimmy 61762
11:25 AM on 09/16/2011
She is frustrated because her poll numbers are tanking.She has become irrelevent as has Palin.Anyone notice that Rick Santorum makes a face like he's just bit into a lemon every time he is asked a question?
11:14 AM on 09/16/2011
Lies for both Perry and Bachman and most GOP become "mistakes" in the media. But watch what they do when Obama or other Dems make an honest "mistake."
10:33 AM on 09/16/2011
The President of the United States has access to the nuclear missile buttons.

Nobody on this planet would love to hear an excuse such as "Some woman approached me and said that country X was attacking the US. That's why I pressed that button."
09:13 AM on 09/16/2011
I assume this blog was meant as a self-parody. Bachmann has nto felt any sting from comments falsely attributed to her. The blog wrote inaccurately: "But in the following days, she linked the vaccine to mental retardation. Medical experts roundly disputed the claim, calling it irresponsible and dangerous."
Bachmann never "linked the vaccine to mental retardation." She accurately reported what a woman in the audience at the debate told Bachmann about the woman's daughter. The blog's attribution to Bachmann of this view is a complete lie.
This is what passes for Team Obama "journolism" at HuffPost: falsely attribute discredited views to political opponents; or misquote political opponents; or inaccurately paraphrase political opponents.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jimmy 61762
11:12 AM on 09/16/2011
Bachmanns purpose reporting what some ignorant or even non existant mother told her was to tell Perry it's none of his business to push this vacination.She has a mouth that moves a lot faster than her brain and she also knows that she is becomming irrelevent in this election.Her statement was not ad-libbed as she has some believing,this was a pre-planned attack that turned back on her.
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trainer3
"Port side, high, I'm comin' down hard."/ "Roger."
07:18 AM on 09/16/2011
I think she got Quackcinated.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PTAOfficerforObama
A micro bio is a terrrible thing to waste.
06:13 AM on 09/16/2011
The problem is she made up this woman who told her that Gardisil caused her daughter to be mentally retarded...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Grace Hulbert
Get your Bichon!
12:32 AM on 09/16/2011
I Can't Get No (Vaccination)

#SongsOfTheTeaParty
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trainer3
"Port side, high, I'm comin' down hard."/ "Roger."
07:22 AM on 09/16/2011
When I'm rollin up my sleeves, and they're doing this while I'm signing that and they fill it with HPVs, I tell them, 'baby better come back...later next week, cause ya see...I'm a man look at this and they shriek, I can't GET no..."
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trainer3
"Port side, high, I'm comin' down hard."/ "Roger."
08:08 PM on 09/17/2011
What a diUk brain...that f*Ki% baby pic...y& louse.

ya don't recognize genius, you will never make more than 31K per year.

have a nice trailer.
12:30 AM on 09/16/2011
What the constitution needs is a presidential recall amendment. Just in case.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Pasterczyk
Banned!
05:35 AM on 09/16/2011
Woulda come in awful handy in about 2006 when the nation finally realized what a bill of goods Dubya really was.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rusken
Progressive Leftist
06:29 AM on 09/16/2011
You people sure want to make a lot of changes to the Constitution, the document you think is sacred.
12:18 AM on 09/16/2011
So Ron C says MB reads only 80-90% and leaves out 10-20% which could change her opinion if she had read 100%. Won't she make a wonderful president. Not saying any of the others are any better. They're all bad, including RP.
10:59 PM on 09/15/2011
Her carelessness with facts is well documented. She'll go with dogma over facts any day of the week.
12:18 AM on 09/16/2011
Doesn't that make her a true republican.
12:32 AM on 09/16/2011
Isn't that the definition of a republican - a person who uses dogma and not common sense.
10:31 PM on 09/15/2011
I would think - that no one approached her. She was trying to make a mountain out of a mole hill.
10:17 PM on 09/15/2011
When it comes to mental retardation, Bachmann is an expert.
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iconoclast6
This is my BOOM stick!
09:41 PM on 09/15/2011
"I made a mistake."

In the colorful patois of my place of origin, Ricko..."NO DOY!"

It's not the one you think, though.