Posted on 06/25/2011 4:47:29 AM PDT by ejdrapes
Queen of the Tea Party If shed fallen backward, shed have been killed. It was September 2009, during her second term in Congress, and a magazine had sent a photographer to shoot Michele Bachmann. He escorted her to the third floor rotunda in the Cannon House Office Building on Capitol Hill, where he positioned a large orange crate next to the balustrade. He told her to stand on it. She reluctantly obliged. Behind her were three stories of empty air. The magazine had also sent a videographer, who wanted Bachmann to gesture ecstatically for the camera. And I said, Thats not what I do, Bachmann remembered during a recent interview at her temporary campaign headquarters in downtown Washington. Im a serious member of Congress. So she got off the crate. The photo shoot soon ended, and the pictures were never published. I think they didnt get what they wanted, Bachmann said. They wanted this freak caricature. We were speaking a few days after Bachmanns well-received performance at a Republican primary debate in Goffstown, New Hampshire, on June 13. Bachmanns poise and deft answers, and her announcement that shed filed the paperwork to run for president, made her stand out from the other candidates. Perhaps the caricature has begun to fade. Energetic, charismatic, intelligent, and attractive, the 55-year-old Bachmann is no stranger to publicity. Since she arrived on the national scene in 2007, her prominence in the conservative movement has skyrocketed. In the world of talk radio and cable news, she possesses something like Most Favored Guest status. She plays the outside game, using media appearances to further the rights agenda. Shes been featured in calendars of female conservative superstars. Theres even a Michele Bachmann action figure. What Bachmann lacked until recently was mainstream credibility. And the skepticism was bipartisan. Democrats loathed herand still dobecause shes about as far from an apologetic conservative as you can get. But plenty of Republican officials and consultant types also didnt like Bachmann. Republican elites muttered that she was a show horse, not a work horse. Her fame alienated colleagues. One congressman recently told me that Bachmann had been upbraided during a House GOP conference meeting for undermining the leaderships message on fiscal issues. Bachmanns tendency to shoot from the hip is said to limit her appeal. I think Bachmanns chances of landing on Jupiter are higher than her chances of being nominated, Republican strategist Mike Murphy told me in an April interview for Washingtonpost.com. Well, get ready for an interplanetary expedition. Bachmann is a far more serious candidate for the Republican nomination than her reputation would suggest. Shes a talented fundraiser who raised $13.5 million for her 2010 reelection campaign. Shes a television star who appropriately tailors her message to her audience. Her combativeness will delight conservatives eager to fight Barack Obama. Her movement credentialsshe founded the House Tea Party Caucusput her at the cutting edge of right-wing politics. And in a primary campaign where authenticity counts, no other candidate has Bachmanns unique history: an Iowa native who put herself through law school, raised her five children and took in 23 foster children, and has never lost an election for state or federal office. Since 2009, millions of Americans have attended rallies, joined Tea Party groups, and become involved in politics. Theyre scared for the future of the country, and they want to stop Americas decline. Many of these activists are parents or grandparents who simply werent political before government policies drove them into the arena. Michele Bachmann is uniquely positioned to speak to these votersbecause shes one of them. Michele Amble was born on April 6, 1956, in Waterloo, Iowa, the second of four children and the only girl. Her childhood was modest. Her parents owned a small home and rented out the top floor for income. Her father was studying to be an engineer. When Michele was four, the family moved into a three-bedroom rambler. It was probably lower middle class, she said, and then, as families do, we moved up to middle class. She was baptized and raised in the Lutheran church. The Ambles come from Norwegian immigrants who arrived in America in the middle of the nineteenth century. They trace their roots in Iowa back seven generations. They were Democrats. The one Republican Michele knew well as a child was her paternal grandmother, a devoted Wall Street Journal and Time magazine reader who, like her other grandparents, worked in a factory. David Amble, Micheles father, was the first in the family to go to college. When Michele was in elementary school, her father got a job designing ordnance at Honeywell. The work took the Ambles to Anoka, Minnesota, north of the Twin Cities. Then came a time of upheaval. Her parents divorced. Her father moved to California. Michele and her brothers remained in Minnesota with their mother, Jean. The family fell into poverty overnight. My mom made about $4,800 a year, Michele said. Jean was a bank teller. Michele was 13 years old. She and her mother had a conversation. My mom said, One thing that can never be taken away from you is your education, Bachmann told me in a 2009 interview. If she worked hard in school, her mother went on, shed have a foundation for life. Michele became a devoted student at Anoka High, graduating early. She was popular and was elected to the homecoming court in the fall and winter semesters. She was never queen, though. I won Miss Congeniality once, she said. Both of her parents remarried by the time Michele finished high school. She has two stepsiblings through her stepmother and five through her stepfather. Just as important as her changing family, however, was her turn to religion. Shed attended church as a child without really hearing what was said. Then, when she was 16, she made a commitment. I believe God is real, she said. I believe hes real, I believe hes true, I believe that there is a heaven, and thats where I want to go. She considers herself an evangelical Christian. As an adult, shes attended both a Lutheran church and a nondenominational Christian church. Her faith led her to some interesting places. The summer after she finished high school, Michele went to Israel and worked on a kibbutz. The trip was sponsored by Young Life, a Christian ministry. I always had this love and appreciation for Israel because I was a Christian, she said. Its the foundation of our faith. All of the Bible is about Israel. She wanted to see the land for herself. What she found wasnt a high-end vacation destination. She remembers the hurly burly of Ben Gurion airport, 1974: heat, soldiers with guns, customs officers at card tables on the tarmac. Chickens were everywhere. It was pretty grubby, she said. The youth housing on the kibbutz was called the ghetto. Lizards climbed the walls. She would wake up at 4 a.m. and get on a flatbed truck that was pulled by an old diesel tractor. Occasionally Michele operated the rig: It was my first time driving a clutch. They would drive out to cotton fields to pull weeds. Armed soldiers escorted them wherever they went. The soldiers searched for mines as the kids cultivated the soil. Youre hoping at 4 oclock in the morning that they see everything, she told me. The group would work until noon, drive back to the kibbutz, make lunch in the kitchen, and promptly conked out. The experience has never left her mind. If you consider what it was like in 1948, she said, and literally watch flowers bloom in a desert over timeI dont know if any nation has paralleled the rise of Israel since 1948. A member of Christians United for Israel, shes one of Israels strongest supporters in Congress. One Jewish Minnesota Republican has told me of speeches at local Republican Jewish Coalition events where Bachmann has brought cheering audiences to their feet. When she returned to the States, Michele enrolled at a community college near Anoka. Money was tight. Shed often work three jobsschool bus driver, restaurant hostess, all sorts of things. The following summer she went to Alaska, where she worked for an uncle who lived in the Aleutian Islands. Alaskas oil boom was just beginning, and geologists scoured the rocks for signs of petroleum. Michele tarred roofs, cleaned fish, washed dishes, and cooked meals. In Alaska she fell into conversation with a geologist who wanted to know her plans. Michele told him she didnt want to go back to community college, and she also didnt have any money. The geologist recommended Winona State University in the southeastern part of Minnesota, near the Mississippi River. Michele sent away for the catalog, applied, and was accepted. The first time she ever saw Winona State was when she arrived on campus to enroll. Luckily, it was a perfect fit. There she discovered, among other things, the work of theologian Francis Schaeffer, whose How Should We Then Live? is a popular Christian interpretation of Western intellectual and cultural history. Schaeffer was important because he widened the scope of evangelical thought and criticism. Study and interpretation neednt be limited to Scripture, he argued, but should include the whole of Western civilization. Essentially, his argument is that faith, the BibleOld and New Testamenthas something to do with all of life, in a positive way, Michele said. He goes through history and he shows how Michelangelo and Da Vinci and great artists were inspired by their faith. It was at Winona State that Michele began to date Marcus Bachmann. The couple volunteered on Jimmy Carters 1976 presidential campaign. They handed out flyers in college dorms supporting the Georgia governor and his Minnesotan running mate. When Carter won, Marcus and Michele received an invitation to attend the presidential inauguration. Theyd never been to Washington. Michele was on the racquetball court when Marcus told her they could travel to D.C. for $100. At first she resisted. I said, A hundred dollars to go to Washington, D.C.? Too much money. But Marcus was convincing. Before long, they were on their way in a van from Winona with six other students. It was kind of like the Beverly Hillbillies, she said. I remember we came over this hill and saw the horizon, and there was the Capitol, and honest to God, tears were coming down my face. Carters was the last inauguration to take place on the Capitols east portico. The day was freezing. What really stood out, though, was all the grub. The young Minnesotans went from ballroom to ballroom, and each location was stocked with huge trays of brownies and deli meats and cheeses. Michele had never seen anything like it. She and Marcus participated in the ancient ritual, known to interns everywhere, of surviving off free food. The students returned to Minnesota and followed Carter from afar. It soon seemed the apogee of Carters presidency had been Inauguration Day. We were extremely disappointed, she said. We were disappointed on almost every level. Stagflation reigned. Carter was feckless on the international front. And on social policy he was awful: Carters task force on the family couldnt even agree on the definition of their subject. A three-year-old knows what a family is, Michele said. And they werent able to do that. And I thought, Jimmy Carters supposed to be a born-again Christian. Whats going on here? The disillusionment was irrevocable. One day while she was in college, Michele took the train from Minneapolis to Winona. Shed brought along a copy of Burr, Gore Vidals fictional portrayal of Americas Founders, to pass the time. What she read horrified her. Told from the point of view of Aaron Burr, Vidals novel makes endless fun of Washington, Jefferson, and Hamilton. At one point the narrator says Americas first president had a large rear end. It was so disgusting to me, Michele said, talking about how he was waddling or something. She put the book down and looked out the window at the passing landscape. Hes mocking the Founders, she thought. Thats not who these men were. Then she thought: I dont think Im a Democrat. And at that moment, I became a Republican. I was done. Michele and Marcus married after graduating from college in 1978. They spent the next year working in Minnesota, Michele at the Buffalo County judges office, Marcus in social work. Then began the long juggling act of continuing their education while holding jobs and raising kids. The family moved to Tulsa, then Virginia Beach, for graduate school. By the time they wound up in Stillwater, Minnesota, in the late 1980s, the Bachmanns had a law degree from Oral Roberts (Michele), a masters in tax law from William and Mary (Michele), a masters in education and counseling from Regent University (Marcus), and a growing family. Marcus went on to open two successful Christian counseling clinics. Bachmann worked as a federal tax attorney until the birth of her fourth child. She always had plenty to do. We taught all of our children to read and write at home before we sent them to school, and we sent our biological children to Christian school, she said. The Bachmanns also opened their home to teenage girls with eating disorders. The maximum number of kids, biological and nonbiological, they had at one time was nine. There came a moment when we found ourselves with a seventh grader, a first grader, a four-year-old, a two-year-old, and a nursing newborn, Bachmann said, and four foster children. There were so many kids in the house the family applied for a group home license. Bachmann was involved in all aspects of her childrens education. In the early 1990s, she joined the board of a Christian-influenced charter school in Stillwater. She left that position in 1993, but remained interested in civic life. She and Marcus were active in the pro-life movement. Curriculum reform, though, was the issue that eventually drove her into politics. In 1998, in order to secure federal education money, Minnesota adopted a state curriculum called Profile of Learning. In a nutshell, the Profile of Learning amounted to the bureaucrats writing the lesson plans for the teachers, said Minnesota Republican Allen Quist, whose wife Julie would go on to work in Bachmanns congressional office. Whoever writes the lesson plans really controls whats being taught. Also, the standards were shockingly low. How low? One day in the late 1990s, one of Bachmanns foster daughters, then in the eleventh grade, took out her math homework. It was a poster. The assignment was to color it. Bachmann was shocked. She began to investigate why students were playing with crayons a year before they graduated from high school. Things were worse than she anticipated. Not only were the standards poor, but she regarded the Profile of Learning as tantamount to liberal brainwashing. What you might call a kind of radical left political indoctrination was coming in that wasnt necessarily reflective of the attitudes, values, and beliefs of parents, she told me. Bachmann delayed her plans to return to tax law. She wanted to focus on defeating the Profile. She became involved in a group called the Maple River Education Coalition, organized by Quist and others. What was really impressive about Michele was that she absolutely threw herself into researching this stuff, said activist Karen Effrem. She spent hundreds if not thousands of hours reading the federal laws, and all of these different contracts, and the standards themselves. Bachmann and members of Maple River organized a kind of road show. Beginning in December 1998, she criss-crossed Minnesota at her own expense, traveling up to three times a week, urging parents to reject the Profile. Her shtick was part Phil Donahue, part Carrie Nation. I would go into a gymnasium, Bachmann said, and by the time the two hours were up, people whod known nothing about the Profile were ready to grab a pitchfork and say, Not with my kid you dont! Audiences loved it. It was a very positive reaction, Minnesota state senator Dave Thompson said. Shes got a lot of charisma, a lot of personality, and shes very passionate. Bachmann caught the eye of a local GOP official, who suggested in 1999 that she run for the Stillwater school board. That contest is the only election shes ever lost. In April 2000, as the fight to overturn the Profile of Learning continued, Bachmann attended her local nominating convention for state senate. The incumbent, moderate Republican Gary Laidig, had 28 years experience. But he was increasingly out of step with the conservative families pouring into the St. Paul suburbs. As the convention began, Bachmann conversed with her fellow activists. Laidig had to go, they said. Someone suggested Bachmann run against him. She didnt know what to do. She was wearing jeans and tennis shoes and a sweatshirt with a hole in it. Shed had no business leaving the house that morning, she said. But Bachmann went on stage and delivered a five minute speech on freedom. Then she sat down. Im sitting there, and I had to be neutral, former Minnesota state GOP chairman Ron Eibensteiner told me in 2009. But Im thinking to myself, boy, would I love to have her run. Laidig gave a speech, and the convention took a vote. Bachmann won a supermajority on the first ballot. Shocked, Laidig decided to challenge her in a primary. Bachmann won handily. It was no mystery why. She tells it like it is, Minnesota GOP state chair Tony Sutton told me two years ago. She doesnt pull any punches. Thats why she has such a strong following. Bachmann won the state senate seat in November 2000. The question was how long shed be able to keep the office. Redistricting forced her to run against a 10-year Democratic incumbent, Jane Krentz, in 2002. A committee chairman, Krentz had the support of environmental and womens groups. The Democrats who controlled the state senate had created the new district with her in mind. During the campaign, Bachmann stressed the Profile of Learning and drew contrasts between her conservatism and Krentzs liberalism. Bachmann won again, 54 percent to Krentzs 46 percent. Minnesota repealed the Profile of Learning the following May. Bachmann went looking for a new cause. I see her as an activist who happens to be a legislator, said Tom Prichard of the Minnesota Family Council. She just pours herself 100 percent-plus into whatever shes engaged in. In late November 2003, when the Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled that same-sex couples had a legal right to marry, Bachmann proposed a state constitutional amendment limiting marriage to one man and one woman. People saw that something was changing in our country, Bachmann said. For the first time a state supreme court, in Massachusetts, had ordered its legislature to pass a law conforming with the views of those who sat on the court. Bachmanns amendment never passed the legislature. But it did make her more prominent and controversial. Local columnists ridiculed her. There were calls for a boycott of Stillwater businesses. A group of Democratic activists started the Dump Bachmann blog. The site became the place where one could find every last Bachmann speech, letter, and articleeven pictures of her car. Things got a little weird. In April 2005, when gay rights activists rallied in front of the state capitol in St. Paul, a local photographer captured Bachmann as she seemed to be peering through some bushes at the protesters. Bachmann and those with her said she was sitting down after standing for awhile in high heels. Around the same time, Bachmann filed a report with the Washington County Sheriffs Office in which she said that two women had accosted her in the ladies room of a local community center after a meeting on the same-sex marriage amendment. As the anti-Bachmann bloggers began to track her closely, she removed her home address and telephone number from the state senate directory. She requested security protection. By then, Bachmann was a candidate for federal office. In February 2005, her congressman, Republican Mark Kennedy, had announced he was running for U.S. Senate. Within days, Bachmann said shed run to replace him. The race for the Sixth Congressional District became one of the closest in the country. Bachmanns Democratic opponent was Patty Wetterling, a nationally recognized spokeswoman for missing and abused children. The two campaigns spent copious sums: $3 million for Wetterling, $2.7 million for Bachmann. The national campaign committees and affiliated groups spent much more. The Sixth District had been designed for Kennedy, whod held the seat since 2002. The population is wealthy (median income $68,195), young (median age 34), growing (up 17 percent between 2000 and 2007), and bright red. Republicans have won the district handily in the last two presidential elections. A McCain-Palin rally in Blaine in September 2008 drew an estimated 13,000 people. The race was Bachmanns to lose. And she didnt lose. Despite a last-minute surge for the Democrat when the Mark Foley scandal broke in September 2006, Bachmann defeated Wetterling 50 percent to 42 percent. She was one of only 13 Republican freshmen elected in 2006. Hers was the smallest freshman GOP class since the House expanded to 435 members in 1911. There was no way that shed get lost in the crowd. "Coming from the outside, my view was that Congress was made up of boozing, skirt-chasing slackers, Bachmann told me. That wasnt what she found, for the most part. A freshman congressman, especially one in the minority, faces a choice. She can be an inside player and keep a low profile while building coalitions and working on legislation. Or she can play outside and use her office as a platform to advocate for her party and ideas. Bachmann chose the latter course. Representative Steve King of Iowa, a Bachmann ally, remembers when he first noticed the lady from Still-water. King, then in his third term, was in charge of scheduling after-hours speeches one night in early 2007. Bachmann accepted his invitation to speak to the C-SPAN cameras from the House floor. There was one potential hitch: When King told her what the leadership wanted her to talk about, Bachmann said she didnt know anything about it. And I said, Well, that really doesnt matter here, King joked last week. And I gave her a sheet of paper with a few sentences on it. When she came back in about 15 minutes, she had become an expert. She streamed it off the top of her head with extreme clarity. Heres someone whos a quick study and extremely intelligent, King thought. In the summer of 2008, when gas was $4 a gallon, then-minority leader John Boehner led a group of 10 House freshmen to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Bachmann was among them. At the end of the trip the group had dinner in Fairbanks with Alaskas governor, Sarah Palin. It was wonderful to be able to meet her before all of the media attention and just get to know her on that basis, Bachmann said. So we had a wonderful meeting with her, and then I met her again when she came to Minnesota as a vice presidential candidate at the convention. Palin, who campaigned for Bachmann in 2010, remains a friend. The two women are compared constantly. Both have five children, both are Christians, both were drawn into politics through their childrens education, and both are Republicans whom Democrats love to hate. But there are also some differences. Whereas Palin makes emotional and cultural appeals to her supporters, Bachmann formulates an argument. She talks like a litigating attorney, and her speeches, op-eds, and interviews are littered with references to books and articles. Not all of her references are conservative. During our recent interview, Bachmann cited Lawrence Wrights history of al Qaeda, The Looming Tower (I love that book!), to illustrate a point about the rise of radical Islam. What unites Bachmann and Palin, above all, is the contempt with which they are treated by liberals. Im just mocked and marginalized, Sarah Palin is mocked and marginalized, Bachmann told me. If you are unashamed and vocal about your position as a conservative, thats what happens. Thats what happened to Reagan, thats what happened to Newt Gingrich, thats what happens to anyone whos not afraid to be a conservative. Its part of the job. The closest Bachmann has come to marginalizationand defeatwas on October 17, 2008, when she appeared on Hardball with Chris Matthews as a surrogate for the McCain-Palin campaign. The topic was Barack Obamas associations with ex-Weatherman Bill Ayers and Reverend Jeremiah Wright. In the course of the interview, Bachmann said she was very concerned that Obama may have anti-American views. Then, after minutes of baiting by Matthews, Bachmann said, I wish the American media would take a great look at the views of people in Congress and find out, are they pro-America or anti-America? One immediately sensed that Bachmann was in trouble. Her DFL opponent in 2008, former Blaine mayor Elwyn Tinklenberg, received $1.5 million in donations after the Hardball interview went viral on liberal websites. The Democrats unloaded more than $1 million in television ads in Bachmanns district. The influx of money and energy worried Minnesota Republicans. Youre always concerned when a bunch of money comes from out of state, Tony Sutton said. Bachmann barely survived. She beat Tinklenberg 46 percent to 43 percent, running seven points behind McCain. The Hardball incident was a classic example of the risks inherent in the outside game. The more prominent you are as a political figure, the more likely you are to make gaffes or statements that offend the medias sensibilities. Even Bachmanns greatest fans would admit that sometimes her mouth runs ahead of her internal censor. Shes said that Iran had a secret plan to partition Iraq. Shes used Michael Barones phrase gangster government to describe the Obama administration. She gave a speech where she said that, under the Democrats health care reforms, if you are a grandmother with Parkinsons or a child with cerebral palsy, watch out. She gave another speech where she said, What we have to today is make a covenant, slit our wrists, be blood brothers so the Democrats plans do not pass Congress. More recently, in an interview on Fox News Sunday, she quoted a Libyan official who falsely claimed that NATO airstrikes had killed 30,000 civilians in his country. None of these statements, suffice it to say, helps Bachmann expand her political base. But they are not necessarily a major impediment to the GOP nomination. Even when she goes over the top, the Minnesota congresswoman is eerily in tune with the grassroots. And the reason shes so well situated is simple: Michele Bachmann was Tea Party before Tea Party was cool. In 2009, soon after he came into office, President Obama went to Capitol Hill to meet with the House Republican conference. The session was closed to the press. Obama tried to convince Republicans to support his $1 trillion stimulus bill. Bachmann sat there skeptical. The president took only a few questions. Bachmann was startled by one of his answers. He said that he would prefer to pass his agenda and be a one-term president rather than not pass his agenda and have two terms, she told me. Which means he is committed to his ideology. The stimulus passed without a single Republican vote. That was one of our finest hours, Bachmann said. What happened next is well documented: a large, spontaneous uprising against government bailouts, debt, taxes, and Obamacare. The Tea Party was beginning. The movement was populated with people like Michele Bachmann. They see that Obama just seems to be completely clueless, Bachmann said. And everything hes done has turned to dust. He has the opposite of a Midas Touch. What no one anticipated was a revolution in the character of the conservative movement. Social and economic conservatives had been distinct groups within the Republican party for decades. They were often at odds. But the Tea Party fused economic and social conservatism in a novel way. Most Tea Partiers focus on the looming insolvency of the United States, but they also hold traditional positions on social issues. The kind of normative politics thats long existed in the social conservative movement, where voters take their positions from a fixed moral code, is now being applied to government spending and taxation. You cannot separate the fiscal issues from the moral issues, said Richard Land, president of the Southern Baptist Conventions Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission. The fight over health care is important to conservatives for this reason: How America provides health insurance isnt only a question of finance. To the extent that health care law affects how one lives, and determines which behaviors government legitimizes through subsidy, it too is a question of morality. And when the Tea Party arrived at the crossroads of economic and social conservatism, Michele Bachmann was there waiting. On the last Thursday of October 2009, the House Democrats unveiled their health care bill. The House Republicans met to discuss it. The message from leadership was that the bill was going to pass. There was nothing Republicans could do to stop it. Several members stood up and said the GOP couldnt simply accept defeat. Yet the meeting adjourned without resolution. Most congressmen left for the weekend. Rep. Steve King had been out pheasant hunting the week before with decorated war hero Colonel Bud Day. Theyd talked about health care. Day urged King to call a rally outside the Capitol building. Jam the Capitol, Day said. Surround it. If you do that, he went on, the Democrats wont be able to pass the bill. King related this conversation to Bachmann as they walked out of the Capitol after the meeting. Bachmann looked at King and asked, Can we do that? King said he couldnt see why not. Lets do it, Bachmann said. We spent the weekend putting that together, King explained, sending out emails and making phone calls and getting the talk radio people to light it up. The rally was held the following Thursday, November 5. Thousands of Tea Partiers showed up. Thats when it was real clear, King said, that Michele Bachmann had the instincts, charisma, and ability to move people. Bachmanns activism had found a new purpose: stopping the president. The contest over Barack Obamas policies was the Profile of Learning controversy writ large. King and Bachmann organized another rally for March 20, 2010, when Congress passed Obamacare. This was the moment Bachmann began thinking of running for president. I knew that whoever our nominee is, they have to be committed to the repeal of Obamacare, she said. Because that is the foundation stone that will ultimately give us socialized medicine. The repeal of any law is difficult; the repeal of Obamacare requires the courage to fight the status quo in both parties. Michele and Marcus discussed a possible presidential bid. Their youngest child would be off to college after the spring of 2011. And Bachmann continued to be disappointed in the GOP message. I felt that we could do better to reflect the pulse of the people, she said. Why not take this opportunity? Obama was looking more and more like Jimmy Carter. Michele remembered standing in her kitchen way back in 1979, fixated on the televised images of the Ayatollah Khomeini being welcomed into Tehran. The lack of American leadership then was not so unlike whats happening in the Middle East today. As bad as the economy is, she said, my concerns are the greatest on the foreign policy front. Bachmann supported the war in Iraq and wants to finish the job in Afghanistan. But she opposes Obamas action in Libya. Not only did he take his eyes off the real issue in the room, which is Iran with a nuclear weapon, hes created an even worse problem in Libya, she said. She also dislikes the presidents energy policy. Weve got so much, she said. And here youve got Denmark trying to claim ownership of territory in the oil-rich Arctic. Denmark? She waved her hand dismissively. Get out of here, you pipsqueak! This is ours! We should be drilling everywhere for oil, and natural gas, and shale, and all of it. Do every bit of it. The extent of Bachmanns disagreements with the president propelled her nascent candidacy. She saw a field divided between establishment types lacking a connection to the Tea Party and gadflies without much potential. And all of them were men. The departure of Mike Huckabee from the race cleared the way for Bachmann in her native Iowa. Many of Huckabees former staff joined her team. Bachmann was encouraged by the response to hints she might run for president. Momentum was building. It would soon be time to make an announcement. A talented politician uses television appearances to make news. When Bachmann walked onstage at the CNN debate in Goffstown on June 13, she had a plan. The stage was made of shiny metal, and surrounded by huge electronic screens filled with bright and endlessly changing graphics. The moderator, John King, asked each candidate to deliver a short introduction. Then the questions began. The first topic was economics. What would each candidate do to create jobs and growth? Herman Cain answered first. Then Rick Santorum, then Tim Pawlenty, then Mitt Romney, then Newt Gingrich. Finally it was Bachmanns turn. Before I fully answer that, she said, I just want to make an announcement here for you, John, on CNN tonight. Her eyes lit up. I filed today my paperwork to seek the office of the presidency of the United States, she said. And Ill very soon be making my formal announcement. So I wanted you to be the first to know. Applause broke out. Bachmann beamed. The other candidates smiled nervously. And grassroots conservatives across America understood: The queen of the Tea Party had arrived. Matthew Continetti is opinion editor of The Weekly Standard and author, most recently, of The Persecution of Sarah Palin.
The presidential campaign of Michele Bachmann
Jul 4, 2011, Vol. 16, No. 40 By MATTHEW CONTINETTI
One doubts the writer knows anything of truth.
The RINO Bachmann hypocritically dispatched
her GOP-killer Rollins to SMEAR Gov. Palin.
And in almost a month since then, RINO Bachmann
has NOT given a public apology or dismissed Rollins.
michele bachmann is NOT “queen of the TEA Party” except by self-proclamation. It is position she coveted and tried to capture, but she never cut it. This is rino, mccain-loving kristol’s mag. Don’t get too happy just yet.
The media is so obvious, so pathetic in its attempt to write all things but Sarah. Sad!
“Palin, who campaigned for Bachmann in 2010”
is WHY the TEA Party supported her. Crap like this ticks me off bigtime and does not endear bachmann to me in any way shape or form..
Little experience compared to who?
Once again you use a photo with the McCain Palin signs in the background to somehow tie Bachmann to RINO mitt.
Are you brain damaged or something?
Oh and Palin is the undisputed leader (don’t like “queen” because of the monarchy stuff) of the tea party.
Unfortunately Sarah Palin isn’t in the race.
And yet Bachman continues to refuse to criticize RomneyCare during multiple opportunties - can’t do it if she is ‘slotted” to be Mittens’ VP.
If any GOP candidate cannot criticize Romneycare, they can’t criticize Ozerocare.
And a history of working with Tokyo Rove to garner campaign financing is another dagger in MB’s resume.
MB is just another GOP elitist....NO THANKS!!!!!
Too bad that she only has you as her face.
She is doomed because of you.
Romneycare is a problem for one state. I don’t care what Mass. does.
Yet.
Sarah is my top choice, followed by Jim DeMint (also not in the race), then Michele Bachmann, and Herman Cain. We'll see how it plays out over the next year.
C’mon, cc. There is no Palin name on those signs. Those signs are from when mitt was campaigning for the VP slot for hisself and before Palin was ever on the scene. EVERYBODY thought mitt was gonna be the VP pick then.
In addition to Romney's fake polls, fake badges,
fake endorsements, fake fake fake taxes called "fees",
Milt Romney and Bill Hudak
are now linked to the creation
of several fake 'Tea Party's, including one
which attacked Gov. Palin from Texas in June (see post 11).
There is little doubt the other Faux-Romney-TeaParties
will adopt RINOs and ObamaBOTs.
Recognize them by THEIR POSITIONS.
If you cannot see the LOVE IN HER EYES for Romney
then it is YOU who ought get medical attention. Run.
I’d like to see both Palin and DeMint in the race but I don’t think they can afford to screw around for much longer.
I hate these early starts but the train is picking up steam in a hurry with the beltway crowd trying to frontload the race with RINO governors. In fact I think the early start is an intentional aid to the chosen RINOs who are well funded for outlasting the competition.
Various RINOs and their Fellow Travelers make cracks, obvious or veiled, about the Tea Party. Try to win without them!
Maybe you should start a Rumor that she had an affair with Romney. After all if you’re going to behave exactly like a leftist Palin hater toward Bachmann, there’s no reason you should hold back.
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