Luxury Coach OutletRepresentative
Michele Bachmann used Monday night’s CNN-WMUR debate among GOP
presidential hopefuls as an unconventional venue to make it official:
she’s running for President.
“I just want to make an announcement here for you, John, on CNN
tonight,” Bachmann told the debate’s moderator, John King. “I filed
today my paperwork to seek the office of the presidency of the United
States today, and I’ll very soon be making my formal announcement. So I
wanted you to be the first to know.
”
Her statement was followed, minutes later, by an e-mailed press
release, making it official that Bachmann will not seek re-election to
Congress, but instead aspires to the highest office in the land. “Our
country needs a leader who understands the hardships that people across
America have been facing over the past few years and who will do what
it takes to renew the American dream. We must become a strong and proud
America again, and I see clearly a better path to a brighter future,”
she said in the statement.
Nike Air Max “For these reasons, earlier this evening I
instructed my team to file the necessary paperwork to allow me to seek the office of President of the United States.”
(More on TIME.com: See a recap of the GOP presidential debate.)
nike dunk shoesBachmann had
pledged to make her decision in Iowa — and her formal announcement will
likely still be there — but in announcing it at the debate, she
captured headlines and buzz. In many ways, the Minnesota Congresswoman
stole the show. As the only woman on the same New Hampshire stage where
in 2008 then Senator Barack Obama quipped condescendingly to Hillary
Clinton, “You’re likable enough,” Bachmann outcharmed her male rivals.
She slapped Newt Gingrich on the wrist playfully when he said he
preferred American Idol over Dancing with the Stars (a subtle dig at
Sarah Palin?), with a cackling laugh that sounded eerily like
Clinton’s. She gushed when asked to choose between Elvis and Johnny
Cash, and finally said, “Both.” And she underlined her biography,
mentioning her 30-plus-year marriage, five biological children and 23
foster kids three times.
She smartly threw Obama’s words back at him on the debt ceiling, saying
someone “far more eloquent than I” had once made the case to vote
against it. Obama voted against raising the debt ceiling as a Senator
in 2006 — a vote he says he now regrets. She spoke convincingly of her
impassioned pleas to the House GOP conference and then Treasury
Secretary Hank Paulson to block TARP in 2008. She spoke forcefully of
her pro-life bona fides. And she showed surprising foreign policy chops
as the newest member of the House Intelligence Committee in
articulating her opposition to U.S. action in Libya. “That sound you
hear is millions of jaws hitting the ground by Bachmann’s stellar
answer on Libya,” tweeted RedState.com’s Erick Erickson. “She just did
very well with that.” Less than an hour into the debate, “Bachman”
[sic] was trending on Twitter.
(More on TIME.com: In GOP New Hampshire Debate, Bachmann Provides
Fireworks as Romney Escapes Unscathed)
Bachmann benefitted from low expectations. “She was as good in this
debate as she was awful in her alternative response to the State of the
Union address,” says Larry Sabato, a presidential scholar at the
University of Virginia. “I can see why she might do better than
expected in Iowa and beyond.” And she showed that she is, actually,
quite media savvy. She didn’t make the announcement of her candidacy in
her opening remarks, as that was precious time she could use on her
biography, instead waiting for her first question on a proposed repeal
of financial regulation to do it. She was poised and relaxed. She even
impressed some Democrats.
Coach Colettle Collections“[Former
Massachusetts governor Mitt] Romney’s polish was perhaps to be
expected,” tweeted Washington Post liberal blogger Ezra Klein. “But
Bachmann is much newer to politics than much of the field. Her ease is
impressive.”
Bachmann used the debate to speak directly to the audience at home. She
was one of the few candidates who looked at the camera, often
addressing it rather than the audience in front of her. And her big
announcement wasn’t her only proclamation of the night. “I want to make
a promise to everyone watching tonight,” she said, underlining the fact
that she was the first congressional member to introduce a bill to
repeal Obamacare. “As President of the United States, I will not rest
until I repeal Obamacare. It’s a promise. Take it to the bank; cash the
check. I’ll make sure that that happens.”
And on answering a question about the Tea Party, she added a direct
plea to all Republicans: “We need every one of us in the three-legged
stool. We need the peace-through-strength Republicans; we need the
fiscal conservatives; we need the social conservatives. We need
everybody to come together, because we’re going to win. Just make no
mistake about it. I want to announce tonight, President Obama is a
one-term President!” she yelled over cheers and applause. “We
’ll win!”
A strong Bachmann candidacy could spell trouble for former Minnesota
governor Tim Pawlenty, who is betting on Iowa. Bachmann, with her 23
foster kids, has a natural appeal to the Hawkeye State’s powerful
home-schooler and Evangelical voting blocs. Her ascendancy could also
spell trouble for Sarah Palin, if the former Alaska governor is indeed
thinking of running. The two women would compete to appeal to similar
voters and donors.
(More on TIME.com: Pawlenty’s Poor Debate Showing Risks Donor Flight)
Nike Air Max 1The
firebrand Bachmann — who once labeled AmeriCorps a dangerous example of
Big Government, rather than a volunteer program; accused Obama of
spending $200 million on a trip to India by bringing 2,000 staff
members and 34 warships with him — a charge the Pentagon labeled
“comical”; and accused the Census Bureau of spying on Americans by
asking for too much information — was toned down during the debate. The
only hint at her Tea Party roots came when she called for the abolition
of the Environmental Protection Agency, which she said should be
renamed “the job-killing organization of America.”
Of course, Bachmann remains relatively untested. “Media is going to
hunt down and check out all 23 foster kids if she wins Iowa,” tweeted
GOP strategist Mike Murphy. She is just entering her third term, and
with only five years in Congress, she can’t employ the familiar GOP
criticism of Obama that he is too green and unqualified for the job.
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