AMES,
IA & SANTA FE, NM (By
Brian Montopoli.
CBS) August 9, 2011 —
This might just be a
make-or-break week
for Rep. Michele
Bachmann in her bid
for the Republican
presidential
nomination.
Bachmann is the
subject of two major
profiles this week —
one in Newsweek and
the other in the New
Yorker —
that will
effectively
introduce the
candidate to
millions of voters
who have not yet
paid much attention
to the presidential
race.
The Newsweek profile
lauds the "petite and
prim" Minnesota
representative for her
"simple, black and white
distillations of complex
problems" and her "poise
and precision" in
transforming
"Washington's
dysfunctional gridlock
to understandable sound
bites." It also points
to charges of hypocrisy
against the Tea Party
favorite for lobbying
for earmarks and
stimulus funds despite
her anti-spending
posture, as well as CBS
News/New York Times
polling suggesting
Americans are souring on
the Tea Party.
More controversial
than anything in the
article itself was the
cover photograph that
accompanied it, pictured
above, which many say is
unflattering or worse.
One website has already
taken to running the
shot alongside a
photograph of Charles
Manson.
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American politics may have changed forever this summer when the conservative
members of Congress who are aligned with the Tea Party rejected dire warnings
that failure to raise the debt limit would rock global markets and cut off
Social Security payments to senior citizens.
No, it wouldn't, the Tea Party replied, everything would be just fine. "We
cannot go on scaring the American people," Michele Bachmann complained in July.
She urged "the truth" about the consequences of default.
Michele Bachman is a candidate for President of the United States. Bachman is
not qualified to be a dog catcher in Iowa. I am sure today she is hiding under a
rock some where in Iowa.
—
Jon Garrido |
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Former
Democrat Senator Russ Feingold of Wisconsin trying to convince senile Tea Cup
seniors to re - elect him. They did not! |
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Vice President Joe
Biden accused
the tea party
wing of the GOP of having “acted like terrorists” in the debt limit debate.
Former
administration official Steve Rattner said they were “strapped with dynamite”
and columnist Thomas Friedman referred to them as the “Hezbollah faction” of the
Republican Party. |
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The long New Yorker
piece, meanwhile,
delves into
Bachmann's
influences, and it
raises plenty of
potential headaches
for her campaign in
the process. In
addition to
documenting some of
Bachmann's
misstatements —
such as an
apparently
inaccurate telling
of her family
history, the story
discusses Bachmann's
links to evangelist
and theologian
Francis Schaeffer.
Schaeffer is
described as having
believed that
Christians are
mandated by the
Bible "to occupy all
secular institutions
until Christ
returns," and who
argued for the
violent overthrow of
the government
unless the Roe v.
Wade decision was
reversed.
According to the
article, Bachmann is
also a fan of a book
by creationist Nancy
Pearcey called
"Total Truth," which
argues that a
Biblical worldview
trumps secular
understanding of
truth: While
Christians may on
occasion be
"mistaken on some
point while
nonbelievers get it
right," Pearcey
writes, "the overall
systems of thought
constructed by
nonbelievers will be
false — for if the
system is not built
on Biblical truth,
then it will be
built on some other
ultimate principle.
Even individual
truths will be seen
through the
distorting lens of a
false world view."
As a state Senate
candidate, according
to the story,
Bachmann recommended
a book by J. Steven
Wilkins, who casts
slavery in a
positive light,
writing, "most
southerners strove
to treat their
slaves with respect
and provide them
with a sufficiency
of goods for a
comfortable, though
— by modern
standards — spare
existence." Wilkins
wrote that slavery
bred "mutual
respect" grounded in
Christianity, one
that existed in
place of any
"adversarial
relationship founded
upon racial
animosity."
Another writer,
David A. Noebel of
Summit Ministries,
was lauded by
Bachmann as having a
"wonderful and
worthwhile" message;
Noebel argued that
the Beatles were a
tool of the
communists used to
infiltrate the minds
of young Americans
and wrote a pamphlet
entitled, "The
Homosexual
Revolution: End Time
Abomination."
Bachmann, who has
played down her
controversial claims
about gay rights
during her
presidential
campaign, has in the
past called
homosexuality
"personal
enslavement" and
suggested that gay
rights activists
view "our children"
as "the prize." She
attended a church
service Sunday in
which the pastor
deemed homosexuality
"immoral" and
"unnatural."
Bachmann has been
spending virtually
all of her time in
recent days
traversing Iowa
ahead of Saturday's
straw poll. Thanks
to her strong
natural advantage in
the state — she was
born there, and her
socially
conservative message
resonates with the
Iowa GOP electorate,
a majority of which
is majority born
again or
evangelical, she is
the frontrunner to
win the straw poll.
That matters because
a victory is often
taken as a sign that
a campaign has the
organization
necessary to win the
Iowa caucuses, and
thus generates
donations, support
and positive media
coverage
despite the fact
straw poll wins have
not necessarily been
a strong predictor
of either the caucus
winner of the
eventual nominee.
With rival Tim
Pawlenty making a
hard charge for a
strong straw poll
finish, Bachmann's
campaign is trying
to manage
expectations. Her
campaign manager, Ed
Rollins, told
Politico, "Since we
were the last ones
to start a
presidential
campaign and have
been badly outspent,
we will be happy to
finish near or at
the top."
Bachmann, like
Pawlenty and other
candidates, will be
paying the entry fee
for supporters who
want to attend the
straw poll, and
offering them live
music and free food
in exchange for
their support.
(Among those
performing in
Bachmann's air
conditioned tent
will be country
superstar Randy
Travis.) The
Bachmann campaign is
so focused on the
straw poll that
Bachmann's Iowa
rallies have names
like the "'Join me
in Ames in 5 Days!'
Rally." On Thursday,
she'll attend the
Iowa State fair in
an attempt to win
over the hundreds of
thousands of Iowans
who flock to Des
Moines for the event
and may stop for the
straw poll in Ames
along the way.
It's worth noting
that Bachmann got a
bit of bad news on
Monday afternoon,
when word came that
Texas Governor Rick
Perry will likely
make his plans to
enter the
presidential race
known on Saturday
potentially
lessening Bachmann's
boost coming out of
the straw poll.
If all that's not
enough action this
week, Thursday
brings the first
Republican
presidential debate
to feature all the
top tier candidates
in the race:
Bachmann, Pawlenty,
Mitt Romney, Ron
Paul, Herman Cain,
Newt Gingrich, Rick
Santorum, and Jon
Huntsman are all
participating.
Bachmann shone in
her first debate
appearance, back in
June; anything less
than a repeat
performance could
slow her momentum
heading into the
straw poll. And in
light of her
position in the
polls and strong
performance last
time around, she'll
have a target on her
back.