WASHINGTON — Michele Bachmann was an “accidental politician,” and it all began on April Fool’s Day.
On April 1, 2000, the 2012 Republican White House hopeful — then a “middle American mom,” as she wrote in her recent memoir — made a fateful, spur-of-the moment decision that changed her life.
She decided not to attend a wedding with her family and instead joined fellow Minnesota activists at a local Republican Party nominating convention. They wanted to put up someone to challenge their state senator, a veteran Republican lawmaker who they thought was turning soft and needed the fear of God put into him.
Bachmann became the sacrificial lamb. To everyone’s amazement, she knocked him off and went on to win the seat.
That was her first political lesson, said Bachmann, now a three-term congresswoman from suburban Minneapolis.
“With the right kind of popular energy, ordinary people can make a difference,” she wrote in her book, “Core of Conviction.” “You can fight city hall you can take on the establishment and win.”
Now her presidential hopes appear similarly challenging: She’s fallen from the top of the Republican field over the summer to the second tier as voting looms next month.
The 55-year-old political dynamo boasts of her “titanium spine.” She’s rarely demurred from taking on the establishment, even her own party when she’s deemed it not confrontational enough or committed enough to core conservative dogma.
When the House GOP leadership backed the debt-ceiling deal with the White House last summer and pressured its caucus to fall in line, Bachmann was a no-show.
Named Miss Congeniality in high school, Bachmann lobs political grenades like a commando. She recently called some of the other Republicans in the presidential race “milquetoast opponents.” She doesn’t blink an eye when she says she’d deport all of the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants in the country — “in steps.”
Like Ben Franklin with his kite, Bachmann lofts a line into the ether and quickly draws electricity. Appearing on MSNBC’s “Hardball” in 2008, she said that President Obama “may have anti-American views,” then suggested that the news media should investigate the views of members of Congress “and find out, are they pro-America or anti-America?”
Sometimes her aim goes awry, as when she said that if she were in the White House, “we wouldn’t have an American Embassy in Iran.” There is no U.S. Embassy in Iran; it’s been closed since the 1979 hostage crisis.
Her religious faith has been her guide, she says. It’s why she became a lawyer, entered politics and chose her crusades.
Bachmann’s campaign didn’t respond to requests for an interview.
Her background
She grew up in Waterloo, Iowa. On the campaign trail, it’s asymbol of her values and a political touchstone.
“I believe we need a lot more Waterloo rather than Washington in the White House,” she said at a book signing last month in her hometown.
Her parents, both Democrats, divorced after moving the family to Minnesota. Earlier this year Bachmann told the Weekly Standard, a conservative political magazine, that she’d learned about poverty firsthand when her mother supported four children on her $4,800 annual salary as a bank teller.
Bachmann and her family reside in Stillwater, Minn. She and her husband, Marcus Bachmann, have raised five children and served as foster parents to 23 others. Marcus Bachmann is a therapist who runs a Christian counseling center with methods rooted in faith.
They were college sweethearts and Democrats who volunteered for Jimmy Carter’s 1976 presidential campaign. But they soon soured on the party of Truman and Kennedy and became religious conservatives. Her opposition to abortion and same-sex marriage has helped to define her political voice.
Her record
In Congress, she opposed the financial bailouts in 2008 and the Dodd-Frank law to regulate Wall Street and protect consumers. She’s also tried to eliminate provisions of the 2010 health care law.
Perhaps her most well-known piece of legislation, though, is the Light Bulb Freedom of Choice Act, which would repeal a 2007 mandate to phase out the less energy-efficient incandescent bulb. The bill hasn’t advanced past the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
Bachmann founded the House Tea Party Caucus last year, but she was unable to parlay that perch into a position in the House of Representatives leadership when the GOP took over last January.
The former federal tax attorney won the Iowa straw poll in August, the first test of candidate strength in the first state that will cast ballots in 2012, on Jan. 3.
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But the 22 percent support she attracted back in June had slipped to just 8 percent by October. It was 7 percent in mid-December.
“No candidate has so far gotten even one-third of electoral support in any poll,” said Mark Meckler, a co-founder of Tea Party Patriots, a large tea party group. “To me, that shows it’s anybody’s to win.”
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