Sunday, August 14, 2011

Michelle Bachmann

Michelle Bachmann
Michelle Bachmann won the white vote in Iowa on Saturday in the first major test in the 2012 Republican presidential campaign.
Michelle Bachmann, a U.S. representative from Minnesota was narrowly defeated Ron Paul and led the rest of the field to capture the non-binding mock election, a measure of initial resistance to the state of the first competition of the 2012 Republican nomination.

Tim Pawlenty, a former governor of Minnesota was third, far behind, dealing a blow to his campaign issues.

"This is the first step towards taking the White House in 2012," Bachmann told a small group of supporters outside his campaign bus on the basis of the white vote. "Now it's all 50 states. "

In South Carolina, Mr. Perry has officially jumped into the race with a broadside against President Barack Obama.

"We can not afford four years of rudderless leadership," he said at the conference, the Conservatives, promising to reduce taxes, regulation and government intrusion into people's lives.

The election battle and launch a campaign for Rick Perry, becoming at least six months before the Iowa contest in the nomination, has promised to incorporate the Republican field vying for the Nomination Committee to challenge Obama, Democrat, in 2012.

Perry, a true social conservative, with the creation of large sheets of paper in Texas, should be reflected in the vault of the main candidates with the most important candidate Mitt Romney. Perry visits Iowa on Sunday.

In the study, Ms. Bachmann won 29 percent of the vote. Paul, a U.S. Representative from Texas was followed closely by 28 percent and Mr. Pawlenty had a 14 per cent.

Ms. Bachmann, the profit increases its power and cement the position of candidates on the upper floors. He raised his Iowa tests this summer with support from the conservative movement Tea Party social and fiscal conservative.

Mr. Pawlenty results raised doubts about its ability to continue to operate after spending $ 1 million in Iowa. It is stuck in a small number of one voice at regional and national levels.

Mr. Perry was sixth with 3.6 percent of the vote, but not on the ballot. It was more than Mr. Romney, the former Massachusetts governor who was on the ballot, but do not participate in elections. He finished seventh.

The six Republicans were paid to create curtains and speak of the matter is required to support dozens of voters gathered in a bus and the candidate stuck in tents, music and a free barbecue.

16 892 votes were the involvement of the second in the polls behind the deaths of nearly 24,000 in 1999, when then-Governor George W. Bush of Texas won the trip to the White House.

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