Posted on 06/16/2011 10:12:29 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
BACHMANNS OVERDRIVE. Coming off of a strong showing if not an outright victory in Monday nights first-in-the-nation presidential primary debate, Minnesota U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann is trying to parlay that momentum into the beginnings of a grassroots New Hampshire campaign.
She has been getting help for months now from long-time friend and radio talk show host Jeff Chidester, who will continue to give her advice and has been asked to take a stronger role, which we will talk about in the coming days, he says.
Now that she has officially become a candidate, three more Granite State activists have joined her team and Chidester says more are on the way.
Mattheu LeDuc is Bachmanns New Hampshire director of operations. He was a volunteer field operative for John McCains state campaign in 2008 and has worked in Massachusetts as an intern for former Gov. Paul Cellucci, then with Gov. Jane Swifts campaign, and later on Mitt Romneys transition team when Romney was elected governor.
In 2009 and 2010, LeDuc worked on current New Hampshire GOP Chairman Jack Kimballs campaign for governor.
Caroline Gigler is Bachmanns Southern New Hampshire field director. She was the Seacoast regional field coordinator for the New Hampshire Republican Partys Victory program during the 2010 elections.
Tom Lukacz ran the Kimball campaign for governor in 2010 and was a key member of his team when he ran successfully for the party chairmanship.
Chidester says that high-profile Granite Staters are ready to sign on as well. And he said the Bachmann debate viewing party at the Puritan Back Room in Manchester was packed.
Its thrilling, Chidester said of the debate. That was the Michele Bachmann Ive known for five years and it was great to see.
He said she has the potential to run a successful campaign in New Hampshire.
She has a lot of the same characteristics that we find important, and a lot of the same things we find in leaders that we can respect, he said.
WINNERS AND LOSERS. Now that a few days have passed and the national gurus have had their say on the debate, heres our New Hampshire-centric view of the first major event of the primary campaign.
While Bachmann gained the most traction from the debate by introducing herself to New Hampshire with comparatively decisive answers on fiscal, political and social issues, Romney was also a winner by not losing.
He entered the debate as the frontrunner by far; and nothing that occurred in the debate either by his own doing or by others changed that status.
He held his own. He made no gaffes. He defended his Massachusetts health care law exactly as he had been doing in the previous weeks.
Romney won mainly because no one else laid a glove on him. And no one really tried, which was surprising.
We didnt expect a bloodbath. We didnt expect the other candidates, far less well-known than Romney, to introduce themselves to New Hampshire and the nation in a negative way by bashing another contender.
But we expected more distinctions to be drawn. So, when Tim Pawlenty backed off, refusing to press Romney on Obamneycare after coining the phrase on Meet the Press the previous day, Romney won that round and Pawlenty lost it.
Thats really the only memorable Pawlenty moment, and it was a negative Pawlenty moment. Lucky for him, he has plenty of time to recover.
Bachmann, on the other hand, became the Minnesotan with momentum.
She articulated the Tea Partys goals well. She answered our question about same-sex marriage versus the 10th Amendment and states rights specifically, saying, that although she opposes same-sex marriage and would support a constitutional amendment to that effect, Im running for the presidency of the United States. And I dont see that its the role of a President to go into states and interfere with their state laws.
Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich comported themselves effectively, but each needed to stand out more in order to begin to gain traction in New Hampshire. Herman Cain was, as one activist put it to us, off his game, and Ron Paul was well Ron Paul, the libertarian conscience of the group.
It remains to be seen if Pauls showing helped him expand his base at all.
I fully expect Perry to jump in also. We need to get the best choices up there to avoid another ‘08.
I’m warming up to Bachmann as a viable Cain alternative if he can’t gain traction.
I’m lukewarm on Perry but would take him over Mittwitt.
That was pure excellence. Basically she's telling social conservatives that she's one of them, but letting rogue libertine states know that she ultimately won't stop them from their ridiculous ideas if they so choose. A good balance, IMHO.
Romney won mainly because no one else laid a glove on him. And no one really tried, which was surprising.
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I wonder why Bachmann didn’t go after Romneycare?
Romney isn’t a dumb guy, he can snow you with alot of crap and sound credible. I basically think they weren’t ready to debate him. You are going have to have your ducks in a row to punch thru all the policywonk garbage Romney will dish out if you go after him.
And someone really needs to.
If Bachmann can beat Romney in the first few primaries, she will rid us of him as a candidate - good for her!
B-B-Baby you ain’t seen nothin yet! (perfect campaign song, except that some liberal puke probably owns it and will sue)
Because she’s not really running for president?
She’ll have to pick someone named “Turner” as her running mate.
Palin didn’t seem to fear any backlash from Romney when she spoke this:
Speaking near Boston’s Bunker Hill, the site of a famous U.S. Revolutionary War battle, Palin said, “In my opinion, any mandate coming from government is not a good thing.
“Even on a state level and even a local level, mandates coming from a governing body, it’s tough for a lot of us independent Americans to accept, because we have great faith in the private sector and our own families, and our own businessmen and women making decisions for ourselves, not any level of government telling us what to do,’’ Palin told reporters.”
Bachmann’s Turnout Overdrive, you could say
My dream scenerio is Palin winning Iowa and Bachmann somehow knocking off Romney in New Hampshire.
Did you read the article? She was introducing herself and was trying to do so without getting negative on the field. Mittens will get his in time.
Palinophiles aren’t going to like the Michelle Surge, she’s stealing the support that rightfully belong to Sarah!
That was Algore’s campaign song and stump speech theme back in 2000.
RE: Palinophiles arent going to like the Michelle Surge, shes stealing the support that rightfully belong to Sarah!
The question is this — what is the cutoff date for Palinophiles to conclude that Sarah isn’t running?
Personally, I’d have to say end of August. If by end of August 2011, we don’t see Sarah throwing her hat in the ring, we can conclude that Michele Bachmann is the only woman in the field.
But how many BACHMANN (turner) OVERDRIVE references am I going to see this week?
Dang, I forgot Algore used it. So much for that. Of course Algore stole it from Reagan.
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