Political Hotsheet
By

Brian Montopoli /

CBS News/ January 4, 2012, 11:37 AM

Michele Bachmann drops out of GOP race

WEST DES MOINES, Iowa -- In the wake of a disappointing finish in Tuesday's Iowa caucuses, Rep. Michele Bachmann announced Wednesday that she is suspending her campaign for president.

"Last night, the people of Iowa spoke with a very clear voice, and so I have decided to stand aside," she said at a hastily-arranged news conference here.

"I have no regrets," she added. "None whatsoever. We never compromised our principles." She said she "looks forward to the next chapter in God's plan."

Bachmann did not endorse another candidate.

Bachmann, a third-term Minnesota congresswoman and the founder of the Tea Party caucus in the House, won the support of just five percent of Iowa Republican caucus-goers Tuesday. She finished in sixth place in the caucuses, which was essentially last place among the major contenders, since Jon Huntsman did not contest the state.

She also came in last in the hard-fought, three-way race among the candidates targeting Iowa social conservatives, finishing behind second-place finisher Rick Santorum and fifth-place Rick Perry. Perry, the Texas governor, said Tuesday he is returning to the Lone Star State to reassess his campaign, though he said Wednesday he plans to stay in the race.

Bachmann said Republicans should "rally around" the Republican nominee in order to defeat President Obama next November. Thanking her husband, her campaign staffers and her supporters, she vowed to "continue to be a strong voice" for her beliefs.

It's been a sad fall for Bachmann in Iowa, where she was born. She won the straw poll here in August, a finish that briefly earned her frontrunner status for the caucuses. But her support eroded steadily since the summer, and an aggressive retail campaign here that included a recent 99-county, ten-day bus tour did not improve her standing.

Bachmann had been running a cash-strapped campaign, and her poor finish here meant she would not emerge with the fundraising boost she needed to keep her effort alive through January. (Instead, Santorum will see that boost - and claim the mantle of the field's consensus conservative candidate.) Bachmann had been planning to travel directly to South Carolina after the caucuses, essentially forgoing the New Hampshire primary and its independent-minded and relatively unreligious voters.

During her campaign, Bachmann had stressed her desire to repeal the health care law, which she calls "the playground of left-wing social engineering." She said Wednesday that "it must be stopped." She also called for the repeal of the Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation passed in response to the 2008 financial crisis.

Bachmann cast herself as a citizen lawmaker in announcing her departure from the race, saying, "while a congresswoman by title, a politician I never have been, or will I ever hope to be."

"I didn't tell you what the polls said you wanted to hear," she said Wednesday.

Bachmann said she ran for president in part because President Obama's policies "based on socialism, are destructive to the very foundation of the Republic." She vowed to "continue to fight" to battle Mr. Obama's "agenda of socialism," invoking socialism multiple times in her remarks.

Bachmann had been the only woman in the GOP race, and there were questions about whether her gender hurt her among Iowa Republican voters. "There's a lot of people that would feel like a man is stronger," Jolene Beveridge said Monday at a Bachmann campaign event - though she added: "Times are changing - she seems pretty strong to me."

Still, there is no clear explanation for Bachmann's slide. One theory, popular among the reporters who followed Bachmann on a daily basis, is that her attempts to engage Iowa voters backfired. Bachmann's recent 99-county tour involved an average of ten events per day, a situation that forced the candidate to give a short stump speech, shake a few hands and move on to the next event quickly. The situation was even worse when Bachmann was running late; she would try to make up time throughout the day, which meant shortening already-tight stops and sometimes trying to engage voters while the music was still blaring from speakers overhead.

Bachmann also took heat for suggesting the HPV vaccine Gardisil caused mental retardation, and she committed a gaffe by suggesting that her hometown of Waterloo, Iowa was the home of John Wayne -- when it was actually the home of serial killer John Wayne Gacy.

By suspending her campaign - as opposed to fully ending it - Bachmann can still raise money and apply for federal matching funds that would help her settle possible campaign debts.

The Republican race is now shifting to New Hampshire, where polls suggest Mitt Romney, the narrow winner of Tuesday's caucuses, holds a commanding lead.

"She was a great candidate," Romney said in New Hampshire Wednesday. "We'll miss her."

Full CBS News coverage: Michele Bachmann

21 Photos

Michele Bachmann on the campaign trail

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
201 Comments Add a Comment
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JV1970 says:
by zenia5 January 6, 2012 9:08 AM EST
@JV1970....you are STILL just as disconnected from reality as YOUR candidates are. Take note: every candidate you have rallied behind and put on a pedestal has failed miserably. Do you see a trend here?
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JV1970 replies:
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I still have Rick Santorum, Rick Perry, and Newt Gingrich. They are all still in the race. Don't count them out yet.
zenia5 replies:
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Excuse me, JV, but I think they have already been "counted out"...but you hang on to those dreams.
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JV1970 says:
by deohgee January 4, 2012 7:50 PM EST
by JV1970 January 4, 2012 7:28 PM EST
Raptorsmasher I think you are going to get a very big letdown and disappointment and a terrible shock in November!


JV1970, do you even remember all the things you said about Palin, or are you REALLY that delusional? Now, you're starting all over? Please, take a look at yourself.
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JV1970 replies:
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deohgee I remember EXACTLY what I said about Palin and I still say it! I say the same thing about all of the candidates I support and I'm not delusional at all! There is a very good chance that one of the candidates that I support will be the GOP nominee and will go on to win the presidency. But whether or not one of my picks win or not, there will be a Republican sworn into the presidency next January! Barack Obama will be a one term president! If you don't think so YOU ARE THE ONE THAT'S DELUSIONAL!
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AngryOldWhiteGuy says:
Now she can go back to just being a State wide embarrassment from the Third District of Minnesota!
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hopetrumps says:
Give the Republicans credit for putting Bachmann at the bottom of the heap where she belongs!
But give them an "F" for putting Romney in first. He has no core, is a chameleon, turncoat and charlatan who would do his own mother in if it would get him ahead. As a moderate voter, I'd vote for a true conservative over him, at least they have beliefs they stick to.
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mr1ncredible says:
This article does a great job of ignoring Bachman's first place win in the straw poll last summer. That was made a really big deal! But I am no supporter of Bachman's. In fact, I found it was amusing that this article fails to mention Ron Paul's very strong 3rd place finish - especially considering how he finished at such a close second to Bachman in the same straw poll. Now THAT is embarrassing (especially for the establishment). GO PAUL GO!
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zenia5 replies:
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The only reason Bachmann took first place in the straw poll last summer was that she PAID every voter's entry fee, provided the best music, and the biggest food spread. She BOUGHT those votes. So, NO, it was not a "really big deal"....just politics as usual.
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solinsd2 says:
Now that Michelle has been in the spotlight it is a wonder how it is even possible she could win another term in Congress. She has got to be an embarrassment to the people of Minnesota.
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norcalruss says:
Michele Bachmann drops out of GOP race
++++++++++++++++++++
I guess the delusional nut case FINALLY saw the writing on the wall: The bible-thumpers, warmongers, racists bigots, and other right-wing extremists support Rich Santorumn, not her.
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sparkskid says:
Step aside, Michele...the GOP has wven more ridiculous candidates to vet before the big defeat. Right now, its a 3-way race between that jumpy little libertarian guy from Texas (that is just a whole lot smarter than the rest of us), that bigot from PA, and everybody's favorite, the stiff, phony guy that didnt get the nod last time and that all the tea partiers think is a RINO. Game, set, match!
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Norwayblonde says:
Perhaps had you bothered to make yourself available via e-mail instead of only allowing the people of your state to contact you you would have done better!
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dzaffina says:
at least she admits she a loser.6 more.
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