Politics & Government
Bachmann Ends Presidential Campaign After Iowa Loss
Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann, who had vowed Tuesday night to press on in her quest for the GOP presidential nomination, this morning announced she is ending her campaign. The Iowa native finished a distant sixth in the Caucuses Tuesday.

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A prayerful Michele Bachmann ended her presidential campaign Wednesday morning, just hours after a crushing sixth-place finish in the Iowa Caucuses.
The Iowa native failed to win even one of the stateβs 99 counties,Β Β only 5 percent of the votes Tuesday.
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At a morning press conference at theΒ , Bachmann said she will notΒ Β her campaign but has no regrets.
"Last night the people of Iowa spoke with a clear voice; I have decided to stand aside. I believe we must rally around the party nominee," she said. "I will be forever grateful to this state and its people for launching us on this path."
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She did not take questions from the media after giving her speech this morning, and did not say which of the remaining GOP contenders she would support.
The Minnesota congresswoman had hoped to repeat Mike Huckabeeβs surprise performance four years ago when he gathered the support of Iowaβs influential evangelical Christians. Those voters went with former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, a Pittsburgh native, whose 11th-hour surge placed him only 8 votes behind former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.
Bachmann placed fifth in Black Hawk County, where she lived as a child.
Bachmannβs campaign began its downward spiral shortly afterΒ Β in August and Rick Perry joined the race. She was hurt by a series of misstatements, includingΒ proclaiming during one debateΒ that it was dangerous to give the vaccine for human papillomavirus (HPV) to girls before they are sexually active to prevent cervical cancer later in life.
Later, despite constant replaying of her remarks, she denied what she had said. β¨β¨Despite touting her Iowa roots, Bachmann failed to gain any real support in Iowa or the other early Republican voting states.
After Bachmannβs team resigned in New Hampshire, she all but dissolved her efforts to compete there.Β Β found her running fifth in New Hampshire. The most recent polls in South Carolina showed Bachmann running third or fourth over the past month.
Bachmann's withdrawal speech focused on how the enactment of President Barack Obama's health-care program, which she labeled Obamacare, galvanized her to seek the presidential nomination.
"I ran because I realized 2012 was our last chance, our only chance, to repeal Obamacare and Dodd-Frank," Bachmann said. "I ran because I believed that since day one Barack Obama's policies are a threat to the foundation of the republic. I ran to secure the promise of our childrenβs future."
The Tea Party leader said she will continue to fight for the issues that matter to her and her supporters: energy production, to protect life, traditional marriage, and religious liberty, among others.
βI will continue fighting to defeat the presidentβs agenda of socialism,β she said. βA politician I never have been nor ever hope to be.β
Find a video ofΒ Bachmann's withdrawal speech on YouTubeΒ courtesy of IowaPolitics.com.
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