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Tim Pawlenty speaks at the Nashua Area Republican Committee meeting in Nashua, N.H., Thursday, April 14, 2011.
AP Photo/Cheryl Senter
By THOMAS BEAUMONT, Associated Press
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - Republican Tim Pawlenty, "T-Paw" to
his supporters, has increasingly tied himself to the new crop of
grass-roots activists in the 2012 presidential campaign.
So maybe it's time to call the former Minnesota governor
"Tea-Paw."
He says his aggressive outreach to tea party audiences is one
important part of a strategy to assemble the diverse network of
backers he needs to go national and win the GOP nomination. He's
not focusing solely on this emerging force in party politics, he
says, perhaps mindful not to alienate other Republican groups.
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"I'm not trying to introduce myself to the tea party. I'm
trying to introduce myself to the whole party ... because I'm not
known outside of Minnesota," Pawlenty told The Associated Press in
a telephone interview ahead of a Saturday appearance at a tea party
rally at the Iowa Statehouse.
He spoke at a similar rally in Boston
on Friday and to the movement's national summit in Phoenix in
February.
A little-known Midwesterner trying to break out of a crowded GOP
field, Pawlenty has said he needs to "win or do very well" in
Iowa's lead-off caucuses by attracting social conservatives and
pro-business conservatives as well as newly motivated tea party
followers. They make up a chunk of the state's electorate: A Des
Moines Register's Iowa Poll showed last fall that 39 percent of
Iowa voters said they supported the movement.
But Pawlenty faces stiff competition for the allegiance of
Iowa's tea partyers from Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann and
others.
"I don't see him as tea party. I didn't feel like he stood for what I stood for."
"There may be some folks who are running as candidates who are
more deeply engrained, or were engrained earlier, in the tea party
movement," Pawlenty said in the interview. "As tea party members
think about who they want not only to represent the conservative
coalition but to win the election, I think we're going to be the
candidate the presents the total package."
Pawlenty drew on the movement's critical eye about spending and
the reach of government during his speech to about 200 tea party
supporters who braved a harsh spring wind at the rally in Des
Moines.
"We're here today to send them this message: Don't tread on
me," Pawlenty said, borrowing the line from the flags common at
tea party rallies.
Cheers greeted Pawlenty when he hit on other familiar themes,
including opposition to raising the government's borrowing
authority and support for a balanced budget amendment.
"I think one of our basic messages is, the government's too
damn big," he said.
Kathy Carley, a Republican and tea party activist from Altoona,
said she found Pawlenty convincing.
"But I need to see him in another setting to see if he sounds
the same," Carley said. "He sounds like he has the right
principles."
Pawlenty has delivered similar messages in private meetings with
small groups of influential tea party supporters, as he did in
Altoona two weeks ago.
While Pawlenty has made overtures to tea party supporters, his
campaign strategists and Iowa advisers are establishment Republican
operatives. Conversely, Bachmann has lined up commitments from some
of the Iowa's most influential tea party leaders. If she does enter
the race, she's expected to pick state Sen. Kent Sorenson, a rising
star among the tea party activists, as her chief adviser in the
state.
Pawlenty might seem an odd fit as the choice of a movement that
sprung up a decade after he rose to GOP leadership in
Democratic-leaning Minnesota. He was not invited to his home
state's first tea party rally at the state Capitol in St. Paul two
years ago, and was a warm-up act last year behind Bachmann and
former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, also a tea party favorite.
But some Iowa tea partyers say Pawlenty's fiscal record in
Minnesota earns him credibility. He was governor during a time of
recurring deficits and battles with Democrats over his refusal to
consider tax increases. Pawlenty had some success in stemming the
growth of programs, but he also he resorted to temporary fixes and
enacted new fees that some anti-tax activists considered tax
increases.
"I think that the tea party is all about spending," said Brett
Rogers, a West Des Moines Republican and co-founder of the Iowa tea
party who is undecided about which contender to support heading
into 2012. "And Gov. Pawlenty has a great message on that."
Others see Pawlenty as a latecomer and are leaning toward White
House prospects with longer ties to the movement but narrower
overall appeal, such as Bachmann.
"I don't see him as tea party. I didn't feel like he stood for
what I stood for," said Jim Carley, Kathy Carley's husband.
Carley said he was dissatisfied with Pawlenty's answer during a
recent meeting with tea party leaders to a question about how to
repeal President Barack Obama's health care law. According to
Carley, Pawlenty said Obama and Congress could refuse to pay for
it. Carley wanted more.
"I'm not talking about defunding it. I'm talking about getting
rid of it," Carley said.
He's says he's not inclined to support Pawlenty.
Carley likes Bachmann, who has introduced a bill to repeal the
health law, and former Godfather's Pizza CEO Herman Cain.
(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Gallery
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Tim Pawlenty speaks at the Nashua Area Republican Committee meeting in Nashua, N.H., Thursday, April 14, 2011.
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