Michele Bachmann

American politician
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Also known as: Michele Marie Amble
Quick Facts
Née:
Michele Marie Amble
Born:
April 6, 1956, Waterloo, Iowa, U.S. (age 68)
Also Known As:
Michele Marie Amble
Title / Office:
House of Representatives (2007-2015), United States
Political Affiliation:
Republican Party
Tea Party movement

Michele Bachmann (born April 6, 1956, Waterloo, Iowa, U.S.) is an American politician who served as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives (2007–15). She sought the Republican nomination for president in 2012.

Michele Amble spent her young childhood in Iowa, but as an adolescent she moved with her family to the northern suburbs of Minneapolis, Minnesota. Shortly thereafter her parents divorced, and she and her siblings were raised by their mother. Amble attended Winona State University in Minnesota (B.A., 1978), where she studied political science and English. While in college she volunteered for Jimmy Carter’s 1976 presidential campaign. After Carter’s election, however, she became disenchanted with the Democratic Party, in part because of her evolving opposition to abortion. Several months after graduation, she married classmate Marcus Bachmann.

In 1986 Michele Bachmann received a J.D. from Oral Roberts University in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and two years later she earned a postdoctoral degree in tax law from the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. For five years she worked as a tax litigation attorney for the U.S. Treasury Department—first in Washington, D.C., and then in St. Paul, Minnesota—before leaving in 1993 to focus on her family. (In addition to raising their five biological children, the Bachmanns took in more than 20 foster children.) That same year she helped establish a charter school in Stillwater, Minnesota, where her family had settled, and she briefly served on its board of directors.

Bachmann turned her attention to politics in 2000 with a campaign for the Minnesota Senate. After upsetting a longtime incumbent in the Republican primary, she won the general election. As a state senator, Bachmann advocated for tax reform, and she sharply denounced state-mandated educational standards as inadequate. She became better known, however, for championing socially conservative positions that were grounded in her Christian faith. While her efforts to ban same-sex marriage in Minnesota proved fruitless, she led a successful initiative to provide grants to organizations that encouraged pregnant women to carry to term by offering them free counseling and other resources.

In 2006 Bachmann was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, becoming the first Republican woman to represent Minnesota in Congress. Two years later she made national headlines when she insinuated on a television talk show that some members of Congress, including presidential candidate Barack Obama, might have “anti-American views.” Although she subsequently apologized for her comments, weeks later she was reelected to her seat by a narrower margin than had been expected. At the same time, her outspoken dedication to conservative principles, such as a belief in limited government, won her the favour of the burgeoning Tea Party movement. In 2010, prior to her election to a third term, she founded the House Tea Party Caucus, attracting more than 50 Republican members of the House, and the following year she provided a televised response to the State of the Union on behalf of the movement. In June 2011 Bachmann announced that she was running for president. Two months later she won the Republican straw poll in Ames, Iowa. However, her campaign subsequently struggled, and on January 3, 2012, she finished in sixth place in the Iowa caucuses. The next day, Bachmann suspended her campaign.

During Obama’s presidency, the telegenic Bachmann made frequent media appearances that helped burnish her conservative credentials, and she was highly sought for speaking engagements, particularly for conservative organizations and candidates seeking to benefit from her prodigious fund-raising capabilities. Because of her high profile and fierce partisanship, however, she also proved to be a polarizing figure, as critics on the left called attention to her minimal legislative record and her tendency toward hyperbole and inaccuracy in her public statements. In 2013 Bachmann announced that she would not seek a fifth term in the House of Representatives, and she left office in 2015.

Bachmann remained active in politics, however. In 2016 she served on the evangelical advisory committee to Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, and, after he won the election, she continued to be a vocal supporter. In 2017 Bachmann was among a group of evangelicals who traveled to Egypt to meet with Pres. Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. Their talks focused on the persecution of Egyptian Christians. Core of Conviction (2011) was Bachmann’s autobiography.

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John M. Cunningham