So much for Bachman for president
Michele Bachmann quits presidential race following poor showing in Iowa
Bachmann (Eric Gay/AP)
WEST DES MOINES, Iowa–Michele Bachmann announced her exit from the presidential race Wednesday morning following a sixth-place finish in the first-in-the-nation caucus state of Iowa.
“Last night, the people of Iowa spoke with a very clear voice. And so I have decided to stand aside,” the Republican representative from Minnesota told reporters during a morning media availability here at the Marriott hotel.
Despite Bachmann’s extensive, last-minute tour to visit all 99 of Iowa’s counties, her first place finish in the Aug. 13 straw poll, and the state being her place of birth, Iowa Republican caucus voters rejected Bachmann’s campaign, handing her 6,073 votes on caucus night–5 percent of the total votes cast in Tuesday night’s caucuses.
As recently as Tuesday evening, Bachmann was dismissing questions about whether a poor finish in Iowa would prompt her immediate departure from the race, saying her campaign’s travel tickets were already booked for South Carolina–her next major campaign stop after largely passing over New Hampshire, which holds its primary on Tuesday, Jan. 10.
But communications director Alice Stewart told reporters following the news conference that conversations began last night about whether to continue the campaign and the congresswoman asked for time to “sleep on it” and “pray about it.” Stewart said she was awoken early Wednesday morning with the news.
Stewart rejected the suggestion that campaign finance challenges factored into the congresswoman’s decision.
“She doesn’t see where she made mistakes,” Stewart said. “None of us, you know, see where there were mistakes made.” In response to question about how her campaign dropped from her high at the Ames Straw Poll, Stewart noted that there were fewer candidates in the race at that time.
The congresswoman has not yet discussed whether she will run for re-election in Minnesota, Stewart said.
Romney winner in Iowa caucus

Sixth-place finisher Michele Bachmann, meanwhile, scheduled a news conference for 11 a.m., ET, fueling speculation that she will withdraw from the race.
Santorum virtually tied Romney Tuesday in the nation’s first nominating contest, coming in second by only eight votes in what appears to be the closest-ever margin of victory in a Republican presidential contest, the state Republican Party said early Wednesday.
“Of course, people are going to ask us about the differences on our positions on issues and backgrounds and so forth,” Romney told CNN Wednesday morning. “But, really, if we talk about what the American people want to hear, it’s how we’re going to be different than President Obama when it comes to getting the economy going, preserving America’s security abroad and making sure we rein in the scale of the federal government. ”
The candidates’ next contest will be in New Hampshire on Tuesday.
Romney said he was “feeling terrific, because, as you know, we were well behind several weeks ago,” when polls suggested Newt Gingrich was in the lead in Iowa. “I don’t think many people gave us a shot of beating” Gingrich, Romney said. “We obviously won last night, although it was very, very close,. Obviously, Rick Santorum and Ron Paul also had big nights. We all came out of Iowa a lot stronger. ”
Ron Paul finished a close third, according to the state GOP.
“Game on!” Santorum tweeted. “”Thanks to all of you, we pulled off our #iowasurprise! Keep us going to NH, SC & beyond.”
The South Carolina Republican primary is scheduled for January 21.
Santorum’s website Wednesday automatically took visitors to a donation page celebrating the “Iowa Surprise” and saying Santorum proved “he is the only conservative who can beat Mitt Romney.”
Paul, meanwhile, told CNN his success in Iowa shows “the message of liberty is appealing to everybody across the board.”
In New Hampshire, he said, “I think we’re going to have some momentum and we’re going to continue to do what we’re doing. It’s a ‘live free or die’ state. They’re very freedom-oriented,and that message will spread there. And I’m confident we will do quite well.”
Despite a weak showing among voters in Iowa looking for a candidate they consider conservative, Romney told CNN he is confident that conservative voters will support him in New Hampshire.
Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who placed fifth in Iowa, said late Tuesday that he would return to his home state to consider whether his campaign would continue.
Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, had 30,015 votes. Santorum, a former U.S. senator from Pennsylvania and an upstart challenger who just weeks ago polled in the single digits, had 30,007, the state GOP said.
Each had roughly 25% of the vote in Iowa, the first state to vote in the 2012 presidential caucus and primary season. Paul, a U.S. representative from Texas, had 21%. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich was at 13%. Perry was at 10%, Bachmann — a Minnesota congresswoman — had 5%, and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman had 1%.
State GOP officials said certified results will be released in two weeks.
The closest previous margin of victory in a GOP presidential contest was 257 in 1936, when Alf Landon won the 1936 South Dakota primary. In 2008, Barack Obama earned the closest-ever margin in a U.S. presidential contest, defeating Hillary Clinton by seven votes in the Guam caucus.
Speaking to supporters in Des Moines early Wednesday, before final results were known, Romney framed the Iowa contest as a “great victory” for him, Santorum and Paul.
“All three of us will be campaigning very hard to restore the heart and soul of this nation,” Romney said.
Iowa caucus results
On Wednesday, Sen. John McCain plans to travel to New Hampshire to endorse Romney, a senior Republican source close to the senator said. McCain beat Romney to win the Republican presidential nomination in 2008.
Romney has long been a front-runner in Iowa and most national polls, though he also has been stuck at roughly the same percentage of support as a revolving cast of conservative challengers bounced up and down, with Santorum the latest to rise.
Santorum told CNN early Wednesday — before the final tally was announced — that he would turn his attention to New Hampshire, where Romney, who governed neighboring Massachusetts, has had a large lead in polls.
“We’re going to be on to New Hampshire. We’re going to work hard and compete there,” Santorum said. “I’m a little bit behind the curve in the sense that Gov. Romney has spent a lot of money and a lot of time up there, and has been running for six years. But we feel like we can go up there and compete.”
“We have had a fantastic showing for this cause and challenging people … and saying, you know, this challenge of, ‘Let’s go back to this real old-fashioned idea, this very dangerous idea: Let’s obey the Constitution,’” Paul said. “… We will go on, we will raise the money. I have no doubt about the supporters.”
Of the 25 pledged delegates at stake in Iowa, CNN estimates Romney, Santorum and Paul each won seven, with Gingrich and Perry winning two. The delegate number needed to clinch the nomination is 1,144.
The Iowa results typically are important because they give the top finishers the fuel they need, including fundraising, to keep their campaigns going. With Romney considered the runaway favorite in New Hampshire, some other candidates who continue past Iowa are expected to focus more on South Carolina, hoping to make a stand there.
Several candidates — Santorum, Gingrich, Perry and Bachmann — positioned themselves as conservative alternatives to Romney. As Gingrich’s popularity in Iowa fell amid withering attack ads in December, Santorum rose just in time for the caucuses.
Obama, who is not expected to face a major challenge for the Democratic nomination, spoke to caucus-goers in an interactive video-teleconference to Democratic caucus sites Tuesday night.
He touted the end of the war in Iraq, health care reform and making college more affordable as some of his achievements — a similar message to the “promises” campaign video rolled out this week.
“In some ways, I’m more optimistic now than I was when I first ran, because we’ve already seen change take place,” Obama said in the teleconference. “And part of what 2012 is about is reminding the American people how far we’ve traveled and the concrete effects that some of our work has had in terms of making sure people have health insurance and making sure our troops are coming home, or making sure people are able to go to college.
“Part of it is also framing this larger debate: What kind of country are we going to leave for our children and grandchildren?”
In addition to Perry, some other Republican candidates may now consider whether they’re in position to compete in the upcoming contests.
One issue to watch will be how many of their supporters latch onto the remaining non-Romney candidates, said CNN political contributor Ari Fleischer, a former White House press secretary.
“Mitt Romney doesn’t want anybody to drop out,” Fleischer said Tuesday, suggesting Romney would want to have any anti-Romney vote split as many ways as possible. “Rick Santorum wants everybody to drop out.”
Gingrich, whose popularity rose in Iowa late last year on the strength of his debate performances before the Iowa attack ads, said Tuesday night he would continue his campaign.
“I think that we are at the beginning of an extraordinarily important campaign,” Gingrich told his supporters in Des Moines. “The goal of the campaign has to be to replace Barack Obama, but there will be great debate in Republican Party before we are prepared to have a great debate with Barack Obama.”
Bachmann, who had hoped for better in Iowa, where she grew up and finished first in a GOP straw poll in the summer before dropping in the polls, also indicate her campaign would continue.
“There will be another occupant in the White House. Who knows, maybe even another Michele in the White House,” she told supporters Tuesday night.
Before Bachmann spoke Tuesday night, CNN chief political analyst Gloria Borger said Bachmann would have to do some “soul searching” about whether to continue her campaign.
“She’s not going to have the money to continue. She won the (GOP) straw poll in Ames in August … She made a big point that she was born in Iowa, that this was going to be her state,” Borger said.
Huntsman, a former U.S. ambassador to China, hasn’t been competing in Iowa, choosing instead to focus efforts on New Hampshire.
Romney was the GOP front-runner in several major Iowa polls last week, with Paul second and Santorum third.
The Iowa caucuses began at 7 p.m. Tuesday in 809 locations after months of pitches from GOP candidates vying for the chance to take on President Barack Obama in Novembe
U.S. warned on aircraft carrier by Iran

“The Islamic Republic of Iran will not repeat its warning,” said Maj. Gen. Ataollah Salehi, commander of Iran’s Army, according to the state-run news agency IRNA.
Salehi “said the country will not adopt any irrational move but it is ready to severely react against any threat,” the report added.
The commander spoke at the Port of Chabahar in southern Iran, as forces held a military parade the day after Iran ended naval drills in the region, IRNA reported.
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Iran was referring to the USS John C. Stennis, part of the U.S. Navy’s fleet in the region. It moved last week from the Persian Gulf into the North Arabian Sea, as part of what the Navy’s 5th Fleet called a pre-planned transit.
Iran said the ship’s movement during Iran’s naval exercises showed that the United States “understood” that Iran’s maneuvers were not “suicidal or aggressive,” but rather about Iran protecting its own “interests and power.”
But Western diplomats last week described the naval drills — which, according to Iranian officials, included test-firing missiles — as further evidence of Iran’s volatile behavior.
Iran’s naval exercises began in the strait and also included waters in the Sea of Oman and the Indian Ocean up to the Gulf of Aden, according to IRNA.
After Tuesday’s warning from Iran, a Pentagon spokesman issued a statement saying “deployment of U.S. military assets in the Persian Gulf region will continue as it has for decades.”
“These carrier strike group deployments are necessary to maintain the continuity and operational support to ongoing missions in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility,” George Little said.
The United States has had forces in the Persian Gulf since World War II. Its ships sail through the Persian Gulf frequently, many on their way to and from the 5th Fleet’s headquarters in Bahrain. The 5th Fleet’s area of responsibility covers about 2.5 million square miles, including the Persian Gulf, which the Navy also refers to as the Arabian Gulf; the Red Sea; the Gulf of Oman and parts of the Indian Ocean.
The dispute over the Stennis began last week. Tehran said an Iranian warplane identified a U.S. carrier patrolling the area of the drills. State-run media showed a picture of the vessel.
Iran’s state-run Press TV said Tuesday the images it showed last week were of the Stennis.
Tuesday’s events came amid growing tensions over the Strait of Hormuz, a critical shipping channel.
Iran last week threatened to block the strait if sanctions are imposed on its oil exports. France, Britain and Germany have proposed sanctions to punish Iran’s lack of cooperation on its nuclear program.
Cmdr. Amy Derrick Frost, spokeswoman for the 5th Fleet in Bahrain, responded at the time, “Anyone who threatens to disrupt freedom of navigation in an international strait is clearly outside the community of nations; any disruption will not be tolerated.”
In his statement Tuesday, Pentagon spokesman Little said the Navy “operates under international maritime conventions to maintain a constant state of high vigilance in order to ensure the continued, safe flow of maritime traffic in waterways critical to global commerce.
“Our transits of the Strait of Hormuz continue to be in compliance with international law, which guarantees our vessels the right of transit passage. We are committed to protecting maritime freedoms that are the basis for global prosperity; this is one of the main reasons our military forces operate in the region.”
The dispute has been pushing up oil prices. Nearly 17 million barrels of oil a day pass through the strait, according to the U.S. Energy Information Agency. “Flows through the Strait in 2011 were roughly 35% of all seaborne traded oil, or almost 20% of oil traded worldwide,” the agency says.
“No one in this government seeks confrontation over the Strait of Hormuz,” Little said. “It’s important to lower the temperature.”
But closing the strait would require means that likely are not available to Iran, said Jean-Paul Rodrigue, an expert in transport geography at Hofstra University. “At best, Iran can posture and potentially disrupt traffic for a short duration,” he said.
China and Japan are more dependent on Persian Gulf oil than the United States is, he said, and he added that any move to close the strait would be “suicidal” to the current regime.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland noted Tuesday that Iran is already under sanctions for its failure to cooperate on nuclear issues.
“Frankly, we see these threats from Tehran as just increasing evidence that the international pressure is beginning to bite there and that they are feeling increasingly isolated and they are trying to divert the attention of their own public from the difficulties inside Iran, including the economic difficulties as a result of the sanctions,” she said.
White House spokesman Jay Carney made similar remarks. “I think it reflects the fact that Iran is in a position of weakness. It’s the latest round of Iranian threats, and it’s confirmation that Tehran is under increasing pressure for its continued failures to live up to its international obligation,” he said. “Iran is isolated and is seeking to divert attention from its behavior and domestic problems. This is simply a measure of the impact that sanctions have been having on Iran and the broad international support for… putting pressure on Iran and isolating Iran because of its refusal to live up to its international obligations.”
CNN’s Josh Levs, Azadeh Ansari, Shirzad Bozorgmehr, Barbara Starr, Adam Levine, and Phil Gast contributed to this report.