Bachmann quits presidential race

Updated: 2012-01-05 05:21

(Xinhua)

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DES MOINES, Iowa - US Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann on Wednesday announced the end of her bid for the White House after coming in a distant sixth in Iowa caucuses.

Bachmann quits presidential race

Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann announces she is dropping out of the race in West Des Moines, Iowa Jan 4, 2012. US congresswoman Bachmann on Wednesday ended her campaign to become the 2012 Republican US presidential candidate and called on supporters to rally behind the party's eventual nominee. The announcement came a day after she received only 5 percent of the vote in the Iowa nominating caucuses, dealing what many saw as a fatal blow to her presidential ambitions. At left is her husband Marcus and at right is her mother Jean. [Photo/Agencies]

"Last night the people of Iowa spoke with a very clear voice and so I have decided to stand aside," the Minnesotan congresswoman said at a news conference in Des Moines, Iowa.

Bachmann won only five percent of the Republican vote in Iowa, the first state-wide party nominating contest, which ended in a virtual tie between former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and dark horse Rick Santorum, a former senator from Pennsylvania. 

Bachmann said she had "no regrets" whatsoever and that she would continue to fight for the causes she emphasized on the campaign trail.

The Tea Party favorite entered the race with strong momentum, winning the top spot in the Ames Straw poll in August. She was considered the most conservative candidate in the field and has been a consistent critic of President Barack Obama, blasting relentlessly on his healthcare insurance and financial regulation reforms.

Bachmann's momentum proved to be short-lived. Texas Governor Rick Perry, who jumped into the race late in August, soon took over the spotlight from her.

Iowa's result was also disappointing for Perry, who finished fifth with 10 percent of the vote. He said he would return to his home state to "reassess" his campaign.

William Galston, Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution, told Xinhua that Backmann's quit, possibly followed by Perry, will benefit Santorum most, as the three have been competing for almost the same category of Republican voters -- evangelicals, social conservatives, and blue-collars.

 

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