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Bachmann wins US Iowa straw poll
13 August 2011 Last updated at 19:41 ET
Michelle Bachmann said Barack Obama would be ”a one-term president”
US Republican Congresswoman Michelle Bachmann has won a key pre-election campaign poll in the state of Iowa.
The Iowa straw poll held in Ames attracted about 17,000 voters and is considered the first big test of the 2012 presidential race.
Mrs Bachmann, an Iowa-born social conservative, narrowly beat her rival Ron Paul in the non-binding contest.
The vote was held on the same day Texas Governor Rick Perry announced his intention to run for the presidency.
It comes five months before the first official Iowa primaries in the race for the White House.
Mrs Bachmann took 4,823 of the 16,892 votes cast after the day-long political festival held on the campus of Iowa State University.
Runner-up Mr Paul took 4,671 votes and Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty finished in third place with 2,293.
Mr Pawlenty said his team had “a lot more work to do” but that he was not giving up hope.
“We are just beginning and I’m looking forward to a great campaign,” he said.
‘Rudderless’
The BBC’s Jonny Dymond in Iowa says Mrs Bachmann had campaigned hard in the state, firing up her supporters with her rhetoric and style.
Before the vote took place, Mrs Bachmann told her supporters: “We are going to make Barack Obama a one-term president.”
Leading Republican candidate Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney did not campaign in the contest but still received 567 votes while the newly declared Mr Perry, whose name was not on the ballot paper, still won 718 “write-in” votes.
Mr Perry had declared his candidacy earlier in the day at an event in South Carolina, telling his supporters: “I full-well believe I’m going to win.”
He slammed the Obama administration, saying the US “cannot afford four more years of this rudderless leadership”.
Texas Governor Rick Perry has announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination in the 2012 presidential race.
His announcement at a South Carolina event comes as fellow candidates face their first key test of grassroots party opinion in an Iowa straw poll.
The poll is not an official primary but winning is considered a major boost.
The front-runner in national opinion polls, ex-Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, is not actively taking part.
Mr Romney is expected to face a strong challenge from the conservative Mr Perry, who succeeded George W Bush as Texas governor.
The strong-jawed Mr Perry told voters in a conference call from Columbia, South Carolina, that he wanted to take on President Barack Obama next year.
“I full-well believe I’m going to win,” he said.
In a speech to supporters, he slammed the Obama administration, saying the US “cannot afford four more years of this rudderless leadership”.
The BBC’s Rajesh Mirchandani in Washington says Mr Perry is a fiscal conservative who has a track record of creating jobs and reducing the role of government.
He is religious with socially conservative views and could be the candidate to unite moderate and right-wing “Tea Party” Republicans, our correspondent adds.
Former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin has yet to announce whether she plans to run.
She was in Iowa on Friday but said the poll was “not always the tell-tale sign of what the electorate is feeling”.
“It’s who happens to show up and has the time and energy to spend that day for their particular candidate,” she said.
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