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Obama begins political counteroffensive this week

Published:Monday | August 15, 2011 | 12:00 AM
Obama

WASHINGTON (AP):

President Barack Obama launches a political counteroffensive this week, weighed down by withering support among some of his most ardent backers, a stunted economy and a daily bashing from the slew of Republicans campaigning for his job.

"We've still got a long way to go to get to where we need to be. We didn't get into this mess overnight, and it's going to take time to get out of it," the president told the country over the weekend, all but pleading for people to stick with him.

A deeply unsettled political landscape, with voters in a fiercely anti-incumbent mood, is framing the 2012 presidential race 15 months before Americans decide whether to give Obama a second term or hand power to the Republicans. Trying to ride out what seems to be an unrelenting storm of economic anxiety, people in the United States increasingly are voicing disgust with most all of the men and women, Obama included, they sent to Washington to govern them.

With his approval numbers sliding, the Democratic president will try to ease their worries and sustain his resurrected fighting spirit when he sets off Monday on a bus tour of Minnesota, Iowa and Illinois. The trip is timed to dilute the GOP buzz emanating from the Midwest after Republicans gathered in Iowa over the weekend for a first test of the party's White House candidates. The state holds the nation's first nominating test in the long road toward choosing Obama's opponent.

'One-term president'

"You have just sent a message that Barack Obama will be a one-term president," Minnesota Rep Michele Bachmann told elated supporters minutes after winning Saturday's Iowa straw poll, essentially a fund-raising event that also tests a candidate's organisational and financial strength. She spent heavily and travelled throughout the state where she was born, casting herself as the evangelical Christian voice of the deeply conservative small government, low-tax tea party wing of the party.

Bachmann pulled in 4,823 votes, or 29 percent of those cast, to 4,671, or 28 per cent, for Republican Ron Paul of Texas, the second-place finisher, and Democrats probably rejoiced that her ultraconservative voice gained strength among Republican contenders.

But at the same time, the contest to challenge Obama in November 2012 grew even more jumbled. While the voting was under way in Ames, Iowa, Republicans had to shift their gaze halfway across the country to South Carolina, where Texas Governor Rick Perry made a cleverly timed entrance into the race.

Like Bachmann and all the other candidates, he ravaged Obama. Perry said the president was presiding over an "economic disaster," in a declaration that stole some of Bachmann's political thunder and undercut the front-runner status of former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, who didn't compete in the Iowa test vote. Perry clearly casts a broad shadow across the Republican contest.