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Michele Bachmann balks at Sarah Palin 'girl power'

Michele Bachmann says she's not a feminist. In an interview, the sole female GOP candidate for president doesn't talk about girl power the way Sarah Palin and Hilary Clinton have.

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Andy Dunawa/AP
Republican presidential candidate Rep. Michele Bachmann, (R) of Minn., speaks in Charleston, S.C., June 29, 2011.

By Kristen Powers

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She is clearly a trailblazer for women, throwing her hat into the highest ring in politics. But while became the first female presidential candidate of the 2012 campaign this week, she does not, interestingly enough, view herself as a feminist.

Unlike , who has brandished the feminist moniker and spoken of an 鈥渆merging conservative feminist identity,鈥 Bachmann told me in an interview Tuesday that she wouldn鈥檛 call herself a feminist鈥攊nstead, she simply described herself as 鈥減ro-woman and pro-man.鈥 When I pressed her on the matter, the Minnesota congresswoman said she sees herself as an 鈥渆mpowered American.鈥

Bachmann seemed loath to engage in the kind of girl-power rhetoric utilized by Palin and Hillary Clinton, who both invoked the perennial鈥攁nd so far unbreakable鈥攑residential glass ceiling.

Said Bachmann: 鈥淚鈥檓 a woman comfortable in her own skin. I grew up with three brothers. My parents didn鈥檛 see us [as] limited [by gender]. I would mow the lawn and take out the trash; I was making my own fishing lures. I went along with everything the boys did.鈥

Bachmann is still doing everything the boys do, but as a she endures indignities that are foreign to your average male pol. Yet she takes it all in stride.

In a joint interview with Bachmann last year, then-Sen. Arlen Specter lectured her to 鈥渁ct like a [lady]鈥 when she strenuously disagreed with him on a point. A recent Rolling Stone diatribe by called her 鈥渃ompletely batshit crazy鈥 with a 鈥渞etro-Stepford image.鈥 has accused her of being 鈥渉ypnotized鈥 on the air and has referred to the three-term House member and former tax attorney as a 鈥渂alloon head.鈥

And over the weekend, Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace asked Bachmann if she was a 鈥渇lake.鈥 She was not pleased. 鈥淚t seemed very insulting,鈥 she told me. 鈥淏ut he did give me a call and he did offer me an apology.鈥 (Wallace also posted a video apologizing and explaining why he asked the question.)

As for Matthews, she has received no apologies, but she is unfazed. Unlike Palin, who frequently decries the 鈥渓amestream media,鈥 Bachmann doesn鈥檛 attack the attackers. 鈥淭he media is what the media is,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 part of the territory. A person has to accept that there are difficult questions and unfair questions and it is a part of this process and it is what it is.鈥

While Bachmann was dismissed by much of the punditocracy before turning in a this month and snagging a second-place spot in a recent Iowa poll, there is no clear explanation for why she has been overlooked or underestimated鈥攁t least, not if you鈥檝e spent any time with her.

True, the media have a field day playing up her every misstep鈥攎ost recently her assertion that the Founding Fathers 鈥渨orked tirelessly鈥 to end slavery鈥攂ut we should know by now what that is about. (Hint: She鈥檚 a woman with presidential aspirations.) If Joe Biden鈥檚 gaffes had received half the attention of Bachmann鈥檚, nobody would take him seriously, either.

In person, Bachmann seems eerily disconnected from the TV caricature. She is bright, quick, charming, and thoughtful. She will civilly and gamely debate any issue.

In a time when people are so tired of the shenanigans of the political parties, Bachmann calls herself 鈥減ost-partisan.鈥 She blames both parties for the mess the country is in. She identifies with the Republican Party as a conservative, but she isn鈥檛 going to carry water for its members or make excuses for their reckless spending.

When the Iowa native speaks of her childhood, which involved hardship, she is devoid of self-pity. After her parents divorced when she was 13, her family had little money, and she used babysitting proceeds to buy her own clothes. She told me that she was thankful that her family didn鈥檛 have money and she had to work her way through college because it taught her the importance of hard work and the value of the dollar.

In a conversation last year, she marveled to me that Democrats were bragging that their health-care plan allows parents to keep their kids on their health-care plans until age 26. 鈥淲hy would any parent want their kid on their health-care plan when they are 26?鈥 she asked. 鈥淧arents want their kids to grow up and take care of themselves. A 26-year-old is an adult.鈥

Bold words in today鈥檚 culture of eternal adolescence.

In late 2010, when conservative pundit S.E. Cupp told CNN鈥檚 Larry King that she thought Bachmann should run for president, the panel erupted in giggles. King was puzzled: 鈥淎re you kidding or do you mean that?鈥

Nobody should be laughing now.

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Kirsten Powers is a columnist for The Daily Beast. She is also a political analyst on Fox News and a writer for the New York Post. She served in the Clinton Administration from 1993-1998 and has worked in New York state and city politics. Her writing has been published in the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, the New York Observer, Salon.com, Elle magazine and American Prospect online.

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