WASHINGTON - Casting about for something to wear to a 2006 fundraiser with President George W. Bush, Michele Bachmann, then a Republican candidate for Congress, recalled her mother's advice on looking nice.
"In her mind, that meant dressing like a lady would have in the 1940s or 1950s," Bachmann recalls in her new campaign autobiography, "Core of Conviction." On went a pale pink suit, matching pink purse, pearl necklace, pink pumps and light pink gloves with scalloped edges.
Inside the limo with Bush, the conversation stayed casual. But at one point the president looked down at her pink-gloved hands and asked with a "crinkly" smile, "Why are you wearing those gloves?" She tried to explain, but Bush said gently, "Lose the gloves." So she did.
The story provides one of many details that trace the arc of Bachmann's conservative world view, grounded in an idyllic Iowa childhood and a morality that grew out of sync with the changing social mores and the political tumult of the 1960s and '70s.
While others in her boomer generation were turning on and dropping out, the teenage Bachmann was sewing her own dresses for school, scoring straight A's and reciting a Lutheran prayer every night at bedtime. "I didn't drink, didn't smoke, didn't do drugs -- and didn't fool around," Bachmann writes. It was, she said, a lifestyle that cost her dates on prom nights.
Amid this, Bachmann got a bitter taste of the increasingly permissive culture she was growing into, reaching its low ebb when her father, after moving the family to Minnesota, left her mother for another woman and exited the young Bachmann's life for six years.
"It was hard for me to comprehend that certain forces in society were seeking to undermine the family," she writes. "To undermine the traditional structures of our society."
Her parents' divorce also sparked a desire for an "intact and happy family," something she and her husband, Marcus, have achieved with 29 children (23 foster children and six biological children, including one miscarriage).