Under fire for her remarks about Barack Obama and Congress, Rep. Michele Bachmann is effectively tied with Elwyn Tinklenberg in the Sixth Congressional District race, according to a SurveyUSA poll conducted for KSTP-TV.
Democrat Tinklenberg leads Bachmann, a Republican, 47 percent to 44 percent, within the poll's margin of error of plus or minus four percentage points. Independence Party candidate Bob Anderson was favored by 6 percent.
The survey of likely voters was conducted Monday and Tuesday, using recorded announcer voices, not live interviewers, to ask the questions. It came during a period when Bachmann was trying to explain her remark last week that Obama "may have anti-American views" and her call for a media "exposé" of Congress.
Both campaigns found good signs in the poll.
Tinklenberg spokesman John Wodele said the results are in line with an internal survey a couple of weeks ago by Democrats that showed Bachmann holding a slim lead.
"We were gaining on her and the momentum was going our way even before she made those comments," Wodele said, adding that the flap over Bachmann's remarks probably had some impact.
"It's not a big surprise," said Bachmann spokeswoman Michelle Marston. "We always knew this was going to be a tight race."
Referring to the recent controversy, Marston said the poll result "doesn't seem like a very big lead to me ... to be within the margin of error at the height of all of this."