WASHINGTON - The Democrats' latest hope for defeating U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann sat alone at a candidate forum in Ham Lake earlier this fall, appearing next to a name card and an empty chair.
A lot has changed since then. On Thursday, businessman Jim Graves and Bachmann squared off for the second of three debates in what has become a surprisingly close race that could serve as a referendum on Bachmann's star turn in national politics.
Graves sought Thursday to use Bachmann's celebrity to her disadvantage, much as former Gov. Tim Pawlenty did when he faced off against her in the GOP presidential primaries, calling her record in Congress "nonexistent."
Meanwhile, Bachmann -- one of Congress' most conservative members -- sought to cast herself as a political independent with a bipartisan track record.
"I've worked with Democrats across the aisle to get a lot of things done and it's important we do that," Bachmann said. "I'm a very independent person." She used the debate to tout the times she had bucked her own party, saying "I didn't believe George Bush ... that we were looking at financial Armageddon," and stressing her work with Democrats on the St. Croix River bridge.
Under intense questioning during the Minnesota Public Radio debate, Bachmann offered support for vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan's Medicare plan, said the only exception on abortion should be the life of the mother and restated her opposition to federal bailouts, saying they prevented the nation's largest auto manufacturers "from going through the orderly process of bankruptcy."
Graves, who has portrayed himself as a moderate, pro-business pragmatist, said that was flawed thinking. Sometimes, he said, "you hold your nose and you do what you've got to do to keep this country up and going. We did not want to lose that sector of the economy and our whole manufacturing industry."
That the race for Minnesota's Sixth Congressional District, the state's most solidly Republican district is even close has surprised some Democrats in Washington. Bachmann's decision to hold three debates in the week before Election Day -- one live, one broadcast on radio and one on television -- now are giving an elevated profile to Graves at no cost while putting a spotlight on Bachmann's three-term record just as the race enters its most intense phase.