Heading to San Diego for a speech that would define him as a presidential contender, Gov. Tim Pawlenty brought no entourage -- just a suit bag, slung over his shoulder as he boarded the plane. An unpaid advance man, former White House aide Alex Conant, would be waiting for him on the West Coast when he arrived. Meeting at the Manchester Grand Hyatt, they would constitute the extent of the Pawlenty political organization on the ground.
As he develops a political presence across the country, Pawlenty is truly traveling light. No big political group, no fundraising committee and no formal campaign organization -- just what he calls an "ad hoc" band of operatives who chip in advice and handle logistics.
With the national GOP searching for a new standard-bearer for 2012, those logistics consist mostly of scheduling a steady stream of trips and speaking engagements, such as the recent speech to the Republican National Committee in San Diego.
There is little glamour in the early days on the national trail, especially when the potential candidate comes from no money and less celebrity. But if the mission appears bare-bones, that's partly by design.
Pawlenty's advisers say this is no time to be conspicuously running for president. The byword, instead, is party-building -- at least until the 2010 elections, when, Pawlenty says, he'll see where he stands.
A small, strong band
His band of advisers is small, but represents some serious GOP political muscle.
For now, they're satisfied to position Minnesota's governor as a lower-key, fresh-faced alternative to Big Names who failed so spectacularly in 2008 -- a candidate, as it were, without baggage.