WASHINGTON - Matching up on a national stage for the first time since they both set their sights on the White House, former Gov. Tim Pawlenty and U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann will woo activists at this week's influential Conservative Political Action Conference.
Interest in the two Minnesota Republicans has sparked since Bachmann let slip her presidential ambitions just as Pawlenty was embarking on a book tour to raise his national profile.
A much-awaited CPAC straw poll Saturday will clarify how much traction the two have gained with the party faithful. It will include 15 of the potential GOP presidential field and represents the first national forum pitting Pawlenty and Bachmann in a head-to-head contest a full year before the first 2012 caucus.
The 11,000 people expected to attend the CPAC this year make up the "shock troops" of any future Republican campaign, said David Keene, chairman of the American Conservative Union, which organized the conference. "It's important at a very early stage to know how the activists feel."
The turf is a familiar one for Pawlenty. The 6 percent he drew in last year's straw poll put him fourth, behind potential GOP contenders Ron Paul, Mitt Romney and Sarah Palin, in that order.
Bachmann has attended the conference before, but not as a presidential hopeful. In their only other matchup to date, Pawlenty finished third in last month's straw poll of New Hampshire Republicans. Bachmann was close on his heels in fifth place. Romney, the top-seed in the GOP field, was the clear winner with 35 percent of the vote.
Since then, the two Minnesotans have been crisscrossing the nation for new adherents.
Pawlenty, capping a meticulous, yearlong rollout of his presumptive candidacy, addresses the convention on Friday afternoon, fresh from the latest of a half-dozen swings through Iowa.