DES MOINES - Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty stood in front of 200 supporters on a rooftop terrace on Monday, with the sun-splashed golden dome of Iowa's statehouse as the backdrop, and spoke the words he's waited so long to say:
"I'm Tim Pawlenty, and I'm running for President of the United States."
In the formal launch of his long-planned quest, Pawlenty told the crowd he would not be offering easy answers.
"It's time for America's president -- and anyone who wants to be president -- to look you in the eye and tell you the truth," he said. "So here it is." He would, he said, go to New York this week and tell Wall Street "that if I'm elected, the era of bailouts, handouts and carve-outs will be over ... No more 'too big to fail.'" In Florida on Wednesday, he said, he would "tell the truth to wealthy seniors, that we will means test Social Security's annual cost-of-living adjustment."
"The changes history is calling on America to make today," he said, "cannot be shouldered only by people richer than us or poorer than us -- but by us, too."
Digging deep into his blue-collar upbringing in South St. Paul, Pawlenty laid out a platform built on the anti-tax principles of less government and traditional values refined over a 22-year political career that started age 28, on the Eagan City Council.
He counted cutting taxes and spending, instituting health care choice and performance pay for teachers, reformed union benefits and the appointment of constitutional conservatives to the state Supreme Court among his achievements. "If we could move Minnesota in a common sense, conservative direction, we can do it anywhere," he said.
"Even in Washington D.C."