WASHINGTON - Coming in the midst of a nationwide call for civility in the aftermath of the Arizona shootings, former Gov. Tim Pawlenty's moderate tone and calm delivery may have given him a fresh purchase on his national ambitions.
Signing books Thursday at a Barnes & Noble four blocks from the White House, the Minnesota Republican bantered easily with about 200 well-wishers, including a small child who pushed a stuffed animal his way.
"Mostly, I get a sense of authenticity," said Kevin O'Brien, a Washington attorney who had come to buy Pawlenty's book, "Courage to Stand." "There's not a lot of pretension. He seems to have a middle-America kind of approach."
Pawlenty and his handlers could hardly hope for a better takeaway than that, particularly coming from a customer who described himself as a political independent.
Hearkening back to another Minnesota presidential hopeful, Democratic Vice President Hubert Humphrey, O'Brien added, "he has the quality of an optimist, a 'happy warrior.'"
After blitzing the talk-show circuit in New York, Pawlenty came to Washington to begin a new public phase in his yearlong effort to raise his national profile. He chatted up downtown shoppers and addressed a packed room of journalists and Washington insiders at the National Press Club, where he called the overheated rhetoric from both sides "very corrosive, not just to the debate, but to democracy more generally."
Even before the shootings focused media attention on outspoken Tea Party figures such as former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, ABC's "Nightline" did a flattering profile depicting Pawlenty's mild manner as the "anti-Palin."
"He's doing extraordinarily well under unexpectedly difficult circumstances, the week when we're all talking about the Tucson massacre," said former U.S. Rep. Vin Weber, a Minnesota Republican.