U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann's decision to retire uncapped the ambitions of many Sixth District Republicans, and the first to step forward is 2010 gubernatorial candidate Tom Emmer.
"I have never felt more compelled in my life to serve," Emmer said Wednesday to at least 100 supporters at a park in Delano, his hometown. During a brief dry spell in the daylong rain, Emmer ticked off his reasons for running: the IRS' targeting of conservative groups, the Justice Department's search of reporters' records and what he termed out-of-control spending.
"Is this the legacy we want to leave to our children?" he said. "The answer obviously is no, and the time to act is now."
Emmer's return to electoral politics a week after Bachmann said she would not run for re-election brings new energy to a conservative district Republicans had feared they would lose and Democrats had hoped they would snatch. Bachmann's increasingly controversial profile and tumultuous four terms in Congress had put the heavily Republican district at risk, operatives from both parties said.
"Rep. Bachmann would have faced an uphill race" that would have forced the GOP to pump in cash to defend her turf, said former Minnesota congressman Vin Weber, now a lobbyist in Washington, D.C.
Bachmann has been unusually quiet since last week, when she released a pre-dawn video announcing that she would not return to Congress after this term. She then jetted off to Russia on a congressional fact-finding trip. Since her return, she has declined Star Tribune requests for an interview.
With Bachmann no longer a factor, other Republicans are eyeing the rare open seat in a reliable district that takes in Carver and Wright counties, suburban Anoka and St. Cloud.
"No question this should be a Republican district, but we can definitely lose it if we get complacent or nominate the wrong candidate," said Pat Shortridge, who managed two of Republican Mark Kennedy's successful campaigns for the district and is considering running for it himself this year. "You don't win the Sixth just by putting a Republican name on the ballot."