Authors: Calvin Trillin
Pawlenty, as a man from one state north,
Had pinned his hopes on being thus thrust forth.
It’s true he’d shown some weakness in debate,
But Iowa, some thought, could be Tim’s state.
Right-wing, and evangelical to boot,
He had a quality that seemed to suit
The Hawkeye voters: When he’s at his best,
Pawlenty’s manner clearly shouts, “Midwest!”
And as for right-wing dogma, he could sell it
Without impressing voters as a zealot.
There were, in fact, among the cognoscenti
Some folks who’d placed their bets on Tim Pawlenty.
They thought that Tim might be the man to beat
Mitt Romney (who at Ames did not compete).
Tim’s hopes for being lead beast in the herd
Were dashed in Ames: Pawlenty came in third—
Far back in third. It wasn’t even close.
So, quickly, Tim Pawlenty said
adios
.
Too quickly, several pundits would propound.
Pawlenty, they advised, should stick around.
But Tim Pawlenty wasn’t looking back.
So thus ordained as leader of the pack
Was Congresswoman Bachmann, who’d gained ground
All summer, ’til in August she was crowned
The straw poll winner, meaning, so to speak,
She got discussed as flavor of the week.
And nationally she started to emerge
While overtaking Romney in a surge.
No longer was it fair to introduce
Michele as “Sarah Palin minus moose.”
Michele: A Serenade by Iowa Social Conservatives
(With apologies to the Beatles)
Michele, our belle,
Thinks that gays will all be sent to hell.
That’s Michele.
Michele, our belle,
Thinks they’re sick but could be made all well.
Yes, Michele.
She just needs to turn them toward Jesus.
They’re going through a phase
That leads to filthy ways.
But with her hubby’s help these guys could
All be John Wayne.
Michele, our belle,
Views you have are suiting us just swell.
Our Michele.
The next “I’m out” upset Michele’s domain:
Ed Rollins, who had managed her campaign,
Announced that he would leave—a key defection.
Her quest since Ames had somehow lost direction.
The scrutiny front-runners always get
Exposed some things the Bachmanns might regret.
Their clinic was a source of great debate,
Since it seemed keen on turning gay men straight.
Unintended Consequences for Marcus Bachmann
The Bachmanns’ belief that gay men should be straight
Caused all sorts of jokes, innuendo and such.
The bloggers and late-night comedians pounced:
They said maybe Marcus protested too much.
Some rumors that were passed around in stealth
Implied Michele was not in perfect health.
As indicated by the groans and laughs,
Ms. Bachmann could be counted on for gaffes.
Before she ran, she’d casually been able
To shade or to exaggerate on cable.
Now, things she said—some wrong, some just inscrutable—
Were not, in this campaign, considered suitable:
The history was flawed, the science too.
(She said, although it’s not remotely true,
That shots now given girls across the nation
Have been the cause of mental retardation.)
When northeast states were walloped by Irene,
She said God’s wrath had surely set that scene.
So Why Be So Hard on Vermont?
Michele Bachmann says Hurricane Irene was God’s warning to curb excessive government spending.
—News reports
We know that this God’s an all-powerful God;
God’s actions are not nonchalant.
We know he can punish whomever he wants.
So why be so hard on Vermont?
Yes, spending increases our deficit—sure.
Vermont, though, has not been
avant
The rest of the country. We all spend a lot.
So why be so hard on Vermont?
Its mountains? Its hipsters? Its accent? Or what
Might tick off the Great Commandant?
We know we’re all sinners; we spend and we spend.
So why be so hard on Vermont?
So by September, Bachmann, back to punt,
Was someone who had briefly been in front
But who, it was increasingly quite clear,
Would from now on be stalled more toward the rear.
Michele: A Reprise
Michele, our belle,
Things of late have truly failed to jell
For Michele.
Michele, our belle,
They’re no longer buying what you sell.
Poor Michele.
Your numbers have gone in the toilet.
They say you peaked too soon.
And talking like a loon
Could not have helped a lot, although Rick
Perry does, too.
Michele, our belle,
Pundits now are bidding you farewell—
“’Bye, Michele.”
The new front-runner wasn’t Romney, though.
From Texas now a mighty wind did blow.
Its smile was broad, its hair just short of stunning:
Rick Perry, who had hit the pavement running.
Enter Rick Perry
With even more impressive hair than Kerry,
At last into the race arrives Rick Perry.
Though Perry’s blessed, no doubt, with splendid hair, he
Believes some things that strike some folks as scary.
Observers down in Texas still are wary.
The space beneath the hair, they say, is airy.
A great campaign for Perry was projected.
In every race he’d run he’d been elected.
He did that Texas swagger to perfection,
And he was known to have a close connection
To lots of Texas money that would make
Financing his campaign a piece of cake.
And under Perry, Texas added gobs
Of what this race was most about—that’s jobs.
He needed no instruction and no training
To seem at home at door-to-door campaigning.
In Iowa, he played the good ol’ boy.
Compared to Mitt, he seemed the real McCoy—
A man who schmoozed and didn’t seem contrived,
As if from many focus groups derived.
Conservatives considered Perry pure,
And he became the favorite du jour.
So What’s with the Cowboy Boots, Rick?
You say you’re the real thing from Texas—
An Aggie, not someone from Yale.
While claiming to be a straight shooter,
You plant a boot high on a bale.
’Twas cotton that grew on your farm, Rick.
You didn’t grow up on the range.
No horses are used to plant cotton,
So cowboy boots seem mighty strange.
No phony? Then alter your costume.
Although they lack cowboy boots’ zing,
If you have a sodbuster background,
Bib overalls might be the thing.
As nationally Rick’s polling numbers soared,
The analysts who crunched the numbers scored
Him well ahead; some said he couldn’t lose.
They thought once more Republicans might choose
A Texas governor at their convention,
Though Bush’s name was one they’d never mention.
But Perry’s chances started going south
When Perry started opening his mouth.
Debates and interviews just did him in,
For they revealed his grasp of facts was thin.
He wasn’t really strong on world affairs.
He didn’t seem to have a lot upstairs.
Of justices his knowledge wasn’t great:
He somehow thought that there were only eight.
He thought the voting age was twenty-one.
By then, the press and bloggers had begun
To look for Perry gaffes on which to jump,
And that put Perry’s numbers in a slump.
For donors, it could be a strong deflater
To watch their man Rick Perry as debater.
Rick Perry Compares Himself to Denver Broncos Quarterback Tim Tebow
When Perry discusses debates now,
He’s calling himself in these rumbles
An Iowa caucuses Tebow—
Except for how often he fumbles.
The biggest gaffe had happened in November,
When Perry, in debate, could not remember
The third of three departments he would toss
Into the scrap heap once he was the boss.
Then he said “Oops.” With that word it was clear
The White House was a place he’d not get near;
All three departments’ workers could relax,
For he’d become the butt of comics’ cracks.
He held out for a while—two months at most—
But from that moment Rick’s campaign was toast.
And that left true believers with a plight:
For their crusade they didn’t have a knight.
Still Looking
The far right looked for someone who’d befit
The ticket—that is, someone not named Mitt
But someone who could strongly lead the nation
Without the faintest whiff of moderation.
Chris Christie was a man they couldn’t get,
And Bachmann was the quickest flopper yet.
It looked like Perry was the right’s white hope,
But now they’re saying Perry’s just a dope.
So who will they convince now to get in?
The time is short. Their bench is looking thin.
The first chance voters had to have their say
In caucuses was some two months away.
Though actual voters still had not been faced,
Some serious threats to Mitt had been erased.
Two candidates whom pundits might construe
As hurdles Romney had to jump were through.
A third campaigner who had seemed a threat,
Jon Huntsman, hadn’t really caught on yet.
One problem that Jon Huntsman had to face:
He wasn’t welcomed warmly by the base.
The people who thought compromise was treason
Suspected he was vulnerable to reason.
His politics and theirs were much the same,
But something troubled them about his name.
Not Huntsman, but the part just past the comma:
“Ambassador to China for Obama.”
Credentials as a true Obama hater
Could not be issued; Huntsman was a traitor.
So he was not the man the right would bless
As champion to stop the Mitt Express.
The weakest candidates were those now left,
And right-wing true believers were bereft.