Only a couple of weeks ago Michele Bachmann's grip on the Sixth Congressional District seemed shaky after she questioned the patriotism of Sen. Barack Obama and other members of Congress.
But the Republican incumbent had nothing to fear from the voters of rural Chatham Township in Wright County.
"I was damn proud of her," said Matt Schuveiller, 24, a heavy equipment operator. "I thought that was something that needed to be said. I don't think she should have apologized for that."
Bachmann didn't apologize. She went on to win reelection to Congress, defeating Democrat Elwyn Tinklenberg 46 percent to 43 percent and proving again that she's hard to beat in the conservative district.
"It was a case of her suffering badly and then recovering really effectively," said Steven Smith, a political science professor at Washington University in St. Louis, an expert on congressional politics. He also is from the Sixth District.
Smith cited several keys to her victory:
• "Late money isn't as good as early money." About $1.9 million poured into Tinklenberg's campaign from people angered at Bachmann's comment on Oct. 17 that Obama "may have anti-American views." It bought him ads, but not time. "If he had earlier money it might have helped him gain some momentum."
• Bachmann responded to her predicament with ads accusing Tinklenberg of cronyism more than six years ago as state commissioner of transportation and of favoring higher taxes. "That tore him down," Smith said.