Tim Pawlenty talking during his campaign event.

Republican presidential candidate Tim Pawlenty is back in his campaign R.V. today, headed to face-to-face meetings with voters in four different Iowa cities.

Without naming his competitors, Pawlenty is stressing his experience as a two-term governor of Minnesota as a means of contrasting his record with the records of his rivals. 

“One of the points we’re trying to make with the great people of Iowa as they have this important role in being first in the country is to say before you fuel the rocket and launch is out of Iowa, make sure it can get all the way to the destination because the main way we’re going to goof up this election as Republicans is to nominate the wrong candidate,” Pawlenty said during a brief interview with reporters today in Ames. 

“We need somebody with executive experience, who has a record of not just rhetoric but results, like I do, and who can win in difficult spots, like I have.”

Pawlenty’s first stop of the day was in Ames, where more than 50 people gathered in a church to meet Pawlenty. Bob Anderson of Ames was convinced and even paraphrased the campaign’s new slogan.

“Executive experience with results,” Anderson said in an interview after Pawlenty’s appearance in Ames. “It’s not just the fact he sat in the chair. He got things done, in a very tough place, so he has the skill set to do what this country needs done.”

Leslie Saftig of Ames said she was “really impressed” with Pawlenty.

“He was very energetic,” she said after the event. “He spoke his positions so well and I think he hit every nail on the head.”

Saftig, a former Minnesotan, describes herself as a conservative Republican.

“I came away thinking, ‘All right!  He’s my guy,'” she said. “…I’ve always wondered why his poll numbers are so low. I really fear that…the masses in this country are very easily swayed by surface appearances and that’s why I don’t want to fall into the same trap myself.” 

Saftig plans to attend the August 13th Straw Poll and she’s been attending candidate events in the area as part of what she calls her “due diligence” to find the right candidate for 2012.

Radio Iowa