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Jim DeMint Wooed By GOP Candidates Ahead Of South Carolina Primary 2012

Jim Demint South Carolina Primary

JIM DAVENPORT   01/12/12 12:10 PM ET   AP

COLUMBIA, S.C. — In the 2012 Republican nominating contest, Sen. Jim DeMint is like the pretty girl all the boys want to take to the prom. Nearly every GOP presidential candidate has come a-courting the South Carolina Republican ahead of his state's Jan. 21 primary.

A dean of the influential and well-funded tea party movement, DeMint has made it clear he's sitting this one out.

The senator suggests he's not feeling that special attraction to any of the candidates, whether it be front-runner Mitt Romney or one of his rivals, or feeling peer pressure to pair up for the big dance. Instead, he has his eye on another class of candidate entirely – those aiming to win enough Senate seats to flip the chamber from Democratic to Republican control.

"My priority is the Senate," DeMint said this week in an interview, adding that it doesn't matter who is elected president if Republicans don't get a Senate majority. He's again turning to his political action committee, Senate Conservatives Fund, to help candidates he wants to see elected to the Senate.

"I have the ability to raise $10 (million) or $15 million to elect some senators and that's how I think I can help the next president. So that's what I want to do," he said. "As soon as I get involved with one (presidential) candidate, I've got 80 percent of my supporters mad at me."

Still, for all of DeMint's efforts not to get dragged into the GOP presidential race, he waded into it on Tuesday with a prediction.

"I think Romney's going to win here," DeMint, 60, told South Carolina conservative radio host Mark Levin.

There are other signs that DeMint is warm to Romney. The senator's political adviser, Warren Tompkins, and former top aide, Luke Byars, are working on the candidate's behalf. And some close to DeMint, who endorsed Romney in 2008, say he's quietly telling people that he's backing Romney and they should, too.

In public, he'll only go so far. "I don't have anything against Mitt Romney or any of the candidates," he says. "I think we've got a good slate. I don't see any of them as unacceptable." He says he worries that endorsing one candidate might alienate supporters of the others.

Whether coy or genuine, DeMint's demurral hasn't discouraged his pursuers as the Republican political machinery rumbles south from New Hampshire. South Carolina's famously nasty nomination contest has proved decisive in the past; the winner has become the GOP's presidential nominee every time since 1980.

Romney faces challenges from Texas Rep. Ron Paul, former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Sen. Rick Santorum and Texas Gov. Rick Perry. Nearly every one of them has wooed DeMint.

A nod from the former ad executive could mean millions of dollars in campaign donations. It also could help send an underdog to Washington, as DeMint's endorsement did in 2010 for Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida and Rand Paul of Kentucky.

That explains why DeMint's name keeps popping up – in glowing terms – on the presidential campaign trail.

A Perry supporter told an audience this week that he wants DeMint on the team.

"Jim DeMint is a conservative icon and he's well respected and his opinion matters here," said Katon Dawson, the former state GOP chairman running Perry's South Carolina campaign.

On that, Romney's camp agrees.

"If there's a kingmaker, it's Jim DeMint," said State Treasurer Curtis Loftis, Romney's chairman.

It wasn't long ago that DeMint was ignored and even shunned by prominent Republicans.

Elected to the Senate in 2004, he made no friends in the collegial chamber when he scolded fellow Republicans for the party's dismal performance in the 2008 elections.

Two years later, he marshaled enough money to step past more senior Republicans and support his preferred candidates for Senate. Paul and Rubio were DeMint's success stories. Other DeMint candidates, such as Delaware's Christine O'Donnell, defeated the establishment's choice in the Republican primary but lost the general election.

Some in the GOP complained that while DeMint's activities may have won like-minded conservatives several seats in Congress, they also enabled Democrats to keep some vulnerable seats and maintain their majority.

This year, DeMint says he has no interest in playing kingmaker in the presidential race.

"Why he would sit this out and not get involved surprises me," said Tim Brett, a former state legislator and longtime GOP strategist.

Others say this is typical DeMint. "He's never really believed that just endorsing someone really helps that much," said Barry Wynn, a former state GOP chairman. Until Thursday, Wynn backed Perry but he abruptly switched his support to Romney, saying that Perry's attacks on Romney's past work as head of a private equity firm had crossed the line in a political party that values free-market capitalism.

DeMint has been down the presidential endorsement road before. In 2008, he charged into the race by endorsing Romney, a notable move for someone already known as one of the Senate's staunchest conservatives. Romney lost the nomination to Sen. John McCain.

DeMint says he expects his network of wealthy and influential South Carolina donors to be more vocal during the next week.

"A lot of them want to get involved," he said. "I think you'll see some support Mitt and some Newt and some Perry. I'm certainly not giving them directions."

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COLUMBIA, S.C. — In the 2012 Republican nominating contest, Sen. Jim DeMint is like the pretty girl all the boys want to take to the prom. Nearly every GOP presidential candidate has come a-cour...
COLUMBIA, S.C. — In the 2012 Republican nominating contest, Sen. Jim DeMint is like the pretty girl all the boys want to take to the prom. Nearly every GOP presidential candidate has come a-cour...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IcedTee63
This train of thought have a caboose?
01:10 PM on 01/12/2012
Sen. Jim DeMint is like the pretty girl all the boys want to take to the prom.

It's like an episode of Maury..."Rick Santorum, you are the father!"
01:02 PM on 01/12/2012
isn't this the same guy who said "this could be obama's waterloo" and lost. Right then is when republicants said we have to stop him look at all the work he can actually get through congress if he keeps this up the people will expect us to start doing our jobs and once again a memeber of the S.W.O.R.M. raises his ignorant head to discuss how they can fool their republicant allies into voting against there own best interest. Republicants = stupid is as stupid does.
12:41 PM on 01/12/2012
Why do these old guys dye their hair and eyebrows? Look dreadful.
11:16 AM on 01/12/2012
And we poor, misguided Yankees thought the North won the Civil War.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Don Glenn
Tree Hugging Liberal With Guns
11:09 AM on 01/12/2012
"Jim DeMint like the pretty girl all the boys want to
take to the prom"
Their views are ugly, their politics are ugly, their whole party supports all that is ugly in business. And what can you say about DeMint and his views? I'm sorry I wouldn't take any of them to a dog fight.
10:59 AM on 01/12/2012
you would think a congressman's first priorty would be to the citizens of this country not to politics.
10:50 AM on 01/12/2012
To the prom, or to a certain airport room?
pogo
My micro-bio is empty.
10:45 AM on 01/12/2012
Demint grew up in and around his single mother's dance studio, largely friendless, and viewed the character played by Andy Griffith, Sheriff Taylor, as a father figure. He was sad and lonely, a pathetic little creature, and now America must be destroyed in retaliation.
10:35 AM on 01/12/2012
"Paul and Rubio were DeMint's success stories."

Like to see that yard stick you're using to measure with.

I think it's broken.
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
10:32 AM on 01/12/2012
Sooooooo, TEA/GOP Minty was NEVER really tea party at all, gotcha! He is a lemming just like the rest, this nomination is soooooo rigged was from day 1. Even Nimrata figured that out, and she will always go with what is best for HER, not us.
10:27 AM on 01/12/2012
Jim Demint is so despicable, he wants to BAN unmarried single women, gays, and pregnant women from being teachers?

How much more radical can these ignorant, religious savages get?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/10/02/demint-gays-unmarried-pregnant-women-teachers_n_748131.html
10:26 AM on 01/12/2012
Did you know that the toothbrush was invented in the South, If it was invented in the North than it would have been called a teethbrush.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
slickbottom
10:27 AM on 01/12/2012
Good one and probably true !
10:37 AM on 01/12/2012
That's because it's a more accurate for what's left in their mouths.
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George Costanza
My micro-bio is apparently unpublishable
10:22 AM on 01/12/2012
"Why is Jim DeMint like the pretty girl all the boys want to take to the prom?"

Ooh! I know! Because he's kind of mean, shallow and selfish? Because he lies all the time to get his way? Or maybe because he'll drop his date in a heartbeat if a more attractive candidate shows up at the dance?

Geez, this simile could go on for days.
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
10:30 AM on 01/12/2012
# 104 sooo true
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demisfine
Often correct, NEVER right.
10:14 AM on 01/12/2012
"Sen. Jim DeMint is like the pretty girl all the boys want to take to the prom. "
DeMint's been waiting his whole life to hear these words.
Finally, someone sees him as he sees himself - the pretty girl.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TFProleteriat
Hey, my micro bio is empty.
10:10 AM on 01/12/2012
The deal is that Demint is a dyed in the wool GOPocrite. He is not truly a member of that insane-but-powerful Tea Party thing. If he was, he would be behind Ron Paul, as would all TP members, if they actually stood for what they say, but like most political movements, politics is winning, and they are abandoning their principles as fast as the highschool's star QB after finding out his GF got knocked up.