MYRTLE BEACH, South Carolina — Mitt Romney, Jeb Bush, and Chris Christie aren’t exactly popular names at the South Carolina Tea Party Coalition Convention.
“Christie lost weight, but that just means he can hug Obama even closer,” Joe Dugan, who organized the conference, told msnbc. “Romney was a poor candidate and ran a terrible campaign.”
That doesn’t mean attendees are unhappy to see them running, however. After watching Romney grind his way to the nomination in 2012 against a rotating cast of underfunded conservative challengers, tea party activists are hopeful that the reverse dynamic might occur in 2016. If Bush, Romney, Christie, and other Republicans popular with big donors end up splitting the moderate vote and training their super PAC dollars on each other, there may be an opening for one of their favored candidates to sneak their way to the convention.
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“We want [Marco] Rubio in, we want Christie in, we want Bush in, we want Romney in, that would be great,” Vernon Robinson, campaign director of a national effort to draft Ben Carson for a 2016 run, told msnbc. “It’s better to have eight liberal Republicans than one.”
A split establishment field only takes care of half the problem, however. They also need to settle on a champion of their own and the anti-establishment field may be even more crowded in 2016 than it was in 2012.
“Everyone is going to have to start coalescing behind one or two candidates as they go towards the finish line in the primary to really get enough votes,” Rob Maness, a Senate candidate in Louisiana last year, told msnbc.
On Sunday, Carson and Senator Ted Cruz, both likely candidates, addressed the conference. Rick Santorum, the runner-up against Romney in 2012, will speak on Monday. Other candidates who could potentially make a play for social conservatives, libertarians, and tea partiers include Rand Paul, Mike Huckabee, Mike Pence, Bobby Jindal, Rick Perry, and Scott Walker.
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Carson described his mother’s struggle to keep her children out of poverty to make the case he knew how to restrain social spending and criticized President Obama’s new proposal to raise taxes on the wealthy to fund tax benefits for working and middle class Americans.
“I’m sure he’s going to talk about these rich people and how horrible they are and some of them are horrible,” Carson said. “But I know a lot of horrible poor people too. I know a lot of horrible people, period, and it has nothing to do with their income.”
Making his case, Cruz urged activists to resist the “mushy middle” of past Republican nominees Bob Dole, John McCain, and Mitt Romney.








