DeMint’s Senate resignation could signal decline

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DeMint’s influence was at its zenith last year during the Republican presidential primary contest, in which tea party sentiment helped push Mitt Romney and other contenders to the right. Hoping to gain his endorsement, five presidential candidates, including Romney, flew to Columbia, S.C., to court the senator, answering his questions at a nationally televised Labor Day forum.

But Republican losses in the election weakened his position. The party had hoped to win control of the Senate, but instead lost ground. DeMint played a role in some of the worst defeats. He embraced the candidacy of Todd Akin, even after the Missouri congressman’s controversial remark about “legitimate rape” sent the Republican establishment fleeing. And in Indiana, he provided financial support for Richard Mourdock, a conservative who ousted longtime Republican Sen. Richard G. Lugar in the GOP primary.

but proved too extreme for voters in the general election.

Similarly, in 2010, DeMint provided endorsements and financial encouragement for Sharron Angle of Nevada and Christine O’Donnell of Delaware, both tea party-backed candidates for the Senate who lost to Democrats.

On Thursday, tea party leaders pushed back against the notion that their movement was in decline. Republican Sen. Patrick J. Toomey of Pennsylvania, who took over for DeMint as chairman of the influential Senate Republican Steering Committee, said he did not see the end of the line for the tea party.

“We had a number of terrific advocates for limited government and freedom who won elections to the Senate — Ted Cruz and Jeff Flake and Deb Fischer,” Toomey said. “The cause is still strong.”

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, a Republican, will appoint DeMint’s successor, to serve until the 2014 election, when voters will fill the remaining two years of the senator’s term.

Speculation about DeMint’s replacement centered on a cadre of young conservative Republican congressmen, including Rep. Tim Scott, who was reported to be DeMint’s choice and would be the only African-American member of the Senate if chosen.

DeMint’s decision could also open the way for him to run for the GOP presidential nomination. As recently as last month, he had refused to discuss a 2016 candidacy, saying only that he wasn’t ruling anything out.

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