Getting your player ready...
After months of hitting the campaign trail, Republican candidates hoping to win their party’s nomination for the 2012 presidential election have been spending most of their time in planes, trains and automobiles. Home, sweet, home has been a dizzying series of hotel rooms.
But out there somewhere, each of these politicians actually does have a domestic domicile where there are no corn dogs to eat, no stranger’s babies to hold and no stray swarms of supporters to glad-hand.
As the GOP primary season cranks into high gear, we’re taking a look at the homes these candidates want to trade in for the in Washington. D.C.
Newt Gingrich
The former House speaker was born in Pennsylvania, grew up in Georgia and served as a U.S. Congressman from the Peach State, but he now calls . After his resignation as speaker in 1998, Gingrich’s aspirations to transform the nation, as outlined in his 1994 “Contract With America,” were short-circuited. Now, however, the 68-year-old author is taking no prisoners as he tries to leap-frog over Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum for a shot at the GOP nomination. Gingrich purchased (above) in McLean in 2000 for $995,000. The 5-bedroom, 5-bath home has 5,206 square feet of living space. The Colonial-style home was built in 1987. Only 10 miles from the White House, McLean is a critical suburban outpost for the Beltway political crowd.
Jon Huntsman
The two-term governor of Utah has spent time in Washington D.C. in diplomatic positions during George W. Bush’s presidency and as an ambassador to China under President Barack Obama. Huntsman currently calls the nation’s capital his home, residing in a Federal-style home since 2010. is in the heart of the politician-stacked . Built in 1911, the 5,119-square-foot home housed the seventh season cast of “Top Chef” prior to Huntsman and his family moving in.
Ron Paul
During his 20-year service in Congress, Rep. Ron Paul established himself as one of the country’s leading libertarians. The prophet of self-rule and minimal government is making his third bid for the presidency. At 76, Paul has been successful in rallying younger voters seeking a leader who promises to alter the political structure of the country. And true to the profile of a man who advocates for people doing things for themselves – in politics or elsewhere — it’s not surprising to find that Paul is trying to without a or broker. The is priced at $325,000 and .



