Democrats 'don't like "old, white and rich",' a red-meat conservative audience heard Saturday in the early hours of the South Carolina Freedom Summit.

'And their answer to that is Hillary.'

Mrs. Clinton, the American liberal most likely to contend for the presidency in 2016, rivaled the ISIS terror army in taking punches from Republicans at the event, held in Greenville.

The demographic quip came from Kellyanne Conway, a pollster. But she wasn't alone.

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, four years ago the Iowa Caucus victor, complained that Clinton stood in the way of nuclear-related sanctions he once drafted when they were both senators.

Asked after his speech if he could think of a nice work or two for the former secretary of state, he stood puzzled and then shrugged: 'Happy Mother's Day?'

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'RE-EDUCATION CAMPS?' Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal mused about how Hillary might try to change conservatives' religious views on abortion

TRUMP: 'Hillary's got some very big problems,' the real estate billionaire said, and 'I'm not even 100 per cent sure she's going to go all the way'

SOLD OUT: The Peace Center in Greenville, SC hosted thousands for the campaign cattle-call of right-wingers

Donald Trump, the brand-happy real estate billionaire, told Daily Mail Online that Hillary Clinton would 'destroy the country.'

He pursed his lips, though, when asked if he could say anything nice about her. And then 15 seconds ticked off silently.

'Honestly,' Trump said after the pregnant pause, 'I think it would be inappropriate right now.'

'Hillary's got some very big problems, I think,' Trump said in an interview backstage. 'Much more significant than people understand, with respect to the emails and other things.'

'If you look back eight years ago, she had it made. And then Obama came along. Now? I'm not even 100 per cent sure she's going to go all the way.'

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal also made a positive note of Clinton's motherhood, saying she and former president Bill Clinton had 'raised their daughter under the glare of the media spotlight.'

'By all accounts she's turned out to be a very accomplished adult in her own right,' Jindal said. 'And happily married.'

But he said he doesn't want to see Chelsea visiting her mom in the White House in 2017.

'The only thing she's ever run is President Obama's foreign policy,' he said of Hillary, ticking off disappointments in Russia, Ukraine, Israel and Iran. 'It's been a complete failure.'

He also criticized her recent comments that 'deep-seated cultural codes, religious beliefs and structural biases have to be changed' to give more of the world's women access to abortion and other reproductive interventions.

'I can't imagine a more preposterous and offensive comment,' Jindal said Saturday.

'My religious beliefs aren't between me and Hillary Clinton. They're between me and God. And I'm not going to change them simply because she doesn't like them.'

INCOMING!: Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidential front-runner, is the liberal America's right-wingers love to hate

'HAPPY MOTHERS DAY' were the only kind words spoken about Hillary Clinton on Saturday in Greenville at the South Carolina Freedom Summit

Jindal snarked that Clinton hadn't proposed a method for shifting the religious views of pro-life Republicans.

'I don't know – does that mean re-education camps?' he asked.

'I think the Democrats are making a mistake simply by crowning Hillary Clinton. But that's their choice to make.'

The president of Citizens United, the constitutionally famous group behind Saturday's event, called for a criminal investigation into her time as America's top diplomat.

'The Clintons are synonymous with the word "scandal",' David Bossie told Daily Mail Online, referring to allegations that she traded her influence for foreign donations to her family foundation.

'I actually hope there is a grand jury looking into this right now, because there needs to be.'

Asked during a press conference what Clinton's strongest political quality is, Iowa congressman Steve King didn't mince words.

'It's not her likeability,' he said.

King also blasted Clinton as a holdover from an Obama administration whose foreign policy stumbles carried her personal brand for four years.

'I don't know how that works for her,' King said with a shrug.

'We need to make a change from Barack Obama. The country knows that. She's partly an extension of Barack Obama. She has to defend her policies and still separate herself [from him]. That's a tough campaign for her to run.'

Pollster KellyAnne Conway called Hillary Clinton 'old, white and rich' – the stereotype for Republican candidates in past elections

RIGHT WINGERS: Iowa Republican Rep. Steve King posed with William Temple, a costumed tea party activist who carries a Gadsden flag and wears a tricorn hat to conservative gatherings across America

David Bossie leads Citizens United, the Freedom Summit host group; he said Clinton will have trouble disentangling herself from a failed Obama foreign policy

Conway, whose Polling Company Inc. runs a 'WomanTrend' division targeting female consumer opinion, hammered Hillary for trying to corner the market on the feminine-candidate mystique.

WIth Clinton as the Democrats' standard-bearer in 2016, she predicted, 'the gender card will be played.'

'The idea of a female president? I think it's terrific. I have three daughters.'

But ultimately, she said, 'the question isn't whether you want "a" woman to be president. It's whether you want "that" woman to be president.'

'Hillary is not a hypothetical. She's Hillary.'