Sext fiend Anthony Weiner is a registered Democrat — but his inner “mongoose” is apparently unaffiliated.
The disgraced former congressman and husband to top Hillary Clinton aide Huma Abedin fired off suggestive messages last year to at least two women — one of whom is a prominent Republican and another who volunteered for a GOP political campaign, a source told The Post.
“Now that I don’t have the New York Post following me around maybe we can get together,” he allegedly wrote to the prominent GOPer, according to the source.
The woman brushed him off, said the source, who saw the alleged bawdy electronic exchange.
“It has nothing to do with The Post, it has everything to do with you,” she said.
“It always has to do with me, let me show you,” Weiner allegedly responded.
Weiner — who recently boasted in an online chat that he was “deceptively strong . . . like a mongoose” — allegedly sent the flirtatious messages to the woman over social media while working as a consultant for a PR firm, two years after his mayoral bid flamed out because of his serial sexting.
The woman, who did not work for the PR firm, approached the source for advice on how to handle Weiner because the source worked with him at the time.
“She was disgusted, and she wanted to make political hay of this,” the source recalled. “But I said, ‘You don’t want your name attached or associated with this in any way.’ Nothing good ever comes with being associated with Anthony Weiner.”
The second woman, a volunteer on a 2014 GOP campaign, was asked by Weiner to meet up after she responded to one of his tweets.
Weiner lost his PR job after just two months.
The latest claims follow other embarrassing exchanges that came to light last week.
Sydney Leathers, the woman whom Weiner sexted in 2013 under the name “Carlos Danger,” told Page Six that Weiner in May reached out through Facebook and Skype to a new woman.
That woman, Leathers said, contacted her for advice. Leathers said she suggested that the woman not go public.
And on Friday, a male college student told The Post he “catfished” Weiner on Twitter into thinking he was a female student named “Nikki.”
Weiner imagined “Nikki” wearing “strappy black heels” and “tight clothes” and bragged he was “deceptively strong. Hehe. Like a mongoose,” in a July 27 exchange on Twitter while on a trip in Los Angeles.
Confronted Saturday morning outside his Union Square home, Weiner grew irate and offered up a bizarre conspiracy theory — that he had been framed by Rupert Murdoch, CEO of The Post’s parent company, News Corp.
“It was set up by you guys, obviously,” he told The Post as he clutched a Louis Vuitton bag in one hand and his son in the other. “It was totally busted, as well.”
“Another Murdoch setup!” he railed, as his wife walked stone-faced in sunglasses toward a parked Ford Escape SUV.
Asked why he gave his phone number over Twitter, Weiner said, “That was a way to bust you people,” before he got in the SUV and sped off.
The “catfish” insisted he had “no prior contact” with any media outlet about the messages.
“I had no intention of going public and just wanted to keep this a fun party story until I saw yesterday’s story [that] Weiner is up to his same old antics,” the “catfish” told The Post. “At the end of the day, he initiated the discussion and invited someone he believed to be a 20-something-year-old college female to his hotel room.”
Weiner insisted Saturday that he never sexted with the enemy.
“Are you asking me if I met with people while I worked at a government-relations/p.r. company?” he wrote in an emailed response. “Of course, I did. I even met with New York Post reporters I’m sure.”
“My job was to buy people lunches and drinks etc.”
Earlier, he tried to get a rise out of Twitter over his shenanigans.
“How the hell is #MongooseVersusRupert’sCatfish not trending?” Weiner tweeted.