Bipartisan résumé a primary concern for Huntsman
(CNN) -- He's a motorcycle-riding Mormon who speaks fluent
Mandarin, a soft-spoken father of seven with eclectic political
connections.
Jon Huntsman is a former two-term Republican Utah
governor and former ambassador to China for President Barack Obama, whom
he once described as a remarkable leader.
Therein lies a primary problem.
"I
think the problem isn't so much that he served as ambassador but that
he just gushed over policies that made no sense," said former New
Hampshire Gov. John H. Sununu, who has been supportive of former
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney's campaign.
As Huntsman officially launches his campaign, his former colleagues on Team Obama want to hug him to death.
"When
we were in Shanghai, we got a chance to talk and he was very effusive
-- this was in the fall of 2009 (during Obama's visit to China) -- about
what the president was doing," said David Axelrod, Obama's top
political consultant. "He was encouraging on health care; he was
encouraging on the whole range of issues."
In an interview last week, Huntsman said Obama has "failed on the economic front."
Axelrod said that conflicts with what he heard from Huntsman in 2009.
"And
if he had suggestions on the economy, he had an excellent opportunity
to suggest them, where we were all together in China," Axelrod said. "I
think that what has changed is not his view of the economy but his view
of his own chances to, perhaps, win the nomination. And I understand --
that's politics. He's a politician and he sees an opportunity."
Huntsman
addressed his Obama connection in his announcement Tuesday, saying of
the president, "He and I have a difference of opinion on how to help the
country we both love. But the question each of us wants the voters to
answer is who will be the better president, not who's the better
American."
Democrats in Utah say Huntsman has been changing his positions in the days leading up to his announcement.
"Huntsman's
changed positions so quickly over the past few days it's enough to give
Utah voters whiplash," state party chairman Wayne Holland said.
But a Huntsman spokesman called Holland's comments "distortions."
"Governor
Huntsman led Utah as an economic conservative, cutting taxes, balancing
budgets, and passing free market health care reforms without a mandate.
That is the record he will run on," spokesman Tim Miller said.
More
than 70% of the country doesn't know enough about Huntsman to know
whether they like him. In a CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll last week,
he registered support from 1% of Republicans or GOP-leaning
independents.
But he did score a second-place finish in a straw
poll at the Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans last
weekend. While Huntsman was a last-minute cancellation because of a
cold, his wife Mary Kaye and several of his advisers did make the
rounds.
Huntsman made his announcement at Liberty State Park in
New Jersey on Tuesday in the shadow of the Statue of Liberty, where
Ronald Reagan launched his presidential campaign in 1980.
A
former staff assistant in the Reagan White House, Huntsman said of his
former boss, "He assured us we could make America great again, and under
his leadership we did."
Huntsman planned to immediately head to
New Hampshire, where the first primary of the 2012 campaign will be
held. He will follow that with stops in the early primary states of
South Carolina, Florida and Nevada, before making a stop in his home
state.
Absent from that itinerary is Iowa, whose caucus follows
New Hampshire's primary. Huntsman doesn't plan to compete there because
he has opposed subsidies for corn-based ethanol, an unpopular position
in that corn-producing state.
Huntsman, 51, is the son of an industrialist who invented the
clam-shell Styrofoam box for the McDonald's Big Mac. Two of his children
are adopted, one from China and one from India.
He served a
two-year Mormon mission to Taiwan, where he acquired the language skills
that would serve him in his future diplomatic career and in business as
the family business expanded into Chinese markets.
His résumé
contains a number of government and political jobs. In addition to the
Reagan White House job, Huntsman interned for Republican Sen. Orrin
Hatch of Utah.
After a six-year stint in the family business,
Huntsman served as a deputy assistant secretary for trade and
development. He was ambassador to Singapore under the presidency of
George H.W. Bush.
He served as a deputy U.S. trade representative
for President George W. Bush, before being elected governor in 2004.
Huntsman was a national co-chairman for Sen. John McCain's 2008
presidential bid against Obama.
After being elected to a second
term as Utah's governor, Huntsman resigned to become Obama's ambassador
to China in 2009. He resigned from that post this year.
Huntsman
entertained, but ultimately did not enact, the idea of mandated health
care insurance in Utah; thinks the United States ought to get out of
Afghanistan; believes in the science of climate change; and favors civil
unions for same-sex couples.
"Will some people hold that against
me? It's OK -- you've got to be who you are and march forward," he
said. "Some people will like it. And I believe that in the end people
will look at the totality of what it is you stand for, the totality of
what you've done, and then make an informed decision."
Party
leaders have advised the rank and file to promote a candidate who can
win the 2012 election rather than focus on ideology. Mississippi Gov.
Haley Barbour, a respected party elder and political tactician, told the
New Orleans conference that "purity is a loser" in politics.
He
urged Republican voters to concentrate on a pocketbook-oriented economic
message and to pick a candidate who offers "plain-spoken, common-sense
solutions" instead of an ideology-driven agenda.
"We
are not going to have a perfect candidate," Barbour said. "There has
only been one perfect person that has ever walked on this Earth, and
there's not going to be one who runs for president in 2012."
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