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May 18, 2013
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Huntsman: Yes, He MightPosted on Jun 22, 2011Here are the key questions about Jon Huntsman’s presidential candidacy: Is he the American version of David Cameron? And is the Republican Party ready for a Cameron moment? What does a British prime minister have to do with the 2012 Republican primaries? If Huntsman is lucky, quite a lot. The British Conservative Party chose Cameron as its leader in 2005 because it was sick of losing elections and realized it could no longer present itself as an old, cranky, right-wing party. Cameron was Mr. Nice, Mr. Modern, Mr. Moderate and Mr. New. And now he’s in power. The Republican Party needs a Cameron-style correction, and the country needs a less doctrinaire, less extreme and less angry GOP. Huntsman is betting that enough people who vote in the primaries believe this, too. Most striking about his announcement in front of the Statue of Liberty on Tuesday (other than a slew of snafus, including the misspelling of his first name on a batch of press passes) was the extent to which his speech was all about hope and promise. It offered a lot about who Huntsman wants you to think he is and little about what he’d do. With not all that many changes, it could have been a speech delivered by someone announcing a Democratic primary challenge to President Obama. “We have the power, we have the means, we have the character to astonish the world again by making from adversity a new and better country; this inexhaustible land of promise and opportunity,” he declared. “We’re choosing whether we are to be yesterday’s story or tomorrow’s.” Advertisement And it’s a sign of how rancid our politics have become that the biggest “news” in the speech came in these sentences: “And I respect the president of the United States. He and I have a difference of opinion on how to help a 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.” Imagine: It’s borderline-brave for a Republican candidate to declare the president a good American who loves his country. Does the former Utah governor and Obama-appointed ambassador have a chance? If you judged only from what happened in 2010, you’d say no. Moderates seem to have abandoned Republican primaries to the Obama-despising hard right. But this ignores an important fact. In many of the Republican presidential primaries, most notably New Hampshire, the rules allow independents to cast ballots. In other influential states (including, for now, South Carolina) Democrats as well as independents can cross over. In 2008, independents were central to John McCain’s New Hampshire victory over Mitt Romney. Huntsman’s campaign, heavy with former McCain advisers, is counting on history to repeat itself. And independents will play an even larger role in the 2012 Republican contest than they did in 2008, when so many of them were drawn into the Democratic primaries by the lively battle between Obama and Hillary Clinton. There is also this: In the early going, the conservative vote will be split between the right (Romney and Tim Pawlenty) and the far right (Michele Bachmann and the rest of the field). There might be room for a candidate who is a smidgen closer to the center. All of which assumes that Huntsman will run a well-organized campaign, and his opening day troubles raise some doubts. He will not be able to be vague on everything, and already he’s endorsed Paul Ryan’s budget. This may buy him some peace on the right but it’s hardly a moderate’s natural move, and it will force him to answer lots of questions. And if Cameron is Huntsman’s forerunner, it’s worth recalling that the British leader spent several years working out carefully calibrated policies and proposals. Huntsman has most of this work ahead of him, and he’ll be doing it on the run. The British Conservatives lost three elections before they turned to a modernizer. The GOP isn’t nearly as desperate yet. So, yes, Huntsman is a long shot. But he’s the only Republican waging something other than a standard-issue conservative campaign, and the only one directing most of his energies toward voters who don’t take their cues from Fox News and Rush Limbaugh. This will at least earn him attention. It might even win him some votes. E.J. Dionne’s e-mail address is ejdionne(at)washpost.com. Previous item: Commencement Day for a Lost Generation Next item: Bad News for a Country Tired of War New and Improved CommentsIf you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy. |
By Gzoref, June 25, 2011 at 1:29 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
My question is will Huntsman be considered the Moderate Republican? All of the
Report thisother candidates are hopelessly extreme. Will Huntsman be moderate? If so, how
could he possibly get the Republican nomination without the base, which requires
insanity in their candidates.
By Chris Bieber, June 24, 2011 at 12:37 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Yet another Establishment plant….to split the GOP up into weak pieces….and to make sure THEIR candidate(either of the Utah pals would follow orders)wins the primary….and would be a fall back if they take the keys from thier erstwhile and not needed anymore Obama….
Divide and conquer….move the goalposts, change the definition of terms, adopt a “Me Too” toleration of socialism(under the aegis of “moderation”), and stab in the front AND back those of the GOP who DONT want the socialism or the shrill antagonism/cutting out.
Dionne et al is rubbing his hands in glee at the infighting…..so are the BIPARTISAN banksters who win irregardless of “opposite” parties…
Report thisBy tropicgirl, June 23, 2011 at 5:40 pm Link to this comment
EJ—Guess you jumped the gun, my friend. Didn’t see the news tonight that huntsman is a joke?
The only thing that happened here is:
1. Huntsman’s daddy consistently gave Harry Reid a bunch of money.
Why? Because he “thought” he could get something…
2. He got a “campaign” all right. A freak show. Harry Reid and the rest of the world are laughing their butts off…
Wanna give more money, daddy? Remember, there are no more Kennedys, and you are no Kennedy.
Report thisBy sophrosyne, June 23, 2011 at 2:18 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Huntsman is the Social register version of a Republican. But he will have to bow low to israeli interests before he is allowed to be a serious candidate.
Report thisBy TDoff, June 23, 2011 at 1:42 pm Link to this comment
Sounds as though Huntsman is adopting the Obama campaign style, promising ‘Hope and Change’. Could we masses fall for it twice?
Will the Dems adopt a rational approach and dump Obama as the loser he is? But if they do, will their candidate run on a truthful, contrasting approach to Huntsman’s? What could that be?
‘Because of the eight years of The Dummy followed by the last four years of The Shucker and Jiver, we’re F****D, but I’m gonna do the best I can?’
Or does this nation have the time and the will to do the right thing, dump the Gopers/TPers and the Dems, and find an anti-establishment someone to start the recovery process from our current disaster/disgrace/quagmire?
Report thisBy Lew Ciefer, June 23, 2011 at 12:31 pm Link to this comment
Huntsman is Harry Reid’s poodle. Another beta boy DINO plant.
Report thisBy LT, June 23, 2011 at 9:53 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
“His slogan might be: platitudes with a purpose. On the other hand, upbeat rhetoric comes as a relief in a party characterized by ideological rigidity…”
I just might go to Vegas and lay money on him.
Sounds OH SO FAMILIAR…like a former “long shot” candidate.
Hahahahahaha
Report thisBy diamond, June 22, 2011 at 10:24 pm Link to this comment
No, he won’t.
Report this