About former Utah governor and obvious presidential aspirant Jon
Huntsman, Jennifer Rubin
asks “Why is Huntsman running for President?” citing among a
few examples:
He also earned kudos from environmentalist groups like the
Sierra Club for joining the Western Climate Initiative — a move
that outraged some Republicans in the state’s Legislature and
prompted a resolution condemning the impact it might have on small
businesses.
Here’s my take on that. In October of (I think) 2007 I was asked
to share a stage at the Utah Farm Bureau’s annual meeting with
Huntsman’s ‘climate’ advisor. He, and she, were indeed dogmatists
on the issue and the agenda. The governor had been refusing to even
meet with UFB on his climate policy which, as elsewhere if not more
so, was a mishmash of left-wing wish-list items (which is also why
the left pushes the ‘climate’ excuse so hard…that’s all it is,
the latest excuse; it certainly isn’t about climate since no one
actually claims their schemes would detectably impact the
climate).
Huntsman had ridden headlines like one I was handed when I
arrived which had run a few months before that event, the
print edition of which read something like “Utah warming
second-fastest on earth.” And he participated in
creating others. And
others still. And
bringing in the fox to guard the economic henhouse… and even
going activist afterward to boast of it. All like
Tim Pawlenty, among others, also did in presumably burnishing
his ‘green’ chops for a future run.
Not real great. But, hey, if Newt can overcome sitting on that
couch with Pelosi… If.
Speaking afer the advisor I showed slides with snaps posted at
the invaluable www.SurfaceStations.org revealing that Utah’s
warming just might have something to do with moving their
surface-based thermometers to parking lots. Among other points.
By coincidence or not, finally, the next day, the
governor changed course and called the Farm Bureau in to
speak. He remained bad on the policy, however. So he got slapped
down by his legislature.
Rubin opines that Mr. Huntsman is sort of like John McCain
without the war record, all the way down to numerous personnel
hires. You might (not) be surprised to learn that his
chief advisor (that’s a 2009 article, but it’s
still the case) happens to be the longtime chief advisor for
the last Republican nominee, who dogmatically and often quite
nastily pushed his global warming orthodoxy on Americans. So
speaking of vehicles, the global warming movement seems to have
found its new Republican host organism pretty quickly after the
whole 2008 unpleasantness.
This sequence explains a lot about Mr. Huntsman, in my mind. And
about his candidacy. In a way, he already lost to Obama in
2008. Let’s move on.
Floyd Looney | 3.25.11 @ 9:43AM
I think he is Obama's poodle
David T| 3.25.11 @ 11:23AM
You need to apologize to Obama's poodle.
Bill Hussein O'Stalin| 3.25.11 @ 10:15AM
The lecherous tentacles of the climate change crowd are deep and wide.
John - TMF| 3.25.11 @ 10:23AM
Yeah... that's the ticket... Pawlenty/Huntsman... that'll scare the Dems... [you can hear the snickering starting to boil into a full fledged snorting chortle...]
Sounds like tasteless cornmeal mush with ketchup.
The Dems are quaking in their Birkenstocks.
We have to do much better... much better.
r/John - TMF
gsr| 3.25.11 @ 10:51AM
Huntsman, puh-leaze. Not even worth discussing.
Grzmlyk| 3.25.11 @ 11:35AM
NO to Huntsman. Throw him on the "broken toy" pile with Pawlenty, Jeb Bush, Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee and many others.
And no, Newt will NEVER atone for that appearance with Pelosi on the couch. He revealed himself (yet again) for what he is: A political opportunist with absolutely no internal gyroscope that points him toward conservatism. A leader of a conservative movement? As Daffy Duck says, "it is to laugh."
Gingrich is like a sligtly more savvy version of Donald Trump - 99% is about hawking the Brand, 1% is about substance.
Gingrich is like Coca Cola - once you get past the advertising and the packaging, what you have is flavored water that goes flat.
The guy would turn left so fast after he was sworn in it would give us all whiplash.
somnolence| 3.25.11 @ 11:35AM
I'm waxing nostalgic for the good old days when I envisioned a ticket of Dornan/Keyes. Alas, where did they go?
NoLib| 3.25.11 @ 1:01PM
Dornan got ACORNED, and I'm not sure what the story is on Alan Keyes.
somnolence| 3.25.11 @ 1:51PM
I agree with you on the ACORN maneuvering against Dornan, but he was also the recipient of many knives in his own party which didn't have the cajones to take out Bubba. I have seldom seen a more shameful spectacle in which the GOP hierarchy surely had a part when Keyes was handcuffed and told he couldn't debate. The GOP hierarchy also didn't go out of its way to help Quayle when he ran in 2000. Those "little" things stick in my mind until this day. And we all know that McCain was the MSM favorite Republican for at least a decade before he was the nominee, and we know why.