Keene Sentinel [Keene, NH]

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Jon Huntsman

Most Americans look for pretty much the same basic attributes in their political leaders: intelligence, self-assurance, imagination, personal integrity, competency, independence from seen and unseen forces, and a listening ear.

Some of the candidates for the Republican presidential nomination in 2012 have some of those qualities, but none more so than Jon Huntsman.

His principal qualifying distinctions include a boldness in economic policy that belies his temperate personal demeanor and a belief that the country’s divisions cannot be closed by bulldozers moving in only one direction. His appeal is enhanced by hands-on experience in international affairs, principally involving China, that’s entirely lacking in every other Republican whose name will be on the presidential primary ballot on Jan. 10.

For these and other reasons, the former Utah governor and ambassador merits support from Republicans and independents voting in the Republican primary — this in a state that is more libertarian than conservative, more open-minded than ideological and more tolerant than mean.

On matters of national policy, Huntsman can’t easily be pigeon-holed. His wide-ranging tax reform plan, including a ridding of loopholes and other special treatments in favor of lower overall tax rates, won plaudits from The Wall Street Journal. His belief that banks should be limited in size should appeal to Wall Street occupiers, among other interests. His commitment to means-test Social Security and Medicare meets the demands of a bipartisan deficit-reduction commission last year. And his support of government spending controls should interest tea party activists.

Meanwhile, he supports compassionate and wise reforms of immigration policy: While backing border controls, he also endorsed the DREAM Act to grant a path to citizenship for undocumented young people brought to the United States by their parents. In education, he says he would work to expand public schooling options, raise standards of early-childhood education and encourage better pay for teachers; some of his competitors focus only on abolishing the federal Department of Education.

By any measure, Huntsman is conservative, but he demonstrates a constructive capacity for flexibility and nuance. Unlike most other major candidates, he refuses to sign pledges that would rigidly commit himself to absolutist policy. His position on abortion — he’s against it, but would allow for exceptions in cases of rape, incest or the necessity to save the life of the mother — lines up with general public inclinations. He also endorses civil unions, a social reform that most Americans have come to understand won’t destroy the country.

To be sure, there are areas where Huntsman’s flexibility is not all that reassuring. For example, he once backed the idea of requiring everyone to have health insurance — a key feature of the current health care reform law — but no longer feels that way. In that conclusion he is no different from his Republican competitors.

But he is different in other ways. He stands apart from those whose approach to the fastest growing economic power in the world — China — is strictly punitive. He, instead, would use his vast knowledge of that country and its leaders to try to win concessions, avoid trade wars and build productive relations.

And his record as Utah governor proves that he is capable of working with political opposites, which is critical in a time of intractable political and ideological gridlock..

In all this, Jon Huntsman stands above his competitors for the nod to face Barack Obama next November, and merits a good look by voters tired of the GOP’s campaign follies so far.


Copyright © 2011 Keene Sentinel, all rights reserved.  Reprinted by permission of Jim Rousmaniere, Dec. 23, 2011 email.



NOTES: The ed. board consists of Tom Ewing (publisher and owner), Jim Rousmaniere (editor and president) and Paul Miller (managing editor).  Jim Rousmaniere provided the following observations in his Dec. 23 email: 

>Which of the candidates did you meet with? 

WE CONDUCTED FULL-HOUR VIDEOTAPED INTERVIEWS WITH: JON HUNTSMAN (10/12), RON PAUL (11/21), BUDDY ROEMER (9/29) AND FRED KARGER (12/1). INVITATIONS FOR SUCH EXTENDED INTERVIEWS WERE ISSUED TO OTHER CANDIDATES, SOME OF WHOM EXPRESSED INTEREST BUT WHO ULTIMATELY DID NOT SCHEDULE INTERVIEWS. THIS REPRESENTED A BREAK FROM THE PAST, WHEN MOST MAJOR CANDIDATES SAT FOR INTERVIEWS.


>Timing of the endorsement? 

WE WANTED TO EXPRESS OUR THOUGHTS BEFORE THE HOLIDAY RUSH.


>Was there anything different about your endorsement process than in past cycles?

OTHER THAN THE FACT THAT WE DID NOT FORMALLY INTERVIEW SOME MAJOR CANDIDATES, THERE WAS NOTHING MARKEDLY DIFFERENT ABOUT THIS ROUND; WE HAD SUFFICIENT EXPOSURE TO ALL OTHER CANDIDATES THROUGH OTHER MEANS.  


>And do you have any other observations on your endorsement?  

THIS PARTICULAR  ENDORSEMENT EDITORIAL WAS UNUSUAL IN THAT IT DID NOT MENTION BY NAME ANY OF THE OTHER REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES, WHICH CAN BE TAKEN AS  A REFLECTON ON OUR VIEWS OF THOSE OTHER CANDIDACIES.  THE EDITORIAL ACKNOWLEDGED DIFFERENCES WITH HUNTSMAN, BUT FOCUSED ON THE POSITIVE APPEALS OF HIS CANDIDACY.  AS IS OUR PRACTICE, WE DID NOT COMMENT ON OR CONSIDER  HIS CHANCES AT THE POLLS, AS THEY HAVE BEEN DEFINED BY VARIOUS POLLS; WE FOCUSED INSTEAD ON THE SUBSTANCE OF THE CANDIDATE’S POSITIONS, HIS EXPERIENCE, HIS DEMEANOR THE TONE OF HIS CAMPAIGN AND THE CANDIDATE’S LEADERSHIP POTENTIAL.