At the end of the New York Times blog post that first reported Jon Huntsman would be dropping out of the presidential race today, there’s an interesting bit of analysis explaining why the former governor of Utah never caught fire within the Republican field:
But his moderate positions and understated style never seemed right in an angry year of disaffection. He struggled for poll ratings and money, and was not expected to make a great showing in his weeks campaign financial filings.
An “angry year of disaffection”? Perhaps in the minds of Times reporters. When I interviewed him in December, Huntsman offered his own theory:
The best explanation, however, may be found in Andrew Ferguson’s profile of the soon-to-be-erstwhile candidate:
Huntsman seems to have missed something big in the landslides of 2010. The reason for his Rip Van Winkle aura, to use still another metaphor, is that Huntsman spent most of the Obama administration out of the country. Just as Huntsman was strapping on his rethinking cap, in the spring of 2009, President Obama appointed him ambassador to China, an offer he accepted without failing to note that this act of bipartisanship was just the kind of thing the American people hungered for from their leaders. He hand wrote a polite thank you note to President Obama, calling him a “remarkable leader”—which is not the kind of thing the Republican people hunger for from their presidential candidates.
