It is what it is, get busy. Donate if you can. Phone from home.
And for the love of something, start spamming facebook, twitter, comment sections on articles, youtube videos, call radio talk shows in NH, lets go!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You can condense the following to something like:
Huntsman drastically increased spending after saying he wouldn’t. He supported both TARP and the stimulus. Threatened his state with a health care mandate. Flip flopped on cap and trade. Tried to create a state level Fannie Mae Freddie Mac in the Utah Housing Corp.
Wrote letters of appreciation to both Obama and Clinton...
Anyone being bankrolled by the Rothschilds cant be good for America.
As Governor, Huntsman has written what can only be described as “over-the-top Love Letters” to President Obama and former President Bill Clinton in 2009. “You are a remarkable leader…and it has been a great honor getting to know you,” Huntsman wrote to President Obama. “I have enormous regard for your experience, sense of history and brilliant analysis of world events. Please save some time for me when I’m next in New York,”
Huntsman wrote to former President Clinton. “I must report that Sec. Clinton has won the hearts and minds of the State Dept. bureaucracy — no easy task. And after watching her in action, I can see why. She is well-read, hard working, personable and has even more charisma than her husband! It’s an honor to work with her.”
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Huntsman’s proposed a cigarette tax hike from $0.70 to $3.00 per pack in order to balance the budget.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As a candidate for Governor, Jon Huntsman wrote that he believed that “government has grown too quickly…for example, over the past decade government spending has exceeded both inflation and population growth.” Candidate Huntsman proposed a spending cap “by constitutional amendment or otherwise”.
After taking office, Huntsman “proposed an annual average hike in spending of close to six percent in real per capita terms, which substantially outstrips personal income growth in Utah, and makes him one of the biggest spending Governors in the nation.”
By the end of 2006, Governor Huntsman had proposed the largest budget in state history.
In 2007, Governor Huntsman and the Utah Legislature took $1.75 billion in unexpected surpluses and tax revenue and dramatically increased state spending. Overall state spending increased by 17% for the year. Bob Bernick Jr. of the Deseret Morning News noted that if one were to add state funds spent from the previous fiscal year to the following year, then state government spending increased 35.6%. “Think about that for a moment,” he wrote. “State government has grown by more than ONE-THIRD in just two years.”
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2008, Governor Huntsman “announced a plan in his state budget proposal that would include $400 million in bond funding through the Utah Housing Corp. to buy mortgage-backed securities from Utah lenders.” The President of the Utah Housing Corporation at the time described the plan, which would “…essentially have the agency acting as the state's version of Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.”
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Governor Huntsman said in 2009 that President Obama’s failed “stimulus”
spending bill didn’t spend enough – it should have been a trillion dollars. Governor Huntsman also stated that “if I were in Congress,
I probably would not have voted in favor because it didn't have enough stimulus and probably wasn't big enough to begin with.”
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Huntsman was also unequivocal in his backing of the Wall Street Bailout, or TARP, saying in a 2008 debate with his Democratic opponent that, “Do we need a rescue package? Do we need the federal government to backstop to the tune of $700 billion? I don't think there's any way around it. Congress is going to have to step in and do something.”
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Huntsman said “health care is a right,” and he once threatened insurance companies in Utah with adding mandates if they did not reduce the price of health insurance, saying that after a year of asking “If that doesn't work, then I think we're looking very realistically at an individual mandate in getting us to where I think we need to be.”
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Governor Huntsman has flip-flopped on cap and trade, stating on record supporting cap and trade. For example, Governor Huntsman was one of only two Republican Governors (the other was Arnold Schwarzenegger) to sign onto the Western Climate Initiative, which “is an alliance of states and provinces along the western edge of North America seeking to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and lay the groundwork for a regional cap and trade system.”
He defended cap-and-trade during a 2008 debate against his Democratic opponent as well, saying, “I do know this, whoever is elected on November 4th is going to move forward with a cap-and-trade program, and I think it’s better for us to be there early on with a model that works for coal-rich states as opposed to having something foisted upon us from those who don’t quite understand the economics.”
Since returning to the United States from China, Governor Huntsman has said that cap-and-trade “hasn’t worked.”
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Governor Huntsman created a “minimum wage working group” in 2005 and after the working group detailed its findings, namely that increasing the minimum wage would increase the salaries of minimum wage workers (and result in higher costs for small businesses), Governor Huntsman lobbied Utah’s Congressional delegation to urge them to support a federal minimum wage increase.