Jon Huntsman

Politician

Jon Huntsman was born in Palo Alto, California, United States on March 26th, 1960 and is the Politician. At the age of 64, Jon Huntsman biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
March 26, 1960
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Palo Alto, California, United States
Age
64 years old
Zodiac Sign
Aries
Networth
$950 Million
Profession
Diplomat, Missionary, Politician
Jon Huntsman Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 64 years old, Jon Huntsman physical status not available right now. We will update Jon Huntsman's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

Height
Not Available
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Jon Huntsman Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
University of Pennsylvania (BA)
Jon Huntsman Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Mary Cooper ​(m. 1983)​
Children
7, including Abby
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Jon Huntsman Sr. (father), Karen Haight (mother)
Siblings
Peter R. Huntsman (brother)
Jon Huntsman Career

Political career

Henry Kissinger, a young Huntsman who served as his father's special assistant to the president in 1971, told the 11-year-old that he was secretly heading to China. In 1983, he served as a White House staff assistant in President Ronald Reagan's administration. Huntsman and his family lived and worked in Taipei, Taiwan, from 1987 to 1988. He was a state delegate at the 1988 Republican National Convention in 1988.

Huntsman, deputy assistant secretary in the International Trade Administration from 1989 to 1990 under President George H. Bush, was deputy assistant secretary in the International Trade Administration from 1989 to 1990. He served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Commerce for East Asia and Pacific Affairs from 1990 to 1991. Bush nominated Huntsman to serve as the US ambassador to Singapore in June 1992, which was unanimously confirmed by the US Senate in August. He was the youngest U.S. citizen at 32 years old at 32 years old. Ambassador Has been in office for more than 100 years.

The Washington Post announced in January 2001 that Huntsman may have been nominated to be the United States Ambassador to China, which is a major change since George W. Bush took power as president. He reportedly declined the nomination to be the United States in March. Ambassador to Indonesia. Huntsman was appointed by President Bush on March 28 as one of two Deputy United States trade representatives in his administration; he served in that position from 2001 to 2003.

Huntsman resigned from his post in the Bush administration in March 2003. Governor Mike Leavitt, a three-term incumbent governor who Huntsman largely supports, has decided not to run for re-election in order to become Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency in the Bush Administration in mid-August. Huntsman became governor of Utah shortly after. Huntsman defeated state Representative Nolan Karras 66–34% in the Republican primary in June 2004. Huntsman was elected with 58% of the vote in November 2004, defeating Democratic Party nominee Scott Matheson Jr. Huntsman re-election with 77% of the vote in 2008, defeating Democratic nominee Bob Springmeyer.

Huntsman maintained high approval ratings as governor of Utah, with 90% approval at times. He left office with over 80% approval ratings. The Pew Center in the United States selected Utah as the best managed state on the nation. Utah was also rated as the best-three states to do business in following his tenure as governor. Huntsman's overall fiscal policy rating was given a "B" in the 2006 Cato Institute report; the institute gave him a "A" on tax policy and a "F" on spending policy.

During Huntsman's tenure, Utah was either the top-ranked state or fourth-ranked state for job growth during the time, with a rate of either 5.9% or 4.8 percent between 2005 and 2009.

According to the Utah Taxpayers Association, "tax cuts from 2005 to 2007 totaled $407 million." Huntsman suggested that the corporate franchise levy for small businesses earning less than $5 million be eliminated. During his tenure as governor, he was able to convince Utah to remove its progressive income tax at a 7% rate, with a flat rate of 5%; and increase motor vehicle registration fees from 4.7 percent to 1.7 percent. He suggested a 400 percent increase in cigarette sales, but the initiative was never signed into law. He has consistently suggested tax credits for families buying their own health care, as well as income tax credits for building improvements and solar projects.

During Huntsman's administration, the state budget grew from $8.28 to 11.57 billion.

Huntsman favored cap and trade policies, and as governor, he signed the Western Climate Initiative. He also favors a raise in the federal minimum wage. He also lowered some rules, including Utah's very stringent alcohol laws. He signed the Parent Choice in Education Act in 2007, which he described as "the first school-voucher bill to date in the United States." Scholarships are available from $500 to $3000 to assist parents to the private school of their choice. All current public school students, as well as some children who were still in private school, were welcome to the program. In a public referendum, the voucher law was later repealed.

Huntsman was one of John McCain's first supporters in his 2008 presidential bid. Huntsman worked with McCain in New Hampshire and other early primary states and then accompanied him to Iraq twice, most notably over Thanksgiving. Huntsman delivered a nominating address for Alaska Governor Terry Jones at the 2008 Republican National Convention. Sarah Palin, the party's vice president, is the party's nominee for vice president. Huntsman also raised more than $500,000 for McCain's 2008 presidential bid. Huntsman later reported that "We're certainly staring down a population shift we've never seen before in America."

On May 16, 2009, President Barack Obama nominated Jon Huntsman to serve as the United States Ambassador to China, citing his work in the region and his proficiency in Mandarin Chinese. His nomination was officially submitted to the Senate on July 6, 2009, and he appeared before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on July 23, 2009, which favorably announced his nomination to the full Senate on August 4, 2009. Huntsman and his formally resigned as governor of Utah on August 7, 2009, and the Senate unanimously confirmed Huntsman as ambassador to China on August 11, 2009. Huntsman arrived in Beijing on August 21, 2009, to begin his duties, and he spoke at his first press conference on August 22 after a meeting with Commerce Minister Chen Deming.

Huntsman made a controversial appearance at the site of a planned pro-democracy demonstration in Beijing in February 2011. Huntsman was unaware of the planned protest but happened to be strolling through the city on a family outing, according to the spokesman for the US Embassy in China.

Huntsman resigned from his position as ambassador on April 30, 2011, in order to return to the United States to investigate a 2012 presidential bid.

Huntsman's name appeared on lists of potential Republican nominees for the 2012 presidential election as early as 2008 and 2009, and John McCain specifically mentioned Huntsman as a potential candidate in the 2012 election.

Horizon PAC, a group of political strategists close to Huntsman, formed a political action committee in August 2010. Horizon PAC's official website debuted on February 22, 2011, saying that it "supports free-market principles, principled leadership, and a dedication to long-term solutions."

Huntsman resigned from his position as president of the United States on January 31, 2011. Starting April 30, 2011, the Ambassador to China announced that he intends to return to the United States at that time. Huntsman's associates said he was likely to investigate a 2012 Republican presidential bid.

He established a formal fundraising political action committee on May 3, 2011, building on the previous establishment of Horizon PAC's efforts. Huntsman's 2012 national campaign headquarters in Orlando, Florida, opened on May 18, 2011. Huntsman officially entered the Republican presidential nomination on June 21, 2011 in a speech at Liberty State Park in New Jersey, with the Statue of Liberty in the background—the same site where Ronald Reagan's campaign began in 1980.

Huntsman tried to establish himself as an anti-negative candidate by taking the "high road." "I don't think you have to run down someone's name in order to run for president in this campaign," Trump said in his oppinion. Huntsman marketed himself as a fiscal conservative, promising significant employment and personal tax cuts as well as a foreign policy moderate, calling for a decrease in defense spending and withdrawal from Afghanistan, while increasing tensions regarding Iran and support for Israel are evident.

Huntsman concentrated his energies and funds on the New Hampshire primary. He postponed the Republican presidential debate in Las Vegas on October 18, 2011 out of deference to New Hampshire, which was locked in a political contest with Nevada. Huntsman's campaign came to an end on January 16, 2012, when he finished third in New Hampshire and announced the end of his campaign. At the time, Mitt Romney endorsed Mitt Romney.

Huntsman suggested that there is a need for a third party in America, saying that "the true problems [were] not being addressed, and that a new one is being introduced," a month after being dropped out of the 2012 race. Huntsman confirmed that he would not run as a third-party presidential candidate in 2012. Huntsman declared in early July that he would not attend the 2012 Republican National Convention for the first time since being a Reagan delegate in 1984; he said he would not attend this year's convention, nor any Republican convention in the future until the party focuses on a bigger, bolder, more secure future for the United States, which is every bit as destructive as our fiscal and economic deficits.

I'm a student at the University of On the day after Obama was re-elected as president, Obama's campaign manager Jim Messina suggested that Huntsman would have been a particularly difficult candidate to face in the general election. Messina said that the campaign was "honest about our suspicions about Huntsman" and that Huntsman "would have been a tyrant."

Huntsman was appointed chairman of the Atlantic Council's Atlantic Council in January 2014. Huntsman said in a talk with Politico that he would not run in the 2016 presidential election.

Huntsman first endorsed Republican nominee Donald Trump in April 2016, but later withdrew his support for Trump after the Access Hollywood scandal. However, Huntsman later defended Trump in FOX News and The New York Times after Trump was chastised for receiving a congratulatory phone call with Taiwan's president, Tsai Ing-wen during his transition process. Huntsman said the detractors were overreacting to Trump's call and that his unconventional style might be a sign of a change in Asia relations in the future talks with China.

Huntsman said in November 2016 that he was considering a bid for the US Senate in 2018, but ultimately decided not to run for the office.

Huntsman and Dennis C. Blair were co-chairs of the Commission on American Intellectual Property Theft of American Intellectual Property. The commission is a nonpartisan and bipartisan commission of both public and private sectors. Its goal is to identify and assess the extent of international intellectual property theft, particularly by China, and suggest appropriate legislative responses. According to the commission's review, the United States has lost up to $600 billion in illicit technology transfers to China.

According to Huntsman,

Huntsman was under scrutiny by Donald Trump and the Trump transition team as a potential candidate for United States Secretary of State in 2017, but Rex Tillerson was announced ten days later on December 3, 2016.

Huntsman assumed the post of US Ambassador to Russia on March 8, 2017. Huntsman said, "There is no doubt that the Russian Government meddled in the 2016 election." "The relationship between the two countries is also one of the most influential and difficult foreign policy challenges we face," he said. Huntsman was unanimously confirmed by the Senate on September 28, 2017, by a voice vote.

Huntsman said he had access to senior Russian officials, although this was not the case when he was ambassador to China. "Any new government has attempted to rewrite or redo of some sort in the years past," Trump said, quoting "past mistakes" in the relationship. (...) Let's not repeat the cycles of the past because (...) those resets could not be sustained. Let's not even start with that thought in mind; there are no resets, no redos, and no redos. "Because it is crystal-eyed and realistically," the relationship is left as it is.

Huntsman resigned as a United States citizen. Ambassador to Russia to President Trump on August 6, 2019, with his resignation taking effect on October 3, 2019. Bartle B. Gorman, deputy ambassodor to Russia, served as the ambassador to Russia after Huntsman left office. (until John J. Sullivan's arrival as the new ambassador) (until he arrives).

Many speculated that Huntsman was considering another bid for governor of Utah following his resignation as the US ambassador to Russia in August 2019. Huntsman emerged as a favorite among several potential gubernatorial candidates in a October 2019 poll.

Huntsman declared on KSL Radio that he will run for governor of Utah in the 2020 election on November 14, 2019. Huntsman's campaign raised $520,000 and visited all 29 Utah counties in the six weeks between Huntsman's announcement and the end of 2019.

Abby Huntsman, his daughter, announced in January 2020 that she would leave The View to join his gubernatorial campaign as a senior advisor. Huntsman revealed on February 7, 2020, Provo city mayor Michelle Kaufusi would be his gubernatorial gubernatorial mate. Huntsman led the campaign with 32% support, while 31% remained undecided in a poll conducted among likely voters in February. However, Lt. Governor Spencer Cox won the primary by 36.4% over Huntsman's 36.6%.

Business career

Huntsman served as an executive for the Huntsman Corporation, chairman of the Huntsman Cancer Foundation, and CEO of Huntsman Family Holdings Company from 1993 to 2001.

Huntsman Cancer Institute Chief Rabbi Howard said in January 2012 that Huntsman had been named chairman after replacing his father, who founded the institute.

Huntsman was elected to the Ford Motor Co. board of directors in February 2012. Ford's executive chairman, William Clay Ford Jr., was praised for Huntsman's global knowledge and experience, particularly in Asia, as well as his tenure as the governor of Utah. In April 2012, Huntsman was admitted to the board of Caterpillar Inc.

Huntsman served on the board of directors of Chevron Corporation from 2014 to 2017, as well as from September 2020.

Huntsman is a founding member of the Pacific Council on International Policy and has served on the boards of the Brookings Institution, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, the Asia Society in New York, and the National Bureau of Asian Research.

Source

Is secretive faith a time of reckoning as Mormon churches face a SIXTH lawsuit alleging fraudulently misappropriated member donations?

www.dailymail.co.uk, February 18, 2024
A slew of lawsuits alleging that the Mormon church has mispent millions of dollars of members' money. The flurry of allegations was triggered by James Huntsman (top right), son of Mormon billionaire Jon Huntsman, who is suing the church for $5 million, which he claims he gave the church the money under false pretenses. The latest, filed by a California couple (bottom right) who have been active in the church for more than 50 years, says that Salt Lake City's leaders have come to 'face a day of reckoning.' So, could it be judgment day for the secretive Utah-based religion?

In the new backlash against college's reaction to Hamas' terror attack against Israel, the ex-Tinder CEO pulls out of his speaking engagement at UPenn, branding it a 'anti-Semitic cesspool.'

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 19, 2023
Ellie Seidman, pictured left, has joined a growing list of wealthy and influential individuals, including former US presidential candidate Jon Huntsman, who is outraged by the University of Pennsylvania's behavior following the Hamas attacks on Israel. Several anti-Israel demonstrations have been organized since the start of the conflict. Seidman, the school's former CEO, had to cancel a speaking engagement dubbed a "anti-Semitic cesspool."

JOSH HAMMER: Defund the vile, brainwashing universities! Any longer can't get enough of wake-hating academia. Move your tuition money elsewhere... and do it now

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 17, 2023
These are some of the country's most prestigious universities, including Harvard, Cornell, Columbia. Nevertheless, Jew-hatred, the world's oldest and presumably most politically correct model of bigotry, now dominates faculty lounges and campus quads. As the new symbol of fashionable radicalism, the Hamas paraglider has replaced Che Guevara or Angela Davis. This is extremely risky. The future leaders of America are being taught the vilest filth, and the adults in charge of ensuring this are kept and condoning it as they pocket tuition funds and alumni contributions. If you can get in on it, it's a rat. Thankfully, market forces have begun to push back against all the cowardice and moral idiocy. Former Utah governor and major funder Jon Huntsman, Jr., has announced that he no longer contributes at the University of Pennsylvania. Ordinary people must take the example of these great entrepreneurs and philanthropists.