The White House said Monday that US ambassador to China Jon Huntsman will soon resign, amid reports he may mount a bid for the Republican nomination to take on President Barack Obama in 2012.
Huntsman, a smooth, former Utah governor, told several people in the White House that he planned to leave Beijing in the first part of this year, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said.
But he sidestepped questions about Huntsman's political intentions, as anticipation builds for Obama's reelection bid and several prominent Republicans take soundings over their chances.
"I have talked to several people in the building, I have not heard anybody say that they know what the future holds for Ambassador Huntsman," Gibbs said.
Obama's 2009 pick of Huntsman to serve in the crucial Beijing post was seen as a political masterstroke, potentially taking one possible rival out of the game in the upcoming presidential election.
But Huntsman stirred 2012 buzz with a Newsweek interview late last year in which he suggested he had one political run left in him, and after buying a new home in Washington,
Huntsman, the son of a chemical billionaire, would be able to inject his own cash into an effort to explore his prospects in the crowded field of presumed Republican contenders for the presidential nomination.
He would bring solid foreign policy and economic credentials to the table, after two years steering perhaps the most important, and often troubled, US diplomatic relationship.
But many commentators believe that his service as a member of Obama's government will prove a huge liability in wooing the conservative voters who dominate the Republican Party nominating process.
And some of his more centrist positions on issues like climate change and immigration may also prove problematic in the Republican primary. Others commentators believe his Mormon faith could irk evangelical Christian voters who comprise a key part of the Republican party base vote.
Obama made a tongue-in-cheek reference to Huntsman's prospects when he was asked about his envoy's political intentions during a White House press conference with Chinese President Hu Jintao earlier this month.
He said Huntsman had done an "outstanding job" as ambassador to China and shown enormous skill, dedication and talent.
"I'm sure he will be very successful in whatever endeavors he chooses in the future, and I'm sure that him having worked so well with me will be a great asset in any Republican primary."
Huntsman learned Mandarin Chinese when he served on a Mormon mission in Taiwan.
He has been seen as a moderate voice in the Republican Party and was a popular governor — he gained 70 percent of the vote in November 2008 for a second term as Utah's governor.
Huntsman served as Bush's deputy US trade representative and negotiated several agreements with China.
He and his wife Mary Kaye have seven children, including two daughters adopted from China and India.
Share This Article With Planet Earth