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Jon Huntsman Expressed Support For Individual Mandate In 2007 Interview

Huntsman

First Posted: 06/17/11 06:24 PM ET Updated: 08/17/11 06:12 AM ET

WASHINGTON--For weeks, The Huffington Post has chronicled the various ways in which GOP presidential contender Jon Huntsman once supported an individual mandate as part of Utah's health-care reform.

In 2004, during his successful campaign for governor, Huntsman promised to reform Utah's health care system. He vowed to fix a system that had left hundreds of thousands of Utah residents without health insurance, even telling the incoming executive director of Utah's Department of Health that his goal was to insure everyone. During his first term, Huntsman became smitten with Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney's Health Connector plan, which included a mandate.

Huntsman and his administration went on to support a 2007 United Way of Salt Lake City plan which called for a mandate. That same year, his cabinet and others pushed draft legislation that mirrored the Massachusetts model and the United Way plan and included a mandate. When the Utah legislature balked at such a mandate, it was taken off the table. Instead, in 2008, Huntsman passed a reform bill that established a health care exchange for small businesses known as the Utah Health Exchange that left uninsured individuals unaddressed.

Throughout our reporting, Huntsman and his campaign have denied that the then-Governor ever supported a mandate.

Now comes blogger Morgen Richmond, who has unearthed a 2007 documentary project on health care reform in Utah. Huntsman is interviewed for the project; in it, he is perfectly clear about where he comes down on the mandate issue:

I mentioned yesterday to somebody asking a question that I wouldn’t shy away from mandates. I think if you’re going to get it done and get it done right, [a] mandate has to be part of it in some way, shape, or form whether it’s the college age population or whether it’s something beyond, it’s got to be a serious attempt, and I’m not sure you get to the point of serious attempt without some sort of mandate associated with what you’re trying to do. Certainly a market-based approach is part of the solution as well. We forget that. If a tax credit is something that the federal government ultimately works out, then you’ve got some market solutions tossed in and nobody likes the word mandate, but without that kind of insistence -- that directness, I don’t know that you can achieve something this challenging in a short period of time, which is what I think we need to do as a nation.

Huntsman spokesperson Tim Miller said that the quote didn’t change the campaign's earlier statements.

"My comment is the same as its always been,” he wrote via email. “Governor Huntsman studied and considered all the options for health care reform in Utah. In the end he fought for and signed market-based, consumer empowering legislation - without a mandate - that is the model for conservative health care reform. That is his record."

Indeed, there appears to be a point in time when Huntsman realized that the mandate wouldn’t work in Utah. Increasingly, however, it seems like he abandoned his support for the mechanism because of political pressures -- not because he, himself, thought the idea was insufficiently conservative or effective.

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WASHINGTON--For weeks, The Huffington Post has chronicled the various ways in which GOP presidential contender Jon Huntsman once supported an individual mandate as part of Utah's health-care reform. ...
WASHINGTON--For weeks, The Huffington Post has chronicled the various ways in which GOP presidential contender Jon Huntsman once supported an individual mandate as part of Utah's health-care reform. ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
madisonhack
I prefer not to......
11:02 AM on 06/19/2011
"...he abandoned his support for the mechanism because of political pressures -- not because he, himself, thought the idea was insufficiently conservative or effective."
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Helloise
Healthy skeptic admires reason, trusts intuition
08:38 AM on 06/18/2011
Mandates were always a goper idea via the Heritage Foundation. One could probably say the same about the majority of the candidates with the obvious exceptions currently visiting from the astral plane.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Gaylord P Farqua
Herb Gardner Amateur Chef, Historian and Political
08:30 AM on 06/18/2011
Huntsman shares the same problem as Romney. Aside from both being Mormons, which scares the evangelical base of the GOP/Tea Party, these guys have made some serious errors in judgment according to the Right Wing code of ethics. Dabbling in anything that smacks of health care reform upsets the GOP base of support from big insurers. There is no place in the "conservative" budgetary thinking for humanitarian projects like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, or any social program that directly or indirectly benefits our citizens. According to the GOP/Tea Party "line up" the Federal government needs to butt out and leave it all up to the states. Privatize everything. A good example is Santorum's idea to privatize the Hurricane Warning system. If citizens want to know if there is danger from a storm all they have to do is sign up like cable television and pay for the reports. If they cannot pay it is just tough luck. This is just a little of what they have in mind. Mitt and Huntsman had better stifle any notions to the contrary.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
reviewingthesituation
Southern liberal feminist
08:17 AM on 06/18/2011
Any rational person changes his mind. The problem for politicians is that they deny ever having had a different opinion and, when faced with the evidence of it, can't give a rational explanation for the change.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Helloise
Healthy skeptic admires reason, trusts intuition
08:40 AM on 06/18/2011
I agree, the ability to change one's mind based on empirical evidence is a sign of intelligence and maturity. But these candidates never had rational reasons for their original ideas, which would render them hard pressed to come up with the alternative.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
reviewingthesituation
Southern liberal feminist
08:45 AM on 06/18/2011
Maybe.Maybe not. Sometimes, there are, indeed, two sides to an issue, with sensible reasons for supporting either.

It's like the scene in "Fiddler on the Roof" where Tevye agrees with both sides in a dispute, then someone points out that both of them can't be right, and Tevye says, "You're right!"
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
madisonhack
I prefer not to......
11:04 AM on 06/19/2011
The ability to change one's mind is usually associated with liberalism, not conservatism. Hard to argue that point differently.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
reviewingthesituation
Southern liberal feminist
11:51 AM on 06/19/2011
I wouldn't say "usually associated with" equates to carved in stone.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
icon22
07:38 AM on 06/18/2011
Sorry Jon, working for Obama has disqualified you automatically, but you must have known that, right? Besides,unless Gov Christie or Perry get into it, it looks like we'll have a Romney/Bachmann ticket, which will win in a landslide!
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Helloise
Healthy skeptic admires reason, trusts intuition
08:42 AM on 06/18/2011
Yeah, that combo worked out so well for you in 2008. Dream on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
listentome
Remember, no matter where you go, there you are !
08:43 AM on 06/18/2011
Well, at least you made me wake up laughing. Romney/Bachmann (LOL). You betcha!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
edgeninja
Ayn Rand was an Atheist & Reagan Raised Taxes 11x
06:53 AM on 06/18/2011
Another one bites the dust.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Miles J. Zaremski
Attorney, essayist and commentator
05:54 AM on 06/18/2011
The individual mandate within a health care scheme is nothing more than a mechanism favored by industry over any mechanism that promotes competition with industry, like the public option more favored by Obama than anything else. Wouldn't it be the irony of all ironies if the judicial branch of our government finds the individual mandate unconstitutional, thus forcing (strong) reconsideration of mechanisms that promote competition in order to reduce the cost of obtaining health care---like a public option? After all, health care for all Americans should be a right. Stay tuned.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
madisonhack
I prefer not to......
11:06 AM on 06/19/2011
You deserve a fan for that comment.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Turtlenewz
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sundance7
02:41 AM on 06/18/2011
No soup for you. NEXT!
02:06 AM on 06/18/2011
What a piece of crap!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dan1902
United we bargain,divided we beg!
01:03 AM on 06/18/2011
Willard Mitt Jon Huntsman Romney! LOL
12:52 AM on 06/18/2011
The mandate isn't all bad...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Turtlenewz
05:08 AM on 06/18/2011
not bad at all
11:39 PM on 06/17/2011
Republicans have revealed their Achilles heel. If Democrats totally surrender and pass the Republican counter-proposal verbatim, it destroys the otherwise victorious Republicans by making the record show that they "agreed" with the Democrat law. It's insane, yes. Nevertheless, it's the case.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:12 PM on 06/17/2011
A politician who is a liar? What a surprise.
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DrBillo1
Consultant
10:53 PM on 06/17/2011
Mormon politicians lie as much as any other politicians-