Jon Huntsman Too Proud to Beg Dad for Help

Jon Huntsman won't ask his billionaire father to dump millions into a political action committee to save his campaign, and his father won't donate unless he's asked, The New York TimesJim Rutenberg and Nicholas Confessore report.

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Jon Huntsman won't ask his billionaire father to dump millions into a political action committee to save his campaign, and his father won't donate unless he's asked, The New York TimesJim Rutenberg and Nicholas Confessore report. The pro-Huntsman group Our Destiny is spending $750,000 on television ads in New Hampshire, which begin airing Tuesday. The ad campaign is "the result of an emotionally fraught, behind-the-scenes drama" over how much Jon Huntsman Sr. will give. The son's campaign probably needs him to donate "millions more," The Times writes.

The Washington Post reports that the ads are meant to increase Huntsman's name recognition in the first primary state, which remains low even though he's spent a ton of time there. "The world is literally collapsing and no one has shown up we can trust as a conservative, who actually has a chance to win, and not some phony who tells me one thing and you another," the ad says. "Where's that guy?" But even the elder Huntsman isn't sure that guy will be his son, The Times reports:

Mr. Huntsman has been loath to ask his father to up his commitment to the outside group, several people familiar with the situation said. His father, on the other hand, they said, has been unwilling to do so without being asked, especially given the uncertainty of whether the investment would make a huge difference.
And while Huntsman's dad is reluctant to get too deep in the race, Huntsman's kids might be too eager. His daughters have been working to become Internet famous -- all in the name of helping out dad, of course -- but his campaign isn't sure they're helping, The New Yorker's Ryan Lizza notes. Daughter Liddy wants to be a writer for Saturday Night Live, but if that doesn't work out, she can try writing a family drama for HBO.
This article is from the archive of our partner The Wire.