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Barbour can't deny his trifecta of issues that make some skeptical. So he owns them. "Let me just make this very plain: I'm a lobbyist, a politician and a lawyer ... and I am willing to have my record in front of everybody," says the Mississippi governor, who was head of the Republican National Committee and the Republican Governors Association. He also founded a booming lobbying operation and was dubbed the King of K Street, a reference to the capital's downtown lobbying corridor. The governor of a Deep South state, Barbour opened himself up to criticism when he bungled questions about the Ku Klux Klan and segregation. Huntsman, the former Utah governor, is taking heat for his job as Obama's ambassador to China. John H. Sununu, once chief of staff to President George H.W. Bush and ex-chairman of New Hampshire's GOP, called Huntsman an "Obamaite" who would never earn the trust of primary voters. Huntsman leaves his post in April and can't say anything until then. But his advisers have a ready-made response: He served his country, not necessarily the Democratic administration. Obama, for one, isn't going to let him off that easily; he's thanked Huntsman for being an "outstanding advocate for this administration and this country." Romney and Huntsman face another obstacle. Both are Mormons, a religion that evangelicals who have considerable sway in Iowa and South Carolina look at warily. Pawlenty, who on Monday announced he had formed an exploratory committee, once backed climate change legislation that conservatives deride. Advisers to the former Minnesota governor know it will be a problem. He's reversed his position on the issue, but his past words are certain to come back to haunt him. "So, come on, Congress. Let's get moving," Pawlenty says in a 2008 commercial for the Environmental Defense Action Fund that urges, "Cap greenhouse gas pollution now." It's available online. So are details of climate change legislation he signed that would reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 15 percent by 2015. Among others weighing bids: Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum may be dogged by his dismissal by voters in the 2006 election. Ex-Gov. Mike Huckabee of Arkansas faces questions about commuting the sentence of Maurice Clemmons, who in 2009 opened fire in Tacoma, Wash., and left four police officers dead. GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin's unorthodox resignation in the middle of her first term as Alaska governor
-- as well as her reality show stints and her countless impolitic comments
-- will be certain fodder for opponents.
[Associated
Press;
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