Jindal rehabs national image

Associated Press photo by Nati HarnikGov. Bobby Jindal addresses the Nebraska Republican convention Saturday in Grand Island, Neb. Chairman of the Nebraska Republican Party Mark Fahleson is at left. Show caption
Associated Press photo by Nati HarnikGov. Bobby Jindal addresses the Nebraska Republican convention Saturday in Grand Island, Neb. Chairman of the Nebraska Republican Party Mark Fahleson is at left.

Bobby Jindal’s rough national debut seems long forgotten.

Louisiana’s youthful governor routinely now receives praise in GOP circles across the nation. He’s being cast as a knowledgeable policy wonk with strong conservative credentials who appeals to the Christian right and can claim a long list of accomplishments, such as leading the state through a series of disasters, including the Gulf Coast oil leak.

He’s being talked up so often as a future leader in the party that Republicans, many in evangelical circles, say presidential candidate Mitt Romney would be crazy not to seriously consider choosing the 41-year-old Oxford-educated governor as a running mate.

Romney and Jindal planned to be together Monday at a fundraiser in the state, an appearance certain to increase the vice presidential speculation and draw more demurs from Jindal about whether he wants the job. “No disrespect to Joe Biden, nobody’s going to the voting booth and voting based on who’s vice president,” he told NBC on July 1.

Jindal’s rebound is something that Republicans in Washington once had suggested would be difficult, if not impossible, after his nationally televised response in 2009 to President Barack Obama’s first State of the Union address to Congress was widely panned. Jindal’s fans and critics alike described his performance as awkward and amateurish, and said the governor was “not ready for prime time.”

Jindal has painstakingly worked to repair his image since then.

He did it by governing in line with his rock-ribbed conservative beliefs and showing leadership at critical times in a state often regarded as dysfunctional at best and corrupt at worst.

“He’s a real powerhouse,” said Republican consultant Matt Mackowiak, a Texas native who runs a political and communications strategy firm in Washington and doesn’t work for Jindal. “He’s as good as it gets from a conservative standpoint.”

In office since 2008, Jindal has rejected any tax increases, despite repeated rounds of budget cuts to education and health care. He also pushed into law a statewide voucher program and other initiatives that give Louisiana one of the most expansive school choice programs in the nation, a big priority for the conservative base of the party.

Even so, Jindal has drawn his share of criticism in the state, including from fellow Republicans.

Some fiscal conservatives in the Louisiana House don’t like the governor’s approach on budget matters, saying that using patchwork funding to pay for ongoing state services is at odds with his rhetoric of needing to shrink the size and costs of state government.

Teacher unions and local school boards have sued over the constitutionality of his education revamp, and critics have complained about his deep cuts to state higher education funding.

His ethics overhaul also has received criticism that it damaged enforcement.

Louisiana Democrats and other critics say that Jindal is pandering to national party interests and partisan politics at the expense of the state’s needs.

“He’s very self-serving,” said former state lawmaker Vic Stelly, a Republican-turned-independent who recently resigned from the state’s top higher education governing board over complaints about the Jindal administration’s cuts to colleges. “All the so-called reforms, it’ll be years down the road before we know if they amount to anything. I don’t think they will.”

Backers who want him on the GOP ticket look beyond those complaints and note his assets.

They say his health care background and knowledge as a former state and federal health official would be increasingly valuable as Republicans focus on repealing Obama’s health care law that was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court.

They also note that Jindal could help Romney solidify his standing with religious conservatives who still view him skeptically, in part because of his Mormon faith.

Left unsaid is the obvious about Jindal: his ethnicity. He’s the son of Indian immigrants. His ascension could make a huge statement about the Republican Party’s inclusiveness as it seeks to boost its support among minorities, most of whom lean Democratic.

Grover Norquist, the well-known anti-tax-increase activist of Americans for Tax Reform, has said Romney should pick Jindal. Former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, one of Romney’s defeated presidential rivals, has showered praise on the Louisiana governor as the future of the party. Tony Perkins, the head of the Family Research Council, is among the notable members of the evangelical community who are pushing for Jindal’s selection.

Says GOP pollster John McLaughlin, whose firm has done work for Republican organizations and candidates around the country, but not for Jindal: “At a time when Gov. Romney has to put forth a response to an unsuccessful presidency, Gov. Jindal’s seen as the type of substantive person you’d like to have around.”

Jindal backed Texas Gov. Rick Perry in the GOP primary over Romney. Even so, he’s proved to be a loyal supporter since Romney clinched the nomination, traveling the country to give speeches on his behalf and appearing on national television to criticize Obama or counter the president’s attacks against the candidate.

At times, it’s seemed like Jindal was auditioning for the job. But don’t expect him on Monday to entertain questions about whether he’s being vetted or would serve on the ticket. He’s dodged those questions, talking about his love of his job as Louisiana’s chief executive while showering praise on Romney.


Please log in to comment on this story

Comments (31)


1) Comment by HRoark - 17/07/2012

Political spectacle in the best Louisiana tradition. An Indian born Governor in a southern U.S. state with a failed record, a poor public speaker, a yes man to the right wing religious oligarchy, who desperately wants to be President of the U.S., and might succeed because Romney is even stupider than we thought. Fly piggies, fly!

2) Comment by 8.3 - 17/07/2012

Trying to understand, some data provided clues: roughly 25% of white Louisiana voters hold a degree greater than high school. of all voters, 67% are white and historically white voters vote in much greater percentages than other races, specifically blacks. A very intelligent and astute politician could advance his career by understanding these facts and capitalizing on them, especially if a narcissistic ambition in which the altruism is proportional to the support for those ambitions. Unfortunately for the blissfully appreciative aficionados, the conservatism may be only a vehicle to propel ambition. Of course only a semblance of K-12 through higher education is needed, since motivations which provide the illusion of profit as the meaning and purpose of life are all that is need to propel one's imagined destinies. The carrot on the stick if you will, the lottery funded retirement. One must admire the sheer psychologically fascinating drive though, certain individuals in history do provide precedent.

3) Comment by hemogoblin - 17/07/2012

When I ask my out of state relatives what they think of Bobby Jindal, they all say "Who is Bobby Jindal?"

4) Comment by Elderly Man - 16/07/2012

I correct myself! Please, angels of mercy, lead Governor Romney to take our Governor from us!

5) Comment by Grannee - 16/07/2012

Please stop saying all of this negative stuff about Alfalfa. Mitt may read this stuff and figure out what a pitiful sack of poop Jindal really is. Then we will really be stuck with him.

6) Comment by Warp7 - 16/07/2012

Amazing, this super ego person came out of the gate supporting Rick Perry against Romney. Now he is supporting Romney! This puppet of the right can't be trusted. Some claim he is an expert on medicad, with just one year of experience at DHH and one year at the federal level! A career politician with basically zero experience at real work.

7) Comment by 1ryben - 16/07/2012

Wow, if 8.3's data is correct, and Jindal were evaluated by a similar system as teacher's, he would've been fired a long time ago. Why isn't he? He has obviously failed to increase the quality of live for the citizens of this state.

8) Comment by gvm - 16/07/2012

I really hope that Romney will pick Bobby Jindal as his running mate. The way I see it, LA can't lose. If Romney wins, Jindal is out of LA. If they lose, conservative tide will have shifted so drastically toward the center, that Bobby's unintelligent, make believe ideals will go up in smoke - the same smoke from his and Romney's failed campaign. So I say, with all the sincerity I can muster, please Mr. Romney pick Bobby for your VP. Louisiana will be forever indebted to you. In fact, we'll name one of the new charter schools in your honor.

9) Comment by 8.3 - 16/07/2012

"Nothing new here. Have a nice day. " Yup nothing new, same old status quo getting worse: LA contains the area with the Highest Level of Senior Citizens Living in Poverty. LA Most Violent state (20 years in a row as of 2012) Longest prison sentence by a Congressman – LA’s Bill Jefferson LA last in Camelot Index LA 1st in corruption convictions per capita LA 49th in student performance and progress LA has worst drivers LA least peaceful state LA 50TH in women’s health LA 49th in Health LA 1st in Murders per 100,000 population. LA 1st in Laziness. LA has least affordable auto insurance LA 2nd worst lawsuit climate LA gets an ‘F’ for Children’s Dental Health LA 1st in Happiness. LA 1st in deaths from diabetes. LA 1st in Personal Income drop. LA 1st in the number of forms of legalized gambling. LA 1st in rate of children under 5 on the brink of hunger. LA 2nd Most Dangerous State LA Worst State for Nursing Homes LA 1st in Homeless Children LA 1st in Percentage of Homeless Veterans. LA 52nd in population gain LA 2nd in bad auto loans LA 49th in Higher Education LA 2nd WORST state for businesses LA 49TH in Business competitiveness and retention LA 48TH in child well-being LA 1ST in gonorrhea rate LA has highest auto insurance rates in the nation LA 1st in the rate of corruption LA LAST in attracting college-educated workers LA 51st in child care LA 2nd in Black Homicides LA roads WORST in the nation. LA 49th in Savings LA 49TH in Longevity LA 50TH in per capita income LA 50TH in livability. LA 4th Highest Rate of Adult Obesity LA 1ST in wasting Medicare dollars LA 2ND in rate of men killing women LA 48TH in places to die LA 2ND in rate of healthcare uninsureds LA 49TH in social health LA 1ST in high school dropout rate LA public schools are 4TH worst LA 2ND cost of Homeowner’s Insurance LA 1ST in net population loss LA is ONLY southern state to lose population LA 1st in people moving out LA 1ST in Southeast in population exodus LA 1ST in rate of incarceration LA 1ST in number of child living in poverty LA 48TH in educational attainment of the population 25 years and over LA 1ST in number of women living in poverty LA LAST in bond ratings LA LAST in healthcare for seniors LA 1ST in abandoning public schools LA 2ND in DWI fatalities LA 46TH in Integrity LA is the 49TH “smartest state” LA WORST for healthcare for the elderly and disabled LA LAST in wealth of our citizens LA’s economy 49th out of 50 LA LAST in cash for research LA 1ST in teen use of steroids LA 1ST in the percentage of income used to pay rent LA 2ND in rate of poverty

10) Comment by Elderly Man - 16/07/2012

Nolalawyer, well said. Thank you.

11) Comment by nolalawyer - 16/07/2012

Jindal acknowledges that our healthcare system is broken. He agrees that America must solve the problems caused by having so many of its citizens uninsured. But while Jindal and his GOP buddies oppose the Affordable Care Act as the solution to these problems, they refuse to offer any alternative. Bobby Jindal is a defender of the failed status quo in healthcare -- he proposes that we reject "Obamacare" but he won't say how he would fix the healthcare crisis. The result is that nothing changes and America remains stuck on the same broken road in healthcare. Jindal's has announced his plan to reject the expanded Medicaid coverage of the ACA and keep thousands of poor people out of the Medicaid program. He is doing this for the sole purpose of burnishing his conservative qualifications for his own personal advancement. This is precisely the opposite of the behavior we should demand of our public servants. Jindal long ago threw Louisiana under the bus as he pursued his personal goals -- he'll only get away with it nationally if Romney hurries up and picks him for VP before the national press figures out that Jindal's "accomplishments" are nothing more than press release ***** with no substance. Louisiana would do well to be rid of Jindal quickly, although this would be at the expense of the rest of the country who would get a shallow loser as VP who is all hat and no cowboy.

12) Comment by potkcalb - 16/07/2012

Jindal for vice president? A nightmare in waiting.

13) Comment by Mr. T - 16/07/2012

Anyone who thinks that Jindal brings anything to the Romney campaign as a veep candidate needs to have their head examined. All it does is to prove how bad Romney's judgement is.

14) Comment by Elderly Man - 16/07/2012

I do not think that Governor Jindal is fiscally conservative. Some of his programs impress me but he seems more about style and show than actual conservative reform. We do need a more efficient system of higher education. Teachers whose students fail have failed. Schools whose students fail have failed. Maybe vouchers will work. I hope that they do. Our state hospitals are residue from a failed way of providing healthcare. We do need more efficiency. I do not see that Governor Jindal has gone deep to deal with core concerns.

15) Comment by Elderly Man - 16/07/2012

The fact is that Louisiana remains a bottom-of-the-barrel state with an unfair system of taxation, backpedalling and downgrading of vital services, an arrogant governor as was Governor Edwards, and no real reform where we very much need a great deal of reform.

16) Comment by gman70726 - 16/07/2012

Amazing how most of the commentors on this site forget htat their God, Edwin Edwards, had legislation passed that took all means of cuts off the table in our budget with the exception of Education and Health. this was with the guise that the people would never cut these and the roads, bridges and other graft projects could run undeterred. Well, hard times bring hard decisions. Why is the General Fund protected. An, why is the General Fund so large and not divided in to smaller more accessible budget plans like Health and Education. The General Fund should be a small, almost rainy day fund. by the way, why is it that every state thinks they have to spend every dime they collect every year and then some. We have had years with a surplus and never put it away for the Rainy Day. By the way, for all of the nay sayers to my post, my daughter is a college student and we worked a little harder for her funds in the medical field. If you want to save some of the money from higher education, get rid of loans and grants for Underwater Basket Weaving for starters and provide for math, engineering, economics, etc.

17) Comment by nimby? - 16/07/2012

I hear great things coming out of california ....

18) Comment by Whatnow - 16/07/2012

Same old rhetoric and negativity. Keep up the good work, Gov. Jindal!

19) Comment by 8point6 - 16/07/2012

Nothing new here. Have a nice day. Geaux Jindal!

20) Comment by Pakistani - 16/07/2012

Pakistani boy has outsourced jobs to India. Hey Mitty, hope you read this nice little article and its comments while taking some good ole Louisiana money in.

21) Comment by Pakistani - 16/07/2012

Pakistani boy is in the wrong party to be accepted.

22) Comment by IMVOR - 16/07/2012

Results? Jindal has gotten results; his career in the GOP is on a fast track. That's results. The prosperity of their states is not the goal of Republican governors anywhere. The measure of success is how well they tow the party line. According to Jindal, Louisiana is a "poor" state. That's why we can't afford health care, hospitals, higher education, or public schools. But the GOP is holding a luncheon fundraiser in Baton Rouge today at $50,000 per plate. Obviously somebody in this state is rich and the rest of us are paying for it.

23) Comment by 8.3 - 16/07/2012

After 5 years, Louisiana is still last in all manner of comparisons, proves that politics need not be grounded in reality. Results? Who cares? "necessary changes in the totally broken educational system" no evidence that these changes are viable, and given the lack of evidence, it will take years to prove or disprove the worth of this use of taxpayer money. Why do research when there is ideology?

24) Comment by DMJ - 16/07/2012

Indeed, he is holding on tax increases....which is why there's a giant hole in the budget that we're making up for by cutting health care and higher education. What a guy.

25) Comment by spqr - 16/07/2012

Yea, Jindal is expanding charter schools that continue to post the lowest grades in the state. Don't ignore that. Vouchers are unconstitutional and many of those schools are already under heavy criticism and state government has never been bigger. College students are paying far more for classes than ever due to cuts (a tax). Give Jindal credit for that.

26) Comment by ABayouBoy - 16/07/2012

Well, at least he's holding the line on tax increases. And he's for a reduction in state and local government. Also, he's making the necessary changes in the totally broken educational system. Those are some points in this favor. Give credit where credit is due.

27) Comment by lovemykids - 16/07/2012

Jindal has national ambitions with the poor and sick and education system of Louisiana as simple unimportant rungs on his ladder.

28) Comment by spqr - 16/07/2012

Jindal's numbers may look good outside of the state, but they don't know the collateral damage he has inflicted on his own people. This governor is not a leader.

29) Comment by gtinla - 16/07/2012

If wrecking a state will get you somewhere with conservatives, then he's their man.

30) Comment by gary - 16/07/2012

Whoa! This would be a Fox's news dream. Mittens explaining the Joesph Smith thing and little Booby J. laying out the ground work to practice a little exorcism on the Wall Street folks - with Grover and Gene Mills on the sidelines - with their pom-poms cheering them on.

31) Comment by Elderly Man - 16/07/2012

Governor Jindal is eve more unlikable than Governor Romney is.