Jindal faces troubles in his home state

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Evan Vucci /
AP Photo by EVAN VUCCI -- Gov. Bobby Jindal listens as National Governors Association Chairman, Delaware Gov. Jack Markell, speaks Monday with reporters outside the White House in Washington.

Gov. Bobby Jindal faces deepening troubles in his home state even as he dishes out advice on how the divided GOP can regroup and looks to position himself as a national party front man.

The new head of the Republican Governors Association, who also is a potential future White House contender, has made a series of cuts to health services and colleges, drawing criticism from affected constituents and Republicans who say he’s not cut enough. And while he delighted conservative policy wonks nationally with his signature measures overhauling education and public employee pensions, those laws are tied up in state court as Republican judges claim constitutional concerns.

At the same time, recent polls suggest that Jindal’s once-formidable job performance rating has fallen below 50 percent just over a year after he was re-elected without serious opposition.

“He’s got a large number of people in Louisiana who just do not like him,” said Baton Rouge pollster Bernie Pinsonat, not usually a Jindal critic.

The question isn’t necessarily how Jindal’s circumstances affect him inside his own party, where he remains popular among vocal conservatives.

“He’s done some serious reforms and taken a stand against establishment thinking,” said South Carolina Republican Chairman Chad Connelly, whose state expects to host the first Southern primary in 2016.

But any governor seeking a national platform must find a way to frame his political approach for a broader audience, and the challenge for a Republican Party that has lost five of the past six presidential popular votes is to find standard bearers who satisfy the GOP base while widening it, too.

Bill Clinton sold the nation in 1992 on Arkansas progress, overcoming mockery of his “Arkansas miracle.”

Eight years later, George W. Bush framed his work with Texas Democrats, who ran the legislature, as proof that he was a “uniter, not a divider.”

The first ingredient, Pinsonat said, is having your own people call you a success, adding: “If I’m from another state and the guy’s not popular in his home state, no matter what he says after that, I don’t know if you hear the rest of it.”

Barred from seeking re-election, Jindal’s second term ends in January 2016, neatly dovetailing with the first caucuses and primaries of the 2016 cycle.

Timmy Teepell, a former Jindal chief of staff who advises Jindal and other Republicans as a campaign consultant, said his old boss isn’t preoccupied with the political chessboard — with the obvious exception of electing more GOP governors during his Republican Governors Association tenure.

“If you do the big things, the right things for the right reasons,” Teepell said, “then people will appreciate it. Sometimes it just takes time to see results.”

In the wake of Mitt Romney’s competitive but decisive loss to President Barack Obama in November, Jindal has been at the forefront of delivering sharp criticism to the GOP.

He has bemoaned “dumbed-down conservatism.” He has argued that the GOP is a “populist” organization and that Republicans shouldn’t be the party of “big anything.”

And he has said that the GOP should “stop being the stupid party.” It was a response to Todd Akin, of Missouri, and Richard Mourdock, of Indiana, the failed Senate candidates whose controversial comments about abortion helped Democrats win seats once viewed as Republican locks.

Jindal also has been clear that Republicans must not “change what we believe” and he has suggested the party hasn’t gone big enough in its argument against active government. “It’s time to quit arguing around the edges of that corrupt system,” he has said.

At first blush, Jindal’s Louisiana priorities fit neatly within his party roadmap.

He’s pushing to eliminate all corporate and personal income taxes, in favor of sales tax increases. He’s refused to expand Medicaid under Obama’s health care overhaul, and he’s dismantling the state’s unique public hospital system, in no small part through his control over the leadership of the LSU System that runs the health care enterprise. He has privatized parts of the Medicaid insurance program for the poor along with state workers’ health care plan.

He’s dramatically cut the number of state workers, though mostly by issuing contracts to pay private firms to do the same work. He’s created one of the nation’s largest school voucher programs, with a price tag of $25 million this year and more than 4,900 students enrolled.

Yet for all his criticism of a big federal government, Jindal has approved its excess and accepted its bounty. As a congressman, he supported deficit budgets under President George W. Bush. Jindal, like every other governor, used federal stimulus money — provided through an Obama law that Jindal assailed — to balance his state budget for at least two years and, in many instances, he traveled to small towns to hand out checks to local government leaders, while sidestepping the explanation that the dollars came from federal coffers.

As many program cuts as Jindal has pushed in Louisiana, he’s feuded with his fellow Republicans in the Legislature who say he’s not done enough.

Jindal’s state government helped spend billions of dollars in federal rebuilding aid after multiple hurricanes, including Katrina. Louisiana just hosted the Super Bowl in a publicly owned stadium restored and upgraded with taxpayer money.

Particularly to outsiders, Jindal has styled himself as a technocrat — competence above ideology — who doesn’t necessarily get his juice from social conservatives. He has won plaudits for disaster management on hurricanes and after the BP oil disaster. His command of policy details is obvious, according to those with access, in private meetings.

Still, Jindal carefully cultivates social conservatives. A Catholic convert raised by Hindu parents, Jindal has spent countless Sundays in Protestant north Louisiana sharing his personal testimony. He signed the Louisiana Science Education Act that allows science teachers to use outside curriculum, a move that Nobel laureates protest as a back-door way to teach Biblical creation as science. His voucher program pays for children to attend religious schools that teach creationism and reject evolution.

Over his five years in office, Jindal has traveled to three dozen states to collect campaign dollars, meet voters and help other Republican candidates. He’s tapped into an extensive network of GOP fundraising and consulting firms that could help launch future political campaigns and built political relationships across key presidential states like Iowa and New Hampshire. And, as he pushes his tax overhaul, he’s hired former communications aides who worked for Romney and Mike Huckabee.

Even so, Teepell said none of Jindal’s agenda is aimed at outsiders: “The governor is focused on Louisiana.”

Bill Barrow reported from Atlanta.


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Comments (22)


1) Comment by Thurston_Howell_III - 27/02/2013

@ Whatnow, you are clearly delusional. The mere fact that the pompous, arrogant Governor clearly wants to cut funding to Medicaid and do away with the State Income Tax, and cut funding to our state colleges is beyond belief. Did I mention his education reform, which will cancel tenure for many teachers? I could go on, but, clearly, he didn't step on your toes because none of this affects you. But, will you reap any of the benefits that he will by cutting most if not all of these things I just mentioned.

2) Comment by Bouncer - 26/02/2013

I see the usual pro-Jindal crybaby is on here, defending his Lord and Master. It's funny to see someone with his/her/its nose so firmly ensconced in that little charlatan's hoo-hah. Typical ignorant response to Jindal's machinations: it hasn't affected ME, so all is well. Pfish.

3) Comment by Whatnow - 26/02/2013

Thurston_Howell_III, I have felt no ill effects at all under Jindal. And being vulgar doesn't make it any different. Maybe it's because I'm not a liberal or the fact that he hasn't stepped on my toes. This is all propaganda by the left and the DNC.

4) Comment by Whatnow - 26/02/2013

Twinkie1cat, Satan run fiefdom? How do you figure it's run by Satan? So, the Republicans are Satanic? Why, because they don't believe in killing babies before birth? Show me in the Bible where that is accepted since you are such a fine Christian. And show me in the Bible where it's Adam and Steve and not Adam and Eve. Do you drop your Christianity off at the church door once you step out of your church? Do you believe Jesus would approve? Jesus forgave those who sinned and changed their ways. He didn't condone the sin. You tell me why you keep calling Republicans satanic.

5) Comment by Thurston_Howell_III - 26/02/2013

Whatnow if you can't tell, then obviously, he used vaseline on you.

6) Comment by Crawdaddy - 26/02/2013

Jindal is a wannabe who is never gonna be. He can't stand up to the national inspection it takes to run for president. Case-in-point: one major point of his platform for governor was that he would never use one-time revenue for recurring expenses in a state budget. And so he has done so every year he has been governor. Which has also led to midyear cuts every year he has been governor. He said he had to use one-time revenue to balance his newly proposed budget to avoid a 19% cut to higher education in 2013-14. So, note to new incoming LSU system president (whoever that may be): expect a big cut soon after you take office. Still want to come?

7) Comment by twinkie1cat - 26/02/2013

Tradewinns: We could start with Jindal's travel budget and his overpaid staff as cuts. Be sure his staff members are paid only at state rates and for one job and halve the number of staff he has. Give him one bodyguard when he goes on a trip and force the GOP to pay up front for any trips that are political in nature, including paying for a state trooper. Forbid out of state trips for political reasons and don't let him fly in state. We could go on with a decrease (not elimination) in the tax breaks he bribes businesses with to locate in Louisiana. Then we stop funding vouchers for religious and for-profit schools and put that money back in the public schools. End the payments (up to $5000 per desk filler) to Teach for America and hire real teachers instead. Eliminate the high priced standardized tests and punitive teacher evaluations. End privatization because it will cost more in the long run by taking back the prisons and hospitals and returning the people getting unemployment because he cut their jobs back to their tax paying careers. And tell the state to stop fighting against the Iberville tiger. Wildlife and Fisheries wasted money on that suit. Finally, fully accept Obamacare and the extra Medicaid money that comes with it and try to get back the federal grant for Early Childhood Education that the idiot turned down because it was "too much paperwork".>>>>>> Don't cut taxes on the wealthy, which is the goal of this plot to end state income tax. Instead, give them a small increase so they will be doing their part to save Louisiana. You are not a job creator if you don't create good jobs that pay a living wage!

8) Comment by twinkie1cat - 26/02/2013

Suzanne MS:The turnout for the election was low and Piyush was the only one with strong name recognition and, the most important thing for any Republican MONEY. Plus an incumbent always has an advantage. Tara Hollis made a nice showing but she had a campaign fund of only $10,000. She should have won and, if the election could have been decided by North Baton Rouge, she would have. >>>>>>> What now: The DNC should be pushing for the Obama agenda! He is having to undo Reagan, Bush, Bush and it takes more than 4 years to do it and all the help he can get. You would not object if the GOP was in office and pushing their agenda of a satan run fiefdom, now would you? That is what we would have if they had won again. Thank God for Jimmy Carter's grandson getting the true tea on Romney and what he thinks of the American voters.

9) Comment by Whatnow - 26/02/2013

Thurston_Howell_III, care to tell me how he did that?

10) Comment by Whatnow - 26/02/2013

Jindal is doing exactly what we hoped he would do. And I agree, he should cut more waste. Jindal isn't the only Republican governor that is being attacked by the left. It's part of the Democrat game plan and the Advocate is helping by playing the game. If this article was posted on Yahoo, then the DNC is pushing hard at maliciousness to unseat any Republican governor that resists Obama's agenda. Jindal has stepped on toes and we all knew that this was coming. That's why we voted for him. And as far as vouchers giving parents a choice of whether or not creationism is being taught in private schools, they have every right not to place their child in those schools. No one is forcing them to use the vouchers if they don't want it taught to their children. It's called Pro-choice.

11) Comment by Thurston_Howell_III - 26/02/2013

For those La voters who re-elected him, I have one question, why didn't you let Piyush use Vaseline when he screwed yall over, ROYALLY?

12) Comment by SuzanneMS - 26/02/2013

He was re-elected mainly because the Democratic party couldn't field a viable candidate. The number and percentage of those who voted for him was less than in his previous election. His money is coming from -- wait for it -- the wealthy donors he's courted for all these years. If by "minority" you mean black -- I voted for someone else twice, and I am soooo not black or Hispanic or Asian or even young. I'm that middle-aged, middle-class, college-educated white woman you see driving around town in a late-model crossover. The income declined because he repealed the income tax part Stelly Plan in order to reduce taxes for his wealthy donors, and carefully left the reduced sales tax in place, so revenues were hit twice. Where were you when that happened, tradewinns? So, let's reinstate the Stelly Plan -- the one that the people voted for -- and see what happens then.

13) Comment by tradewinns - 26/02/2013

it seems everyone hates jindal. yet he got reelected as gov & he's collecting millions of dollars for his possible run for president. how can that be? perhaps the minority voters (those who voted for someone other than jindal) in La. hope he doesn't become president cause he's cut their benefits. as far as cutting the budget, when "income" declines, spending must also decline. if you know of areas that should be cut instead of those that are cut, please express yourselves.

14) Comment by Snidely70448 - 26/02/2013

My first experience with Jindal was a a constituent in his congressional district. It was awful. His office was chaotic and incompetent. I finally had to seek help from Gary Taylor of Mississippi, who got it done. IMHO Jindal is a phony whose sole interest is in advancing his national stature in the Republican Party at the expense of the citizens of Louisiana. Privatizing state functions puts money in the pockets of his supporters at the expense of Louisiana citizens. Replacing the income tax with higher sales taxes makes the tax system more regressive and hurts low income citizens to benefit those with higher incomes. In Louisiana, the combined state and local sales taxes are often close to 10%. Jindal's political personae combines what is to me the worst aspects of Republican ideology: a toady to Big Business and the Republican Taliban

15) Comment by Bighug - 26/02/2013

For anyone outside Louisiana who is reading these comments, be aware that Jindal is a wonderful governor, not the person they make him out to be. Please disregard those comments and elect him to a federal job. Let all science students in the US learn about how the FSM created earth.

16) Comment by Pakistani - 25/02/2013

Dumb Pakistani boy!

17) Comment by Buck - 25/02/2013

This article was posted nationally on the Yahoo board. There were over 300 comments. The general conclusion was the emperor has no clothes.

18) Comment by Grannee - 25/02/2013

Jindal would not win Louisiana. I estimate he may receive 100,000 votes especially if he is running against Hillary.

19) Comment by gvm - 25/02/2013

Once Bobby begins to be seriously scrutinized by the media, his negatives are only going to increase. When I read about him in the national media it becomes evident that they haven't taken the time to see what the average Joe thinks of our wunderkind. Thankfully, I believe that his chickens are coming home to roost.

20) Comment by Warp7 - 25/02/2013

People in this state are finally waking up and seeing that Jindal is not who they really thought he was. They are finding out that he cares about one thing and one thing only, Jindal. He uses this state to show the national GOP just how conservative he can be. He lacks and sense of compassion and is showing he is not as smart some folks think he is. Now he is in Washington spilling his same old hypocritical remarks towards the President. Of course did anyone think this ego maniac would have anything positive to say. He represents one coalition and that is the ultra right. He can't deliver any votes to the GOP other than the already entrenched ultra conservatives. Before he leaves office he will leave this state in the worst shape it has been in years. The only ones smilling is the Conservatives who want to see every facet of government privatized. Privatization equals profits for his conservative followers who provide the financial support that keeps him running. Potential White House contender, only in his little pea brain dreams.

21) Comment by 8point6 - 25/02/2013

Great article bill and melinda! Wahhooooo! "Jindal faces troubles in his home state " Ok. let me guess. This headline should be posted tomorrow morning when my "progressive" friends will be at "work" so they can comment from their "state" computers. And, no, I don't support Jindal as I have. Same as I didn't support Bush in his second term because of his spending.

22) Comment by crabby - 25/02/2013

"a potential future White House contender" and I'm the potential queen of England . . . "we live as we dream, ALONE"