Tuesday, December 4, 2012

JINDAL HAS MOJO BACK?

The last year has been a bad one for many Republicans, but 2012 was exceptionally kind to Bobby Jindal.

The 41-year-old Louisiana governor ends the presidential campaign cycle as a staple on the Sunday talk shows, a regular subject of 2016 speculation, and a legitimate contender to become the next standard-bearer of a party that once again finds itself leaderless.

And the former Rhodes Scholar has Rick Perry to thank for it all.
You could have fooled me about Jindal.  Do any of the journalists who heap praise on the governor ever check with the folks down in Louisiana?  You know, the state which Jindal "governs", and I use the word loosely and with scare quotes, because his policies are well on their way to destroying a good many institutions in Louisiana.  Where are you, Governor Jindal?  We seldom see you or hear from you in the Gret Stet where you should be accountable, but are not.  You won't talk to the local media, even as you concentrate your efforts to claim the spotlight in the national media. Your heavy-handed style of governance from afar, along with a legislature, most of whose members are either too lazy or too frightened to cross you, make for much mischief down heah.

From an adviser  to Perry:
"Anything we asked of him [Jindal], he was there," said one former Perry campaign official. "When the tide was high and when the tide was low, he was a loyal soldier." 
How we the people of Louisiana wish we could say the same.  Yes, we know Jindal can't run for a third term, and he doesn't want to be bored when he leaves office, so he feels compelled to make friends around the country who will be beholden to him should he decide to make another run for president or vice-president.  It's amazing to me that Jindal even entertains the thought that he can ever be president, but I suppose stranger things have happened.  A little ego goes a long way, and Jindal seems to have far more than his fair share.  Still, if all else fails, surely there's a well-paid lobbyist job out there waiting for him.
Rick, Bobby's separated-at-birth twin

That the media, who hail Jindal as a shining light in the Republican Party, know so little about the wreck he has made of our state, which made such a poor showing even before Jindal's depredations is quite discouraging. 

Photo of Jindal by Gage Skidmore from Wikipedia.    

4 comments:

  1. It's just the Dilbert principle in action.

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    1. Exactly, James. I don't see Jindal's appeal, and I never did. From his first run for the US House, I've always seen him as a fast-talking, flimflam artist

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  2. Nobody in Texas likes Perry, either; or thought he was gonna go far in the GOP primaries (though out of Texas would be far enough for most of us).

    Did the press ask us if we loved us some Rick? Nope. So I'm not surprised they aren't asking about Louisiana, either.

    It's not Jersey, it's not NYC, it's not Virginia. So they don't really care.

    I wish I were just being snide and parochial about this.

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    1. Rmj, I feel your pain; you feel my pain; and no one outside bothers to ask why we are in pain. The media think Jindal is the new Republican Party, when, in fact, Louisiana is the laboratory where he tests old GOP policies which, thus far, have failed miserably.

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