Showing posts with label bobby jindal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bobby jindal. Show all posts

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Gov. Bobby Jindal: Sarah Palin is ‘Absolutely’ Electable

"I don’t like anybody... trying to tell Republican voters who their nominee should be."
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Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal said in a weekend interview on Bloomberg TV’s “Political Capital with Al Hunt,” this weekend, that Gov. Palin is “absolutely” electable as president:
HUNT: Governor, let me ask you one final - I want to get one - I want to get one political question in. You’ve said there are a lot of strong GOP contenders, including Sarah Palin. Joe Scarborough, the former congressman, the other day said it’s time for Republicans like you to man up and acknowledge that Sarah Palin is a reality show star who can’t be elected. What do you say?

JINDAL: Two things. One, I love Joe. I’ve been on his show several times. But I don’t like anybody - whether it’s the Republican establishment, D.C. insiders - trying to tell the Republican voters who their nominee should be. I think there are several strong contenders. Governor Palin is one of them; there are many others. I don’t think the establishment should try and get together to pick the nominee. Let the voters decide.

HUNT: So you think Sarah Palin could be elected? Do you think Sarah Palin’s electable?

JINDAL: Oh, absolutely. I think it’s up to her to make the case to voters. I think we have several - and, by the way, I am biased towards governors and those that have run organizations and executives who’ve had to balance budgets, make tough choices.

But when I first ran for governor, Al, the establishment didn’t think I should run. There were folks - I write about it in the book - that didn’t think I should run. The money people got together and said, “Maybe you should get out of the race.” The voters get to decide that.

[More]
- JP

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Economist's YouGov poll and Palin running mate speculation

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From Merv Benson at Prairie Pundit, a look at the results of a recent Economist/YouGov poll:
"It is the best poll I have seen for Sarah Palin. She still must convince some voters she has the ability to perform as President. The good news for her is that Obama has set that bar pretty low so far."


Here are some of the other gems in this poll:
• Among those who identify with the tea-party movement, 26% support Mrs Palin, 19% choose Mr Romney, 16% go for Mr Gingrich and 15% for Mr Huckabee.

• Over three-quarters (77%) of Republicans have a favourable view of Mrs Palin (17% unfavourable). But 51% of the overall public gives her an unfavorable rating.

• Barack Obama’s struggles continue. In this week’s poll his approval rating is at 45%, with 48% disapproving. Just 34% approve of the way he is handling the economy — his lowest rating ever on the public’s most important issue — and even fewer, 31%, approve of how he is handling the budget deficit. Most Americans see no impact of last year’s economic stimulus package — just 29% think it has helped the economy. Only 13% say the package has created jobs; 55% say it never will.
While Benson favors the idea of a Palin-Romney ticket because it might have broad appeal, we're not so sure. Many conservatives don't trust the former Massachusetts governor, and the big advantage the GOP has over the ruling Democrats is that the current mood of the nation stems, in part, from a lack of trust in government. A Pew Research Center poll finds trust in government and all of its institutions at near-historic lows. And a plurality of the American public is still opposed to ObamaCare, especially the likely voters among them, according to an aggregation of survey data by Pollster.com. Gov. Romney will forever be linked to RomneyCare, and that is an albatross the 2012 GOP ticket does not need to be burdened with.

If Gov. Palin decides to run in 2012, she will need a running mate who brings balance, not baggage, to her ticket. The pretty much rules out Romney, Mike Huckabee and Newt Gingrich as well. Her ideal ticketmate will be a "papa grizzly" (for obvious reasons) who hails from the deep south or the southeast (she's from the northwest); will be Catholic (she's protestant); will have legislative experience (hers is administrative); will have an Ivy League degree; (she has been unfairly criticized for her journalism degree from the University of Idaho); will have specialized knowledge and experience related to an issue of national interest (hers is in energy) and will have private sector large business experience (she has small business experience).

In light of the above, consider that Governor Bobby Jindal is happily married with three children; was born and lives in Louisiana; has been a Roman Catholic since his freshman year of college; served in the U.S. House representing Louisiana's 1st Congressional District; graduated with honors in both Public Policy and Biology from Yale and earned an advanced degree from Oxford in Political Science with an emphasis in Health Policy; served as Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals and was president of the University of Louisiana System (health care and education are key issues); and worked as a consultant for McKinsey & Co.

Above and beyond balance, Jindal also brings executive experience and a record as a proven problem-solver to a potential Palin presidential ticket. As Secretary of Louisiana's DHH, he turned around a broken health care system, taking the state's Medicaid program from bankruptcy (with a $400 million deficit) into three years of surpluses (totaling $220 million). Jindal received praise from members of both major political parties for his leadership during Hurricane Gustav, ordering an evacuation which has been credited for saving many lives. As an American of Punjab Indian heritage, he would bring ethnic balance -- not a requirement but definitely a plus -- to the ticket. His leadership during the Gulf Oil Crisis has boosted his popularity in Louisiana, as a Rasmussen Reports poll taken at the end of June shows -- his approval rating in his state is at 74 percent, up from 64 percent in April.

True, there's not much ideological balance to a Palin-Jindal presidential pairing, as both are Reagan conservatives. But we don't think ideological balance will be an imperative for voters in 2012. They are not happy with governance from the left in the current Democrat administration, nor were they enamored of Republican moderate governance in the post-Reagan era. We think the country is ready for a return of Reagan conservatism with leadership provided by Governors Sarah Palin and Bobby Jindal. He's not exactly Mr. Excitement, but the Democrats would look silly attacking his gravitas, and she has enough charisma for the both of them.

- JP

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

A Palin-Perry presidential pairing for 2012? We don't see it.

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The editors of the Longview News-Journal admit that it is early yet to be speculating on the 2012 presidential race, but they just can't resist the temptation:
Sarah Palin seems to have a big advantage on the GOP race with the momentum she picked up as Sen. John McCain's running mate in 2008. For Texans, perhaps the bigger question is whether yet another person with deep Lone Star roots may take a lead position on the national stage.

Gov. Rick Perry has a November general election in front of him for a possible third term to retain his office for a third term. That potential roadblock on his way to a change of address to Washington, D.C., has not stopped, nor even slowed, speculation on his presidential aspirations.

When Perry and Palin get together on the same stage, as they have several times in recent months, including Saturday night's East Texas rally at Tyler's Oil Palace, it only adds fuel to the Republican fire to get a winning combination for the next presidential go-round. Whether the ticket might be a Perry-Palin or Palin-Perry combination, the possible leading pair has spurred a lot of excitement among factions of the GOP.

Palin, buoyed by pocket-lining book deals and high dollar speaking engagements, seems to have been in the news nearly as much as our sitting president. In East Texas she blasted Obama and his administration on their energy policies and accused Obama of attempting to use the Gulf oil spill for political gains.

In Texas, her message of attempting to get the nation to a state of energy independence gains a lot of support. Meshed with Perry's ongoing message of distancing himself from the Washington establishment and pushing for less government and lowered taxes, the Palin-Perry option seems to have the potential to carry a lot of weight.
Perhaps the editors in Longview are unaware that Rick Perry made a point of asking that his name be left off the Southern Republican Leadership Conference straw poll ballot a few months ago. The Texas governor told Human Events in an April interview:
“I’m not being coy. I don’t want to go to Washington, D.C. I have great interest in who will be the presidential candidate in 2012, and I’ll be active and I’ll be engaged and I’ll be helpful and do all of the things that a governor of a major state can do and should do, but it won’t be me... I have a great bully pulpit.”
The media tend to close their ears when politicians tell them that they are not interested, which is a shame, because sometimes the pols really mean it. "I don’t want to go to Washington, D.C." sounds pretty clear cut to us. Also, if Gov. Palin does decide to make a run for the White House in 2012, we can think of some potential Palin running mates that make more sense to us than Perry. Governors Bobby Jindal of Louisiana and Haley Barbour of Mississippi are just two of them. Jindal has drawn renewed interest nationally and is very popular locally for his efforts to save his state's coastal region from Gulf Oil Disaster while the Obama administration characteristically dithers.

Should he win his Congressional race in Florida, retired Army Colonel Allen West is another possibility more likely than Perry. And, since he has Gov. Palin's endorsement, we know that Col. West meets with her approval. But the editorial was correct in its first paragraph. It's still too early for serious 2012 presidential race speculation, and much too to be speculating about running mates.

h/t: roy y

- JP

Monday, June 14, 2010

Jindal takes Palin's advice; orders barriers built in Gulf

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Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal has finally decided to take Sarah Palin's advice and ordered the construction of the barrier walls he's been asking BP and the federal government to build since the early days of the Gulf oil disaster:
Eight weeks into the oil spill disaster in the Gulf of the Mexico, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal has told the National Guard that there's no time left to wait for BP, so they're taking matters into their own hands.

In Fort Jackson, La., Jindal has ordered the Guard to start building barrier walls right in the middle of the ocean. The barriers, built nine miles off shore, are intended to keep the oil from reaching the coast by filling the gaps between barrier islands.

[...]

The authorities say they're keeping a tab on the cost of the project and will send a bill to BP, adding to a huge list of claims from the spill zone.
Two weeks ago, Gov. Palin tweeted:
"Gov.Jindal:to avoid ravished coast, build the berms.Ask forgiveness later;Feds are slow to act,local leadership&action can do more for coast"
- JP

Monday, May 31, 2010

Palin to Jindal: Forget the feds; build the berms yourself (Updated)

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Sarah Palin advises Bobby Jindal via Twitter not to wait on the Feds and to go ahead and build the berms he has for over a month been asking the Obama Administration to build:
"Gov.Jindal:to avoid ravished coast, build the berms.Ask forgiveness later;Feds are slow to act,local leadership&action can do more for coast"
Updated: More from The Hill's Blog Briefing Room here. Will Gov. Jindal take his former Alaskan colleague's advice and go rogue?

- JP

Friday, October 9, 2009

A Constant Craving for Sarah Palin Information

According to the Personal Democracy Forum, people are "voracious" for information about Sarah Palin. That appetite is measured by Wikirank, a web tool that charts the number of people who read Wikipedia pages:
Interest in Palin on Wikipedia crushes that of some of her possible 2012 Republican presidential rivals.

Take Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal, for example. He's often mentioned as a possible Republican presidential contender, has an compelling life story of his own, and yet he isn't overly familiar to many Americans. His Wikipedia entry was read about 100,000 times over the last three months. Not bad, but Palin's was read eight times that.
Tim Pawlenty's Wiki page was viewed 3,546 times, while Mike Huckabee's page got 68,326 views.

The article didn't disclose how many times Mitt Romney's Wikipedia entry was viewed, so we looked it up. The former Massachusetts governor got 3,804 views in 30 days, which would be somewhere  around 11,500 views in three months, if the page was viewed at the same rate for the previous 60 days as it was for the last 30.

- JP