Posted on 09/16/2014 7:35:14 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Bobby Jindal is making a bet, according to someone familiar with is thinking: Ideas and smarts are going to be crucial in winning the presidential nomination.
Jindals nascent 2016 campaign will be an exploration of the validity of this belief. When the Louisiana governor unveils his energy plan at the Heritage Foundation today, he will do so under the auspices of his ambitious attempt to articulate and sell a national policy agenda to the country. Consider it also a part of another ambitious plan, the second plank of a 2016 presidential platform and an attempt to persuade Republican primary voters that they should award the partys nomination to a 43-year-old wonk.
Jindal seeks to persuade through policy proposals more than public spectacles. The energy plan follows the health-care proposal he released in April as an alternative to Obamacare. In October of last year, he founded the nonprofit group America Next, which is churning out these plans. Next will come proposals for jobs, education, and defense taken together, they will make a rough presidential platform.
Jindals health-care plan did not earn rave reviews from many on the right. One conservative policy analyst who met and spoke with him about the plan says that the general feeling among his cohort was that the plan would be politically explosive and that it involved too much disruption to be plausible. The plan, says the analyst, was designed for the Republican primary season, but not for the larger health-care debate.
Nonetheless, Jindal is filling a policy void that most conservatives have long acknowledged and bemoaned. Florida senator Marco Rubio, who offered his own policy agenda designed specifically for the 21st century in a June speech at Michigans Hillsdale College, is the only other 2016 presidential contender on the Republican side who has so clearly laid out the planks of a would-be platform.
For Jindal, the rest of the preparation for a presidential run is taking place behind the scenes. Theres been a lot going on that we dont publicize, says a source familiar with the governors political strategy. That includes six trips to New York this year for meetings with a massive number of big donors.
Most of Jindals potential rivals are taking a different tack. Texas senator Ted Cruz on Wednesday marched off stage when a group of Middle Eastern Christians booed his pro-Israel remarks, and he has sucked up media oxygen in the ensuing days; New Jersey governor Chris Christie led a trade delegation to Mexico earlier this month with a bevy of reporters; and Kentucky senator Rand Paul traveled to Guatemala in August with his political team and a documentary-film crew in tow.
Jindals lower profile is not to be mistaken for a lack of ambition. Earlier this month he told nationally syndicated radio talk-show host Hugh Hewitt hes thinking and praying about a presidential bid. He wont stay out of the race, he said, simply because I have friends running. Last February, he was knocking on the door of Romney finance director Spencer Zwick, looking for introductions to the former Massachusetts governors top-dollar donors. He had already snapped up Jill Neunaber (who, notably, managed Romneys Iowa campaign) to serve as executive director of America Next.
Perhaps most tellingly, Jindal has engineered a 180-degree reversal on the Common Core educational standards, which have increasingly come under attack from conservatives and which will undoubtedly play an important role in the presidential primary. An early supporter of the standards, Jindal this spring withdrew Louisiana from them and is now suing the federal government over them, a move that should play well among the most conservative voters in early primary states such as Iowa and South Carolina.
The question hovering over Jindal is whether an Ivy League whiz kid can turn heads in a field of elbow-throwing candidates with established national profiles. I have heard almost nothing on him, says a major New York Citybased Republican donor who served as a bundler for Mitt Romneys 2012 campaign, which tells me he is not breaking through in the Northeast. Jindal is not attending the annual Republican-party fundraiser hosted by New York Jets owner Woody Johnson. Scheduled for October 6, the event this year will include several potential 2016 candidates: Rand Paul, Marco Rubio, Chris Christie, and Ohio governor John Kasich.
Jindal is a Brown University graduate and Rhodes Scholar who became a McKinsey and Company management guru after he returned from Oxford. After two years there, at the age of 29, he went to work in the public sector running Louisianas department of health and hospitals. He has cultivated his image as wunderkind: To this day, he notes on his official biography that he went to Oxford University on a Rhodes Scholarship only after he turned down admissions to medical and law schools at Harvard and Yale.
The governors longtime political consultant, former Republican National Committee political director Curt Anderson, met Jindal after the 2002 midterm elections at the request of former RNC chairman Haley Barbour. According to Anderson, Barbour told him that there was a young guy over at HHS whos thinking about running for governor of Louisiana.
When Jindal, who was 31 at the time, emerged to meet him, Anderson was confounded. I figured this must be his assistant, he says, because the notion of him running for governor of Louisiana was so funny.
The meeting, suffice it to say, left him impressed.
I thought, Man, I never met anybody like this, Anderson says. I told my colleagues, There are only two problems: Hes 31 and hes of Indian descent. And there was dead silence. And here we are.
Republican primary voters might have the same initial reaction that Anderson did. Jindal proved it wrong then and is now embarking on a campaign to prove it wrong again, on a much bigger stage with much bigger stakes.
Eliana Johnson is Washington editor of National Review.
What he has done for Louisiana, he can do for the country.
There was a lot of corruption in Louisiana politics. The locals didn’t get the blame from the press for the failings in the wake of Katrina, the President did. Even with Mayor Nagin going to prison, the “blame” still rests with Bush.
Jindal would be far better than some of the other names I hear thrown around.
Plus he has the #1 qualification: He isn't white.
RE: There was a lot of corruption in Louisiana politics.
How much of this can be pinned on Jindal himself?
The man has proven to be a true leader.
And Jindal has the charisma of a wet sock.
I’m not trying to pin it on Mr. Jindal, I just wonder how much he can accomplish with others in his state who built their own little empires.
And there are those in Louisiana who welcomed the change from the “old way”.
He has an excellent background prior to becoming Govenor
RE: And Jindal has the charisma of a wet sock.
Much like one of my favorite Presidents — Calvin Coolidge.
Give me boring but competent over exciting but incompetent.
What exactly is wrong with his being of Indian descent? That’s a wacky objection that I doubt most people would even consider.
He’s still pretty young, but he’s certainly proved himself as governor of LA, so I don’t think his youth would be an objection either.
I said the last cycle, if I could just pick a guy to insert into the job (of the possible candidates), it would have been Mitch Daniels out of Indiana. While I have some issues with what he said later on, I think he was the most competent and most successful governor in looking at the political situation and making vast conservative improvements. He would have been excellent in the presidency. Unfortunately, he is short, bald and boring....not the formula to win.
I’d say the same this time with Jindal. If we could pick one sitting governor and just put him in there, he’d be very effective. I question whether he could make it through the campaign process. Of course, assuming Hillary, almost anyone comes out pretty well in the charisma battle. I’d lump Scott Walker into that discussion, too. He’s shown tremendous political acumen at the state level, and he’s done great things. Jindal is a much stronger movement conservative, so I’d give him the leg up. I would love to see either sworn in January 2017...we’d have a strong leader in either case. Neither tops my list, though, just from a political dynamic.
RE: What exactly is wrong with his being of Indian descent?
I believe to many purists, they don’t believe he meets the constitutional criteria of NATURAL BORN.
For a party that claims to hate racists, I suspect the usual suspects in the Dem Party and the MSM will give Gov. Jindal a very rough ride.
(think of those political cartoons that portrayed Condoleeza Rice as a monkey)
He’s a heck of a lot more “natural born” than the alien that currently occupies the WH!
I like
Like the guy or not, he is not a natural born American, and thus not qualified.
RE: Hes a heck of a lot more natural born than the alien that currently occupies the WH!
See post #17 to appreciate what I’ve been saying...
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