By Whitney Blair Wyckoff
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal dodged a question Friday on whether he would "promise" not to join Republican presidential candidate John McCain as his vice presidential running mate this fall.
"He's not going to ask me to run," Jindal said. "I think it would be presumptuous to turn down something I've not been offered. I likened it earlier this week to like going to high school and telling the prettiest girl in the high school 'I'm not going to prom with you' before she asks me.
"I like the job I've got," said Jindal, who took office four months ago. He added that when McCain visited Louisiana last week, the two spoke about the state's recovery plans, levees, wetlands and attempts to cut through government bureaucracy to speed the recovery from the devastation of Hurricane Katrina. "I've got a job where I get to make a difference for my state."
As Louisiana recovers from the economic aftershocks of the 2005 storm, Jindal said he has been attempting to attract business to the state.
"We're not a poor state... we're a wealthy state," Jindal said, adding that Louisiana boasts oil, fisheries, ports and six major rail lines. "We should be running circles around every other state in the country. And yet even before the storms... we were one of the only states in the South to be losing our people."
Recently, the Louisiana legislature approved dozens of ethics bills that he thinks will convince potential investors that the stereotyped "Louisiana way" of doing business--with widespread influence peddling for government contracting--is a thing of the past. The legislation prohibits elected officials from doing business with the state, and it forces elected and appointed officials to disclose sources of income. It also requires lobbyists to disclose their lobbying income, what they are lobbying for and who they are lobbying.
He said that the changes in Louisiana led the Center for Public Integrity to rank the state first in ethics standards. In previous years, Louisiana has ranked 43rd or 44th.
"We worked hard to restore the people's trust in the system in Louisiana," Jindal said.
But he said that the second step to attract commerce was to curtail business taxes.
"If you want businesses to borrow money, to expand, to modernize, to invest in your state, don't tax them when they're trying to do it," Jindal said.
He added, "We are going to be back, and we're going to be back stronger and better than we were before the storms."
Jindal, speaking at the National Press Club, encouraged Congress to approve funding as soon as possible to rebuild levees in Louisiana, and he said there should be national interest in restoring Louisiana's wetlands.
Last year, Jindal, at 36, became the nation's youngest governor. He is the son of Indian immigrants who as a four-year-old asked his friends to call him Bobby after the Brady Bunch TV show character, graduated with honors from Brown University and attended Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar. Before Jindal took over as governor, he twice was elected to the House, served as an assistant secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services and ran unsuccessfully for governor.
Some Republicans tout Jindal, who is Louisiana's first non-white governor since Reconstruction, as the ideal addition to the McCain ticket. Conservative radio talker Rush Limbaugh has described Jindal as the next Ronald Reagan.
In accordance with the state's ethics rules, Jindal said he could not accept a mug presented to him by the press club. But he said that he would donate the mug to the state.
"If you come to the governor's mansion, you'll see this sitting in the mansion long after I'm governor," Jindal said.





Comments
This man seems to good to be true for a state like Louisiana. It will be interesting to see how he survives the gritty reality of the land that gave birth to Huey Long, et al.
Posted by: GW | May 3, 2008 9:04 AM
More importantly, if you don't mind my saying so, " GW ", that great state survived Katrina and the criminal negligence of the crew of Bush's Department of Homeland (In)Security and its bureaucratic bunglers!! It sounds to me like this Governor has mastered the Republican game, quite well: Tell the voters what they want to hear, not the truth and the hard choices that we must make!! I hope Senator McCain, to pay off an old debt, doesn't bring Charles Keating out of mothballs, for his choice of V.P.!!
SUPPORT OUR TROOPS, BRING THEM HOME, ALIVE. NOW.
Posted by: Don Fitzgerald, Chicago | May 3, 2008 10:53 AM
* * * * *
Posted by: Don Fitzgerald, Chicago | May 3, 2008 10:53 AM
There he goes again: Don the resident Democrat raving propagandist.
Don forgot to mention former Governor Blanco, Ray Nagin and their Democrat legions among "bureaucratic bunglers" and those guilty of "criminal negligence" in handling the aftermath of Katrina.
Don also elected to slam Governor Jindal without a single shred of evidence that Jindal has ever done anything wrong, that he isn't as competent or trustworthy as the People of Louisiana seem to think, or that he doesn't have the interest of Louisiana’s citizens at heart. Don forgot, I guess, that the People of Louisiana elected him to the office of Governor after Katrina, and that they chose Jindal over a Democrat. Maybe it didn't dawn on Don that the People of Louisiana might know something more than him about the man.
And then Don comes up with this crazy notion that it might be possible for McCain to select as his running mate a man who stands convicted of bankruptcy fraud. Only loony left, kool-aid drinking Don could possibly think Republicans are that stupid. And, of course, in mentioning Charles Keating, Don completely fails to mention that McCain was essentially exonerated by the Senate ethics panel, unlike the other four DEMOCRATS involved in that scandal.
Way to go, Don. Little Joey Goebbels would have been proud of this effort.
Posted by: John W. | May 4, 2008 7:22 AM