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Bobby Jindal on Principles & Values

Republican Governor; previously Representative (LA-1)

 


Save the idea of America before it's too late

My message is to conservatives, this is our hour. Thanks to the insanity, the incompetence of the Democratic party, the American people are ready to turn our government over to us. It's not enough to let just any Republican, however. The reality is the idea of America is slipping away. As Christians, we believe that the tomb is empty. As Americans, we believe that our best days are always ahead of us, and they can be again. We must win this election. We cannot allow Hillary Clinton to take us down this path towards socialism. I've got the courage to apply our conservative principles. I can't do it alone. With your help, with God's grace, we can save the idea of America before it's too late.
Source: GOP "Your Money/Your Vote" 2015 CNBC 2nd-tier debate , Oct 28, 2015


Bobby Jindal on Past Campaigns

Get rid of Republican Party and create a party with backbone

You heard a Senate Republican say, "We can't defund Planned Parenthood, despite these barbaric videos." I wish the Senate Republicans had half the fight in them the Senate Democrats did. If we can't defund Planned Parenthood now, if we can't stand for innocent human life after these barbaric videos, it is time to be done with the Republican Party. It's time to have Republican with a backbone in DC.
Source: 2015 Republican two-tiered primary undercard debate on CNN , Sep 16, 2015

I ran for office to make generational change, not popularity

Q: Your approval numbers at home are in the mid 30s. If the people of Louisiana are not satisfied, what makes you think that the people of this nation would be?

JINDAL: Last time I was elected governor, I won a record margin in my state. We've got a lot of politicians that will kiss babies, cut ribbons, do whatever it takes to be popular. That's not why I ran for office. I ran for office to make the generational changes in Louisiana. We've cut 26 percent of our budget. We have 30,000 fewer state bureaucrats than the day I took office. I don't think anybody has cut that much government anywhere, at any time. As a result, eight credit upgrades; as a result, a top ten state for private sector job creation. My point is this: I won two landslide elections, I made big changes. I think our country is tired of the politicians who simply read the polls and fail to lead. I think the American people are looking for real leadership. That's what I've done in Louisiana, that's what I'll do in America.

Source: Fox News/Facebook Second Tier debate transcript , Aug 6, 2015

We can't just be the party of no

Q: You said last year, "we've got to stop being the stupid party." Well, how is that going?

JINDAL: That was an RNC audience. And you can tell there was some nervous laughter when I said that. I've got Op-Ed coming out tomorrow: we can't just be the party of no. As a party, we've got good solutions. Why not delay all of the mandates in ObamaCare? Why not approve the Keystone Pipeline today? The Republican Party needs to be all about growth, opportunity, creating good paying private sector jobs.

Source: Face the Nation 2014 interview: 2016 presidential hopefuls , Feb 23, 2014

We've got to stop being the stupid party

Q: This week you really saw Republicans start to say who are we and what did we do wrong the last time out? Haley Barbour says we should have won the presidential election. Bobby Jindal, the governor of Louisiana, boy, he laid it out on the line:

GOV. BOBBY JINDAL, R-LA.: We've got to stop being the stupid party. It's no secret we had a number of Republicans that damaged the brand this year with offensive and bizarre comments. I'm here to say we've had enough of that.

NEWT GINGRICH: You know, it's ironic. In 1976, Irving Kristol wrote an essay for The Wall Street Journal entitled "The Stupid Party," which I commend to every Republican. Ronald Reagan came along with Jack Kemp and they basically moved us back to being an idea-oriented party. I think we clearly have to change. When you lose Latinos by 71%; you lose Asian- Americans by 74%; you lose people under 30; you lose single women--I mean, you go down the list. Except for 2004, with an incumbent, we have not won a majority since 1988.

Source: CBS Face the Nation 2013 series: 2016 presidential hopefuls , Jan 27, 2013

2009 Obama response speech: I blew it

I was selected to give the Republican response to Pres. Obama's first speech to Congress in Feb. 2009, a time when the president was still extremely popular. Republican leaders in Washington knew me or had read good things about me, so they thought I would be a good choice to give the Republican Party response. Turns out they were wrong. I blew it.

Truth be told, I have never mastered the teleprompter. In fact, I hate the teleprompter. And as the country found out that night, the teleprompter hates me, too.

So here you have me, a guy who is "teleprompter challenged," versus the king of the teleprompter. Bad match up. My delivery was just awful. Even though it's never been done before, I should have just winged the response. The press savage my performance.

The bottom line is this: it was my speech, I delivered it poorly, and I take full responsibility for it. When you screw up, it's time to man up. Interestingly, many people who heard the speech, but did not see it, thought it was great.

Source: Leadership and Crisis, by Bobby Jindal, p. 37-38 , Nov 15, 2010


Bobby Jindal on Personal Background

Parents accepted my conversion; but they are actively Hindu

Q: What was your parents reaction when you told them you were becoming a Christian?

A: At first, they were very, very concerned. I'm a parent and I put myself in their shoes: 'Your teenage son comes home and says he is changing his religion. At first your reaction is--'Is this just a fad? Is he doing it for a girl? Will it wear off?' Second, you wonder, 'Is he joining a cult?' Third you wonder, 'Is he rejecting us?' I think they finally got to acceptance. By the time they attended our wedding and our kids' baptisms, they are very proud to be there. But still they are actively Hindu.

Q: What led you to join the Catholic Church while a student at Brown University?

A: There were a couple of things that drew me to Catholicism. One was the sacraments, and I felt a hunger for the sacraments. The other was the history and tradition of the church. I got baptized in Providence (without family present); I didn't want to cause them any more heartache than I had already caused.

Source: Washington Post 2014 coverage of 2016 presidential hopefuls , May 14, 2014

Journey from Hinduism to Christianity began in high school

My parents naturally assumed I would remain a Hindu, but knew I was investigating Christianity. My journey to Christianity accelerated at the end of my sophomore year in high school when my grandfather died suddenly of a stroke. At one point, I bought "Cliff's Notes to the Bible", to help me make sense of it.

My questions continued until a church at LSU showed a simple film about the crucifixion. I had studied that momentous event, yet watching that film I suddenly realized that Christ was on the cross because of me--my sins--what I had done, what I had failed to do. This was my epiphany. He didn't die for billions, which was so abstract, but because of me. Suddenly, God was tangible.

In the summer of 1987 I knelt in prayer and accepted Christ as my Savior. For a year I postponed telling my parents.

My path to Christianity was an intellectual journey followed by a leap of faith. It took me years, and at the end of it I concluded that the historical evidence for Christianity was overwhelming

Source: Leadership and Crisis, by Bobby Jindal, p. 45-50 , Nov 15, 2010

Mother was pregnant with him when parents arrived from India

Regardless of party, all Americans are moved by the president's personal story--the son of an American mother and a Kenyan father, who grew up to become leader of the free world. Like the president's father, my own parents came to this country from a distant land. When they arrived in Baton Rouge, my mother was already 4-months pregnant. I was what folks in the insurance industry now call a "pre-existing condition." To find work, my dad picked up the yellow pages and started calling local businesses. Even after landing a job, he could still not afford to pay for my delivery, so he worked out an installment plan with the doctor. Fortunately for me, he never missed a payment.

As I grew up, my mom & dad taught me the values that attracted them to this country, and they instilled in me an immigrant's wonder at the greatness of America. As a child, my dad would tell me: "Bobby, Americans can do anything." I still believe that to this day: When we pull together, there is no challenge we can't overcome.

Source: GOP response to the 2009 State of the Union address , Feb 24, 2009


Bobby Jindal on Political Philosophy

Republicans should embrace Republican principles

Q: Republicans lost the popular vote in five of the last six presidential elections. Are Democrats simply putting forward a better national economic message?

JINDAL: No, I think right now there's not much difference between the two parties. The reason we keep losing nationally is we try to be cheaper versions of the Democratic party. What if the Republicans, what if Republicans actually embraced our own principles?

Q: What are those principles?

JINDAL: If you want bigger paychecks, you want more jobs, you want less government dependence, you're going to have to cut government spending. If Republicans want to win national elections, let's be conservatives, let's be Republicans, let's not be a second version of the liberal party, let's cut government spending and grow the American economy.

Source: 2015 Fox Business/WSJ Second Tier GOP debate , Nov 10, 2015

Reagan's 11th commandment only applies to real conservatives

Q: You have said that the front runner, Donald Trump, is an "unstable, narcissistic, ego maniac." Reagan made famous the so-called 11th Commandment, "Thou shalt not speak ill of thy fellow Republican."

JINDAL: I'm in compliance with the 11th Commandment: let's stop treating Donald Trump like a Republican. If he were really a conservative and 30 points ahead, I would endorse him. He's not a conservative. He's not a liberal. He's not a Democrat. He's not a Republican. He believes in Donald Trump.

SANTORUM: I think personal attacks, [should be limited to just one person], Hillary Clinton. I don't think it helps when Republicans attack Republicans personally.

JINDAL: Hillary Clinton is gift-wrapping this election to us. They are running their weakest candidate. The best way for us to give this election back would be to nominate a Donald Trump. He'll implode in the general election. You can't just attack him on policy. He doesn't care about policy. He's not serious.

Source: 2015 Republican two-tiered primary undercard debate on CNN , Sep 16, 2015

Don't turn the American dream into the European nightmare

I don't have a famous last name. My daddy didn't run for president. I don't have a reality TV show. I'll tell you what I do have, I've got the backbone, I've got the bandwidth, I've got the experience to get us through these tough times, to make sure that we don't turn the American dream into the European nightmare.
Source: 2015 Republican two-tiered primary undercard debate on CNN , Sep 16, 2015

Uncompromising GOP leadership in DC to make real change

I want to run a campaign where we embrace our principles, establishment Republicans don't want us to do that. Jeb Bush says, "We've got to be willing to lose the primary in order to win the general election." I strongly disagree with that. What some of those Republicans are saying is we've got to hide who we are. Nonsense. We don't just need to send a Republican to D.C., we need to send somebody who will take on the conventional wisdom. Republicans in D.C. say you cannot repeal ObamaCare. That you cannot shrink the federal government. You cannot balance the budget. You cannot do term limits. Well, if we don't do that, we're done. We can own this next century if we actually implement conservative reforms. I'm not running to manage the decline of this great country. I'm running to make real changes in D.C.
Source: Meet the Press 2015 interviews of 2016 presidential hopefuls , Jun 28, 2015

We must stop viewing ourselves as being separated by race

I'm glad that America has moved towards a much better view on race relations. I've said we need to stop viewing ourselves as hyphenated Americans, we're not African Americans or Indian Americans, we're all Americans. I think viewing people by the color of their skin is one of the dumbest ways to view people.
Source: Meet the Press 2015 interviews of 2016 presidential hopefuls , Jun 28, 2015

OpEd: Appeals to both Ivy League-coasts and Bible Belt

America needs a leader to bridge the widening gulf between faith and science, and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, a devout Roman Catholic with Ivy League-level science training, thinks he can be that person.

As a studious man of immigrant background with the kind of credentials admired by coastal intellectual meritocrats--Brown, Oxford and McKinsey & Company--the Republican governor, at least on paper, has a chance to appeal to the middle, should he run for president in 2016. He also has an impressive record as a government bureaucrat and administrator, both in Washington and in Baton Rouge.

Yet given his own deep faith and his roots in the Bible Belt, Jindal's early focus will be on wooing evangelical Christians and others on the cultural right.

If he can solve this Rubik's Cube of religious belief and scientific trust, he may not only do the country a favor; he might reach the White House.

Source: Huffington Post 2014 coverage of 2016 presidential hopefuls , Sep 16, 2014

Dems are for government expansion & economic contraction

Jindal encouraged Republicans to focus their efforts on ensuring America could once again become a land of opportunity, while seeming to advise that efforts at fiscal restraint should be directed at the most egregious examples of government waste, noting that Obama would never be able to give enough tax money to his green-energy cronies to create prosperity. "As conservatives, we must dedicate our energies and efforts to growing America," Jindal said.

He portrayed this goal as more realistic than a bitter struggle for control of Washington, given the results of recent elections, and the booby prize awarded to the victors of such a struggle. "If our end goal is to simply better manage the disaster that is the federal government, you can count me out. I'm not signing up for that. Who here wants to sign up for managing the decline of America?"

He said he was content to allow the Democrats to remain the party of government expansion and economic contraction.

Source: 2013 Conservative Political Action Conf. in "Human Events" , Mar 16, 2013

Crisis principles: urgency; listening; informing public

    As I look back, the oil spill has reinforced several principles I have learned through my years of dealing with crisis:
  1. You must lead from the front. Always.
  2. Speed is everything. There must be a sense of urgency.
  3. Listen to the locals.
  4. Don't wait for federal agencies to tell you what to do.tell them what you need.
  5. Keep the public informed of details. Transparency inspires confidence.
  6. Make quick decisions when plans fail.
  7. Demand and expect excellence.
  8. Ignore the politics, focus on doing a good job.
  9. Read the old playbook, then throw it out and get ready to improvise.
  10. Hope for the best but prepare for the worst, immediately. If you prepare for war and peace breaks out, great! But if you prepare for peace and war breaks out, you're in trouble!
Source: Leadership and Crisis, by Bobby Jindal, p. 22-23 , Nov 15, 2010

I'm a son of the Deep South

The national media tends to misunderstand Louisiana. You will not find a more giving, generous group of people anywhere on the face of the earth, and this extends beyond all the racial, class, partisan, or religious lines.

National reporters have often said to me, "It must have been so tough for you growing up in the Deep South." To which my response is, "Um.no. It was not tough, in fact it was tremendous. I'm a son of the Deep South, so you can keep your prejudices to yourself." Louisiana is my home and I'm proud of it.

I've never had it tough, but my dad did. He grew up in India, the only one of nine children to get beyond the fifth grade. For me, growing up middle-class in Louisiana was anything but tough. Compared to my father, I grew up in great riches, because I grew up in America.

Source: Leadership and Crisis, by Bobby Jindal, p. 26-28 , Nov 15, 2010


Bobby Jindal on Religion

Washington is waging "silent war" against religious liberty

Gov. Bobby Jindal told religious conservatives that the Obama administration has been waging a war on religion and a "hostile takeover" of Washington is imminent: "I can sense right now a rebellion brewing amongst these United States, where people are ready for a hostile takeover of Washington, D.C., to preserve the American Dream for our children and grandchildren." Jindal said during the annual Faith and Freedom Coalition conference in Washington.

Jindal said there was a "silent war" against religious liberty: "I am tired of the left. They say they're for tolerance, they say they respect diversity. The reality is this: They respect everybody unless you happen to disagree with them," he said. "The left is trying to silence us and I'm tired of it, I won't take it anymore."

Source: The Hill weblog 2014 coverage of 2016 presidential hopefuls , Jun 22, 2014

Traditional Hindu values mesh with Bible Belt beliefs

Growing up I was taught to pray and believe in an all-powerful God who created the universe and was present and active in our daily lives. My parents were, and remain to this day, devout Hindus.

But the values I learned from my Hindu parents ran deep: honesty, respect for elders, hard work, modesty, reverence, the importance of family--traditional Hindu values that meshed quite well with Louisiana's traditional Bible Belt beliefs. I never felt culturally different from your typical Baton Rouge kid.

Source: Leadership and Crisis, by Bobby Jindal, p. 44-45 , Nov 15, 2010

Elite harbor condescending view of people of faith

Having attended Brown University, studied at Oxford, and served in the highest levels of government, I have spent a great deal of time interacting with folks who would be classified as our country's "elites." I've found many of these folks, who predominately reside in the Boston-New York-Washington corridor, harbor a condescending view of people of faith.

To this day, it surprises me how little the national press understands about faith. When I was serving in Washington, I had lunch with a well-known reporter. Before we ate she saw me bow my head and say grace, ever so briefly mind you. She immediately asked me if everything was okay. She was startled and fascinated by what I had done. And the fact that it startled her startled me. She was not rude or condescending. She just didn't have any frame of reference for a person who would say grace in a public restaurant before lunch. But some of our top national reporters ARE condescending, & it goes beyond matters of faith.

Source: Leadership and Crisis, by Bobby Jindal, p. 33-34 , Nov 15, 2010

Rated B by the Club for Growth, pro-growth but not targeted.

Jindal scores B by the Club for Growth, a conservative PAC

The GOP controls the Senate by just one vote. Even with today’s margin, the GOP doesn’t have effective control of the agenda as the Democrats use the filibuster to kill pro-growth reform or crucial judicial appointments. The next Senate could confirm two U.S. Supreme Court justices.

If the Republicans do manage to pick up a few extra seats in the Senate, there could also be an ideological shift toward pro-growth issues. Right now, the balance of power is in the hands of the RINO Republicans like Olympia Snowe and Arlen Specter. With a seat pick-up for the GOP, plus the addition of GOP superstars, Olympia and Arlen would no longer be deciding votes. We could move away from watered-down Republicanism toward a genuine pro-growth agenda.

Members of the Club are economic conservatives, like-minded political contributors who are frustrated with the ideological drift of both parties today. Club members have a shared goal of contributing to and electing more Reaganites to Congress who are willing to stand for the issues like: cutting taxes, controlling federal spending, personal accounts for Social Security, ending the death tax, eliminating the capital gains tax, fundamental tax reform, providing true school choice and minimizing government's role in our daily lives.

The stakes are mighty high in the Senate elections. That’s why we’re providing you now with our outlook for every competitive Senate race and a list of our top tier choices. The “A” List Candidates make this list because their races are competitive and they are the very best on economic issues. The “B” List Candidates are all in hotly contested races too, but they are not as rock solid on economic growth issues.

Source: CFG website 04n-CFG on Sep 21, 2004

Rated 0% by the AU, indicating opposition to church-state separation.

Jindal scores 0% by the AU on church-state separation

OnTheIssues.org interprets the 2006 AU scores as follows:

About the AU (from their website, www.au.org):

Americans United for Separation of Church and State (AU) is a religious liberty watchdog group based in Washington, D.C. Founded in 1947, the organization educates Americans about the importance of church-state separation in safeguarding religious freedom. AU is a nonpartisan organization dedicated to preserving the constitutional principle of church-state separation as the only way to ensure religious freedom for all Americans.

Americans United is a national organization with members in all 50 states. We are headquartered in Washington, D.C., and led by the Rev. Barry W. Lynn, executive director. AU has more than 75,000 members from all over the country. They include people from all walks of life and from various faith communities, as well as those who profess no particular faith. We are funded by donations from our members and others who support church-state separation. We do not seek, nor would we accept, government funding.

Source: AU website 06n-AU on Dec 31, 2006

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