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Bobby Jindal strikes an impressive blow for dishonesty

I’m embarrassed to say that I once had a little bit of respect for Bobby Jindal.  I mean, his retrograde social views notwithstanding, he seemed to be exactly what I was looking for in a Republican: intelligent, articulate and comfortable with public policy.  Granted, I would never vote for him, but it is critically important for the country that the GOP take governing seriously, and here was a guy who – I thought – did exactly that. [Read more →]

October 5, 2009   10 Comments

Bobby Jindal – as terrible as everybody else

So, meandering around the web today one comes across almost universal consensus that Bobby Jindal’s speech was simply awful.  The odd thing is, almost all the critics of the speech offer up the same apologetics – namely, that really all State of the Nation response speeches are bad.  This caveat is basically universal.  Ross, for instance, writes:

Sure, responding to a Presidential speech is almost always a thankless, hopeless job – but shouldn’t someone as smart as Jindal have recognized that, and either turned the opportunity down flat, or found a way to sound like something other than a kindergarten teacher delivering familiar GOP talking points?

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February 25, 2009   Comments Off

Jindal: debt is bad when we say it is

Image by flicker user edwardleger used under a Creative Commons license.

Image by flicker user edwardleger used under a Creative Commons license.

I’m open to hearing a defense of Bobby Jindal from Matt Yglesias’s allegations. But I am having a hard time imagining what such a defense could mean. Bobby Jindal was not out there beating the drum of deficit reduction and fiscal responsibility when George Bush was in office; now, suddenly, he’s rediscovered the value of such things. And it’s not even a situation where one side is as bad as the other, as Democrats are generally more amenable to deficit spending.

This question is equally applicable to a lot of Republicans, of course. But they aren’t Jindal and don’t represent what he represents to so many conservatives, of many different stripes. As many have said, Jindal is potentially a Republican Obama, and in two possible directions (not exclusive): an invigorating young politician who wins back political power after a period of great failure; or an empty vessel that partisans can cast all of their hopes and dreams onto, without much at all in the way of evidence or proof. We’ll see. He is an impressive politician who has generated real enthusiasm from an influential part of the conservative intelligentsia. It’s really noticeable to me, just how thoroughly invested otherwise skeptical conservatives have become in Jindal, and how they are developing the same kind of sensitivities towards him that I and other liberals have towards Obama. That’s natural, and people from both sides need to feel inspired by politicians sometimes. But of course there was a huge amount of work to be done between Obama’s convention speech in 2004 and his election in 2008, and what Jindal will amount to in the long term is still quite uncertain. In the meantime, I’d love an explanation of how someone can be considered credible or serious when they start giving a shit about debt and deficits only at the precise time that it becomes politically expedient.

February 25, 2009   7 Comments