Bobby Jindal鈥檚 unpleasant record

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/bobby-jindals-unpleasant-record/2015/02/09/e91a2386-b0a7-11e4-854b-a38d13486ba1_story.html

By Dana Milbank Opinion writer February 9

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal took his presidential campaign-in-waiting to Washington on Monday trailed by an unwelcome, unsavory and downright unpleasant companion: his record.

The interloper followed the Louisiana Republican into the St. Regis Hotel and crashed his breakfast meeting with three dozen reporters, at which Jindal planned to make the case to do for America what he did for Louisiana.

Dave Cook of the Christian Science Monitor, the breakfast host, quickly acknowledged the presence of Jindal鈥檚 uninvited guest by pointing out that, for all of Jindal鈥檚 claims that he鈥檚 a champion of education, a study found that public universities in Louisiana had suffered the deepest cuts per student in the nation under Jindal.

The governor replied by talking about teacher salaries, taxes, state credit upgrades, the state payroll, private-sector job growth 鈥 just about everything other than what he had been asked about.

Alexis Simendinger of RealClearPolitics made another reference to Jindal鈥檚 unwanted but omnipresent sidekick by observing that he had taken the state from a billion-dollar surplus to a $1.6 billion budget deficit.

Jindal responded with a four-minute filibuster, repeating his points about the state payroll, credit upgrades and private-sector job growth. For good measure, he tossed in statistics about graduation rates, official ethics, population growth 鈥 even low-birth-weight babies spending less time in neonatal intensive-care units. 鈥淕reat for those babies, great for taxpayers,鈥 Jindal said.

It was the equivalent of a homeowner dismissing the significance of his foreclosure by noting that he had done a fine job tending the flower beds.

This is likely to be a problem for Jindal and several other Republican presidential hopefuls. Some of the party鈥檚 most promising candidates are governors or former governors running on their executive experience. But their experience isn鈥檛 always a good advertisement for the limited-government policies they promote.

There鈥檚 New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who has seen his state鈥檚 credit rating downgraded eight times and who has presided over a state debt that reached a record-high $78 billion while unemployment is above the national average. Then there鈥檚 Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who led his state to a projected $2.2 billion deficit while Wisconsin鈥檚 wage and job growth sag below the national average. Indiana鈥檚 Mike Pence and Ohio鈥檚 John Kasich have more impressive stories to tell. Rick Perry presided over a big boom in Texas during his 14 years as governor, but his tenure has left him with other things, too, including an indictment. Former governors Jeb Bush (Fla.) and Mike Huckabee (Ark.) don鈥檛 have current records to sell.

Louisiana鈥檚 travails are particularly problematic because they have been caused in large part by Jindal鈥檚 tax cuts, which, along with declining oil revenue, blew such a hole in the state budget that even huge spending cuts haven鈥檛 made up the gap. In the last few days, articles in the New York Times and Politico have detailed Louisiana鈥檚 fiscal travails, including a possible 40 percent operating-budget cut at Louisiana State University and an increase in tuition at public universities of 90 percent during Jindal鈥檚 time in office. Jindal has already raided state reserve funds and resorted to the sort of budget-keeping gimmicks that he once criticized.

Jindal ate up the first 15 minutes of Monday鈥檚 hour-long breakfast with an extensive preamble about an education reform policy he is proposing for the nation. But his record quickly intruded. 鈥淚s there some irony in your talking about ramping up education while you鈥檙e cutting it in Louisiana?鈥 Cook inquired.

The governor ignored the specific question 鈥 about Jindal鈥檚 cuts to per-student spending for higher ed being the deepest in the nation 鈥 and instead delivered a sermon that included a boast about 鈥渆ight credit upgrades鈥 for the state and the 鈥渟trongest credit rating we鈥檝e seen in decades.鈥

Unmentioned: That just last week, Moody鈥檚 issued a 鈥渃redit negative鈥 report on Louisiana and said its problems have been intensified by its reliance on $1 billion in temporary patchwork funding being used to prop up the budget this year. The Republican state treasurer, John Kennedy, protested 鈥渂udget gimmicks鈥 and years of being 鈥渇iscally irresponsible.鈥

Minutes later, when Simendinger asked Jindal to explain why the big state deficit 鈥渜ualifies you to run for president,鈥 the governor replied with a string of non-sequiturs.

鈥淚n New Orleans, 90 percent of our kids are in charter schools.鈥

鈥淚t used to take 10 days to get a prescription if you were uninsured in Baton Rouge, and now it takes 10 minutes.鈥

鈥淚n ethics rankings we were bottom five for legislative disclosure, and now we鈥檙e in the top five.鈥

A while later, he joked, 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 the short answer.鈥

No, governor, that鈥檚 a non-answer.

Twitter: @Milbank

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