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Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal announces run for president in video Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal announces run for president in video
(about 1 hour later)
Louisiana Republican Bobby Jindal announced his candidacy for the White House on Wednesday via a “hidden camera” video posted on Facebook.Louisiana Republican Bobby Jindal announced his candidacy for the White House on Wednesday via a “hidden camera” video posted on Facebook.
In the video, Jindal, the two-term governor of the Pelican State, gathers his family around a table in their backyard to tell his children that he is running for president. Jindal describes the decision as something that he and his wife have been thinking about and promises his children that “if they behave they can go back to Iowa”.In the video, Jindal, the two-term governor of the Pelican State, gathers his family around a table in their backyard to tell his children that he is running for president. Jindal describes the decision as something that he and his wife have been thinking about and promises his children that “if they behave they can go back to Iowa”.
He followed that with a tweet:He followed that with a tweet:
I’m running for President of the United States of America. Join me: http://t.co/MmqB4kxpUqI’m running for President of the United States of America. Join me: http://t.co/MmqB4kxpUq
This makes Jindal the 13th Republican to announce a 2016 presidential bid. However, he faces an uphill battle. A former Rhodes scholar who had long been considered a rising star in the GOP, Jindal has faced sinking approval ratings in his home state and has made a series of flip flops on issues like Common Core to appeal to his party’s conservative base. He also drew national attention for signing a bill to allow the teaching of creationism in Louisiana schools. This makes Jindal the 13th Republican to announce a 2016 presidential bid. However, he faces an uphill battle and currently polls at less than 1% in the crowded GOP field.
Jindal’s candidacy though is historic. He is the first Indian American ever to run for the White House and, if elected, would be the third-youngest president (behind Theodore Roosevelt and John F Kennedy). A former Rhodes scholar who had long been considered a rising star in the GOP, Jindal’s fortunes have ebbed in recent years.
His approval ratings in his home state have hit an all-time low and fellow Republicans have railed against a gimmick in his most recent budget that serves to disguise an increase in revenue.
This marks a major fall for a Republican who was once considered the future of the GOP. A two-term congressman who became the first Indian American governor in American history in 2007 at the age of 36, Jindal was tapped to give the Republican response to Barack Obama’s first address to Congress in 2009.
However, his speech was widely panned as Jindal was compared to the character Kenneth the Page from the television show 30 Rock and the Louisiana governor’s political fortunes have never fully recovered.
But that comparison isn’t the only obstacle that Jindal’s long-shot bid for the White House faces. The Louisiana Republican has also drawn criticism for making a series of flip-flops on issues like Common Core to appeal to his party’s conservative base. Jindal went from being a staunch advocate of the program when it was adopted in Louisiana in 2010 to a vehement critic of the educational standards.
Jindal, who converted to Catholicism as a young man, has also drawn national scrutiny for his social conservatism. As a college student, Jindal participated in an exorcism and also drew national attention for signing a bill to allow the teaching of creationism in Louisiana schools in 2008.
Regardless of the obstacles that he faces, Jindal’s candidacy is historic. He is the first Indian-American ever to run for the White House.
Further, if elected, Jindal would be the third-youngest president (behind Theodore Roosevelt and John F Kennedy).
The Louisiana governor is expected to give a formal announcement speech later today in his home state.