Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  Gov. Jindal defends message of his GOP speech
Last updated: 2009-03-02


Gov. Jindal defends message of his GOP speech
2009-03-02

Category
Time
Year
Nations
U.S.
City
Baton Rouge
States
Louisiana
Category
Regions
County
East Baton Rouge Parish
Event
2005 Hurricane Katrina
Category
U.S. Republican Party
Category
2007
2006
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
Source
(AP)

BATON ROUGE, La. - Widely panned for his national TV address, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal offered his first defense of the speech Monday, saying he sticks by the message, while acknowledging shortcomings in his delivery.

"Look, I get that people thought I could have spoken better. I get that. That's fine ... What's important to me is the content. I'm a policy guy. You guys know that. I've always been a policy guy, always will be a policy guy. The ideas are important. The substance is important," Jindal told reporters in the state Capitol, a day after returning from a family vacation.

The 37-year-old governor, regularly touted as a presidential contender, said he outlined a critical philosophical distinction between the views of Democrats and Republicans as he gave the national GOP response to Obama's first address to Congress last week.

Republican party leaders have touted the Oxford-educated Jindal, son of Indian immigrants, as the future of the GOP, generating lofty expectations for his debut national address. Jindal said he wrote the speech himself.

But the address has been the target of political commentators, comics and bloggers who called it amateurish and out of step with the American public. Some critiqued Jindal's delivery as too "sing-songy," and compared it to the late children's television host Mister Rogers. Some critics asserted the speech -- which was many Americans' first view of Jindal -- could have damaged the governor's long-term political aspirations.

Jindal tried to deflect the criticism Monday and joked that many of Louisiana's governors have received bad national publicity over the years, in a state often the butt of jokes for corrupt politicians.

"Being compared to Mister Rogers is better than some of the other comparisons we've had here in the past," Jindal said.

The governor said it was difficult to follow Obama, known for his impressive oratory, and said he tried to slow his pace because of past complaints that Jindal's rapid-fire speaking style is tough to follow. But he insisted his message was important.

In the speech Tuesday, Jindal criticized Obama's $787 billion economic stimulus package as laden with unnecessary spending added by a Democratic Congress. He talked of the need to cut taxes and limit government spending at a time when polls show a majority of Americans are looking to the federal government to reverse the economic downturn.

Jindal defended those positions again Monday, despite criticism from political commentators -- both Democratic and Republican -- that the speech was too simplistic and offered few new ideas for battling the country's economic woes.

"Our children and grandchildren have to pay that debt back. It's important to get control of that spending in Washington," he said.

Jindal called "a diversion" the claims that his criticism of government spending was hypocritical because he continues to push for hurricane recovery spending, particularly money to repair levees in the New Orleans area damaged by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

The governor said the federal government failed to design and build the levees properly, so the federal government should repair them to the promised standard and help the state recover from the resulting damage.

"I think that is a simple concept: You break it, you buy it," Jindal said.

And despite the repeated criticism over the last week, the Louisiana governor refused any suggestion he might hire a speechwriter.

 East Baton Rouge Parish   2005 Hurricane Katrina 
  Profile News194GalleryLinks  
  Gov. Jindal defends message of his GOP speech (2009-03-02)
  Exxon boosts diesel output as others scale back (2008-12-15)
  Thousands flee Texas coast as Ike approaches (2008-09-11)
  Evacuations begin in Texas ahead of Hurricane Ike (2008-09-10)
  Gulf coast anxiously prepares for Hurricane Ike (2008-09-09)
  Hurricane Ike turns west, away from Florida Keys (2008-09-08)
  Remnants of Gustav slow attempts to restore power (2008-09-03)
  Gustav provides test for rising Louisiana governor (2008-09-03)
  Hurricane Gustav fades moving into Louisiana (2008-09-01)
  As Gustav nears, New Orleans becomes a ghost town (2008-08-31)
  1st black La. Supreme Court justice dies at 84 (2008-06-22)
  Raloxifene Cuts Risk of Certain Type of Breast Cancer (2008-06-11)
  Food banks face high costs but feeding more people (2008-05-26)
  Tropicana Entertainment to file for Chapter 11 protection (2008-05-05)
  Democrat Cazayoux wins congressional seat in Louisiana (2008-05-04)
  Vessels collide on Mississippi; 18 hurt (2008-04-14)
  Campaigns battle to motivate voters in Louisiana (2008-02-09)
  Woman kills two students, self at US college (2008-02-08)
  Study: Acupuncture may boost pregnancy (2008-02-07)
  Barge hits sunken warship replica in La. (2008-01-20)
  Teen Spears' baby daddy eludes media (2007-12-21)
  2 Ph.D students killed on LSU campus (2007-12-14)
  FEMA to workers: Stay out of trailers (2007-11-08)
  Katrina evacuees trapped in trailers (2007-08-04)
  U.S. family tries living without China (2007-06-30)


Stories Coverages

NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
 ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 
[China-U.S.]: US and China to reduce emissions, but not enough (22:24 11/27)


[2009 Dubai Debt Crisis]: Stocks slide on concerns about Dubai debt fallout (16:24 11/27)

[U.S. Markets]: Stocks slide on concerns about Dubai debt fallout (16:24 11/27)


[Black Friday]: Shoppers pack stores as holiday season revs up (08:58 11/27)


[European Markets]: Dubai debt fears remain focus in world markets (08:58 11/27)

[Iran Nuclear Crisis]: Iran condemned by UN nuclear watchdog (22:24 11/27)


[Holocaust]: Son insists accused Nazi guard will be found innocent (08:58 11/27)

[Japanese Markets]: Dubai debt fears hit world markets hard (16:52 11/26)

[2008 U.S. Recession]: Obama and GOP differ over recipe for jobs, economy (16:52 11/26)

[2008 U.S. Real Estate Crisis]: Seniors suffer in troubled California subdivision (16:52 11/26)



Muzi.com

Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.