Governor PBJ

Roundup ...

by: ryan

Mon Dec 21, 2009 at 08:55:58 AM CST

Since I didn't blog last week ... I wanted to give y'all a round-up of what happened that I found noteworthy in little blurbs:

  • The Sinning Senator once again has trouble telling the truth to the people of Louisiana, this time with respect to the safety standards on children's toys.
  • Senator Mary Landrieu appeared on MSNBC with Howard Dean, and morphed into a defender of the Senate's Health Care Bill:

  • Governor PBJ has been busy inviting supporters to join him for a duck hunt out in Cameron Parish during the first weekend of 2010. No news on whether former Vice President Dick "Buckshot" Cheney is scheduled to attend.
  • Ahhhh, dem Saints. To be honest, I'm fine with dem losing a game ... because a perfect season would lagniappe to what I really want to see - da Saints in Super Bowl XLIV!
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Governor PBJ Hanging Out With Ponzi Schemer

by: ryan

Wed Nov 18, 2009 at 15:28:16 PM CST

Well, well, well ... it was only a matter of time before Governor PBJ came into contact with some shady characters on the fundraising trail, since he spends oh, so much time traveling outta the Gret Stet, as you can see to the right.

If y'all click on the picture (or here), you'll see the yeoman's work that conservative blogger CB at The Old River Road has been doing with respect to tracking Governor PBJ's multiple out of state jaunts to keep his national profile up for a '12 or '16 bid for the White House, while ostensibly raising campaign cash for his re-election campaign in '11.

Some background from that TPM Muckraker report linked to above:

One of the co-chairs of the October 2008 reception was none other than Scott Rothstein, then a prominent Fort Lauderdale attorney, now accused of a fraud worth $1 billion.

He contributed the maximum $5,000 to Jindal, and his firm, Rothstein, Rosenfeldt, and Adler ponied up another $5,000, according to Louisiana campaign finance records. Jindal, a potential GOP presidential hopeful, is the latest addition to a lengthy list of pols who hit up Rothstein for money.

Doesn't sound like much, does it? Of course, Governor PBJ never had his picture taken with the man, let alone meet him ... right? Wrong:

GOP operative Roger Stone, a former business associate of Rothstein's, tells TPMmuckraker he remembers Rothstein huddling with Jindal at the Republican Governors Association conference in Miami, held the month after the football game.

Maybe this Stone guy has an axe to grind. Well, then there is this: (emphasis added)

In the past few days alone, Rothstein had a nice chat with his friend John McCain ("He asked how all our local races went; that's the kind of guy he is"); did some business in New York; held a fundraiser in Miami for rising Republican star Bobby Jindal (the Louisiana governor who might run for president in 2012); spent a day screening judicial applicants for Florida's 4th District Court of Appeal; eulogized one of his best friends, who was killed in a motorcycle wreck; and searched for a liver for a friend who needs a transplant.

So, how 'bout it, Governor PBJ? You gonna return the money donated by Mr. Rothstein and his firm, as quite a few Florida politicians are doing?

UPDATE: The Governor's press flack, Kyle Plotkin, formerly of The Wanna Be's Senate campaign, and also the "liberal" former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney's presidential campaign, told TPM that the Governor will be giving the $10,000 he received from Mr. Rothstein and his company to the victim's compensation fund once one is created.

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Vitter's Silence ...

by: ryan

Tue Oct 20, 2009 at 23:35:11 PM CDT

By now, y'all have heard about the Tangipahoa Justice of the Peace Keith Bardwell's refusal to marry an interracial couple. Here's what Governor Jindal had to say:

"This is a clear violation of constitutional rights and federal and state law. ... Disciplinary action should be taken immediately -- including the revoking of his license."

So Gov. PBJ wants him gone. Here's what Senator Mary Landrieu had to say, via a press release from her office:

"I am deeply disturbed by Justice Bardwell's practices and comments concerning interracial marriages. Not only does his decision directly contradict Supreme Court rulings, it is an example of the ugly bigotry that divided our country for too long. I call upon the Louisiana Judiciary Committee to use its authority to have Justice Bardwell dismissed from his position. He clearly has no intention of administering the law or upholding justice for interracial couples."

And, here, ladies and gentlemen of Louisiana, is what your Sinning Senator, the one up for re-election next fall had to say when questioned by Mike Stark, the blogger behind The Crooked Dope:

You don't think that's the case, Sinning Senator? What, that you're the senior most official from the State of Louisiana NOT TO COMMENT on this? If so, please see the quotes from Governor Jindal and Senator Landrieu above. Or perhaps you're not aware that Mr. Bardwell refused to marry an interracial couple? If so, please click here!

Then again, your silence ain't all that surprising to those who know you best ...

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Governor PBJ's Been Cautious About Endorsing Republicans?

by: ryan

Wed Sep 30, 2009 at 10:48:22 AM CDT

Politico has this tidbit about Governor PBJ's public distancing from the Sinning Senator:

And in a sign that he is keeping a close eye on his own political standing, both in Baton Rouge and beyond, the governor pointedly declined to offer his endorsement of Sen. David Vitter (R-La.), who could face a serious reelection battle next year in the wake of his appearance on a Washington madam's client list and his subsequent admission of an undefined "very serious sin."

"We'll make a decision whether we'll get involved in that race once we get closer. We haven't made that decision yet," said Jindal, who has been cautious in the past about his endorsements. While allowing that Vitter was doing well in polls and fundraising, Jindal noted it's still "very early in that election cycle" and that many average voters aren't yet paying attention.

Cautious in his endorsements?  Are ya kidding?  Let's take a look at PBJ's greatest endorsement hits over the last year:

And he's also endorsed Jimmy Faircloth, the doer of "unethical, unscrupulous and substantially injurious acts and misdeeds" (pdf alert ... according to this lawsuit filed by a Texas law firm - hat tip to We Saw That) who is running the for the open Supreme Court seat:

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Governor PBJ Nixes High Speed Rail for Louisiana

by: ryan

Sat Aug 22, 2009 at 14:28:53 PM CDT

Geez ... it's becoming quite apparent that Governor PBJ is increasingly desperate not to give President Obama ANYTHING to crow about when he campaigns for re-election in 2012 ... at least with respect to Louisiana.

First, the Governor lambasted the Recovery Act, known in Jindal-speak as the "a nearly trillion-dollar stimulus that has not stimulated."

Then we learned that the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development would not be putting up the ubiquitous yellow signs along highway construction informing us of the funding source, supposedly to save money. But as Walter Pierce of The Ind informs us:

When asked why DOTD used similar signage for highway projects funded through state surplus money, the spokesman replied, "But we put up really cheap signs."

Uhhhhh-huh. Or perhaps the Jindal Administration is making sure that the federal gummint, and by extension, President Obama, gets no credit for anything positive in the Gret Stet.

Further evidence of this goal of the PBJ Administration is the fact that the Governor just went on a barn-stormin', 64 parish tour of the Gret Stet, handing out gigundous checks signed by him for stimulating programs, funded, in part by the "nearly trillion dollar stimulus that has not stimulated."

Now, after Governor PBJ was named the one of the world's worst people for his hypocrisy on high speed rail - specifically blasting it in his National Response, only to have his Administration inform the feds that they might want high speed rail funds for a line between New Orleans and Baton Rouge - we learn that the Governor is indeed, not in favor of high-speed rail in Louisiana.

Pity ... the real losers are the people of Louisiana, thanks to Governor PBJ.

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Governor PBJ ... Worst Person in the World

by: ryan

Thu Aug 20, 2009 at 13:44:06 PM CDT

Governor PBJ is at it again ... saying one thing, but doing another. Back in February, in the Republican response to the President's national address, he denounced President Obama's Stimulus bill as "wasteful spending." But more to the point is what he denounced as "wasteful spending":

While some of the projects in the bill make sense, their legislation is larded with wasteful spending. It includes $300 million to buy new cars for the government, $8 billion for high-speed rail projects, such as a "magnetic levitation" line from Las Vegas to Disneyland, and $140 million for something called "volcano monitoring."

Now, the State of Louisiana is planning on seeking federal funding for a high speed rail link from New Orleans to Baton Rouge. But why would Governor PBJ seek money that he views as wasteful?

According to Louisiana Department of Transportation and Developement official Tom Atkinson:

"Long term we see it as a very valuable economic incubator for the entire corridor."

But wait ... hasn't Governor PBJ declared that the Recovery Act (aka the stimulus) has not stimulated? No wonder, then, that KO declared Governor PBJ the worst person in the world last night, as it is apparent that Governor PBJ is trying to have it both ways:

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LA-Sen: Governor PBJ Refuses To Endorse Sinning Senator Vitter

by: ryan

Mon Aug 03, 2009 at 16:25:46 PM CDT

After nearly months of hearing the rumor from folks throughout Louisiana that Governor PBJ might leave the Governor's mansion to run against the Sinning Senator David Vitter, Governor PBJ finally deigned it time to address the issue head-on: (emphasis mine)

"Well a couple of things, first, Vitter's going to have to make his case with the voters, just like every candidate does. There's been a lot of speculation. Let me answer your question very directly, I'm not running for the senate, I'm running for re-election as governor in 2011, but David's going have to make his case with the voters directly just like any other candidate's going to have to do that."

Wow. Not only is Governor PBJ distancing himself from running against the Sinning Senator, but he literally does not want the taint of the Sinning Senator's peccadilloes to even touch him in public.

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Governor PBJ Taking Credit for Federal Government's Actions

by: ryan

Thu Jul 23, 2009 at 10:55:54 AM CDT

Mike Stagg pointed out Governor PBJ's propensity for taking credit for things he didn't do. This picture above shows Governor PBJ signing a faux check of federal dollars that were earmarked to the State of Louisiana in the very same federal stimulus bill which he panned as being full of pork.

Well, 4 months later, Governor PBJ has NO problem whatsoever taking credit for the money he opposed receiving in the first place.

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Governor PBJ's an Expert in Health Care?

by: ryan

Tue Jul 21, 2009 at 09:35:17 AM CDT

The Fix, a Washington Post blog, ran a piece about Governor PBJ's stock rising in national political circles again because he has sold himself as a "health care policy expert."

The Governor is an expert in health care policy? Really? Perhaps someone should page Rep. Bill Cassidy, who's actually a doctor, and had some interesting things to say about Governor PBJ's handling of the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals during the Foster Administration during the 2003 gubernatorial campaign: (emphasis added)

The Jindal Record is Poor One
The Advocate (Baton Rouge, La.) - September 18, 2003

Working with uninsured patients, medical education and public health programs, I took interest in Gov. Mike Foster's advertisement printed in The Sunday Advocate on Sept. 7 in which he praises Bobby Jindal's record as secretary of the Department of Health and Hospitals and in particular Jindal's accomplishment in cutting the DHH budget. For those whose concern about health care goes beyond cutting budgets, the Jindal record is poor.

When Jindal was appointed secretary of DHH, he published his list of goals. Among these were: "ensuring high quality health care services will be available for the indigent, disabled, working poor ..."; "focusing on primary and preventive care ..." and "developing Louisiana as a Southern regional center of excellence for medical education" (http://www.geocities.com/bcassi/JindalGoals.html). None of these goals was met.

As he cut Medicaid, reimbursement for health-care providers was cut below their cost of treating patients ("La. Medicaid cuts implemented," The Advocate, July 2, 1996). Paying physicians and hospitals below cost decreased the number of physicians who saw Medicaid patients and forced providers who did to shift the cost for caring for Medicaid patients to the privately insured ("Medicaid patients dwindling, Lower payments to doctors may be cause," The Advocate, March 27, 2000). Jim Brown, then commissioner of insurance, predicted that cost-shifting could raise private medical insurance premiums 20 percent ("Plan cuts state Medicaid," The Advocate, Feb. 19, 1997). In 2003, it was estimated that the actual figure was 17 percent. The effect of this has been to make health insurance so expensive that many employees dropped their insurance ("Rising insurance costs affect companies, employees," The Advocate, April 20, 2003). They are priced out of insurance as a result of Jindal's policies, whose goal was increasing access to health care.

Another goal was improving preventive care. Childhood immunization is a cornerstone of preventive care. In 1995 and 1996, Louisiana was ranked 10th in the United States in the percent of infants 19 to 35 months old who were completely immunized. In 1997, as Foster and Jindal assumed control, Louisiana fell to 21st, in 1998 to 30th and in 1999 to 38th (http://www.cdc.gov/nip/coverage/#NIS).

Indeed, after eight years of the Foster/ Jindal administration, Louisiana has now been ranked as the least-healthy state in the nation for three straight years, despite spending more per capita on health care than the national average. The problem, according to David Hood, the current secretary of DHH, is inadequate access to primary care and preventive services ("State spending ranks high but overall health ranks low," The Advocate, April 13, 2003). Yet improving these was the Foster/Jindal goal.

The last goal was "developing Louisiana as a Southern regional center of excellence for medical education." Jindal left the state before he could effect this, but the current Foster budget endangers medical education. ("Sharing the misery," Baton Rouge Business Report, September 2, 2003).

Bobby Jindal is unquestionably a nice man who is young, well-spoken, and intelligent. Yet he failed in his three goals as Secretary of DHH. Contrary to what Gov. Foster says, Jindal's record does not indicate that he is capable of the much harder job of Governor.

For the Governor to blast President Obama's legislative policies on health care when his record as the head of the Department of Health and Hospitals fits in really well with the Republican agenda on health insurance reform - help the health insurance industry reap record profits at the expense of the health of the American people - is the height of hypocrisy.

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Corporations Are The BIG Winners in the Legislative Session

by: ryan

Thu Jun 04, 2009 at 11:11:59 AM CDT

I haven't blogged much about the legislative session, mainly because I have been so disappointed in the lack of fight shown by the Legislature when it comes to coming up with a revenue stream (or budgetary reform) to help the state get through our fiscal crisis over the next few years.

Instead, up until yesterday, they have been content to let corporate welfare win, and win BIG. By corporate welfare, I'm talking about the former Pilgrim's Pride chicken processing plant, which was sold to Foster Farms of California. How did the Governor "save" those 500 jobs? By ensuring that Foster Farms will get $50 million from Louisiana taxpayers. That's $100,000 of state funds spent to save each job. Not exactly the fiscal responsibility I was hoping for from a conservative Governor.

And I'm also talking about the $85 million dollar deal with the Saints. While I am not the biggest Saints fan around, (as they quite frankly, stink), I do appreciate how they bring Louisianans together across socio-economic and racial lines, if only for a few hours every Sunday during the NFL season. The Saints are making money hand over fist, and they need money from the state coffers (which we as taxpayers put there) to make even more? I'd love to see the books for the Saints made public ... and if I were advising the Guv, I'd urge him to make that a precondition to any deals the state makes with the Saints from here on out.

I just wonder when the Legislature will realize that they are elected to protect the people of Louisiana ... not the corporations that donate gobs and gobs of money to their re-election efforts.

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Lee Domingue and the Baton Rouge Business Report

by: Matt D

Mon Mar 30, 2009 at 20:58:55 PM CDT

Note: For the most part, Democrats, liberals, and left-leaners of all stripes have been sitting on the sidelines of the state senate race for district 16, vacated by Bill Cassidy so that Lane Grisgby, and Michael Jackson could give the GOP another pickup. But, anyways, the race, which features three Republicans still proves for interesting drama.

Act I - (circa 1999)
Rolfe McCollister is the publisher of the Baton Rouge Business Report. He's got a decent size circulation and his paper is experiencing steady growth. Due to the nature of the Business Report, McCollister has access to quite a bit of people with much more political and economic clout than himself. One such person is former Louisiana governor, Buddy Roemer, who approaches McCollister with the prospect of opening up a commercial bank - The Business Bank of Baton Rouge - with 290 other investors. McCollister would sit on the bank's board and steadily build contacts and influence throughout Greater Baton Rouge.

Act II - (circa 2000)
McCollister, trying to figure out his 'next gig', takes on the traditional role as the 'white collar South Baton Rougean' in Baton Rouge's mayoral race. As always, there is a three-way split in the race, between a white politico from Baker or Zachary (usually a mayor), an African-American politician from North Baton Rouge, and a white collar South Baton Rougean. As someone put it to me, crudely, it's a race between 'the redneck, the black guy, and the suit'. As always, the top two slots went to Bobby Simpson (the Baker mayor), and Kip Holden (the North Baton Rouge politico), and McCollister's 19.5% of the vote goes to Simpson.

Act III - (circa 2004)
The initial batch of investors (none of whom ponied up more than $250k), are rewarded handsomely for their $50-70 million initial investment when their bank is acquired by BancorpSouth for $11 billion. McCollister, realizing that A) he didn't have much of a direct career in politics and B) that he was now ten to twenty times richer (he goes from being upper-middle-class to being a multimillionaire in 5 years time), he decides to assume a 'kingmaker' role, and starts trying to forge a role as a powerbroker in Baton Rouge politics.

Act IV - (now)
McCollister, fresh off having his golden boy Jindal elected, is starting to feel as if he could be the Joseph Cannizaro of Baton Rouge, and starts backing other sorts of candidates, including a relative unknown named Winston 'Lee' Domingue.

So, why did McCollister grab ahold of Domingue? Coming soon...

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LA-Gov: Governor PBJ WANTS Obama To Fail

by: ryan

Wed Mar 25, 2009 at 11:17:12 AM CDT

Yet another indication that Governor PBJ is considering running for President:

Jindal described the premise of the question -- "Do you want the president to fail?" -- as the "latest gotcha game" being perpetrated by Democrats against Republicans.

"Make no mistake: Anything other than an immediate and compliant, 'Why no sir, I don't want the president to fail,' is treated as some sort of act of treason, civil disobedience or political obstructionism," Jindal said at a political fundraiser attended by 1,200 people. "This is political correctness run amok."

"My answer to the question is very simple: 'Do you want the president to fail?' It depends on what he is trying to do."

We're facing the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, two wars, a worrisome race for oil with China, and playing catch-up with respect to green technology, and our erstwhile Governor wants certain things that Obama is doing to fail?

Pray tell, Guv, which things are those?

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Labor to Governor Jindal: Ball's in YOUR Court

by: ryan

Mon Mar 23, 2009 at 13:32:58 PM CDT

Our Christian Governor PBJ has repeatedly stated that he will not accept $98.4 million in stimulus funding designed to help those who have lost a job in our state's oh-so-booming economy.

Well, Senator Landrieu's staff asked the Department of Labor to clarify the rules and regulations of accepting the money, and whether the state will have to repay any funds back to the federal government if they change state law to accept the funding, and then repeal the law enacted to enable the state to get the federal funding. Here's the Department of Labor's response. Here are the pertinent parts for y'all:

Section 2003 of the ARRA added a new subsection (f) to section 903 of the Social Security Act (SSA), which established UI Modernization Payments. Under Section 903(f)(4)(B)(i), SSA, the Department is to certify any state law provisions that meet the UI modernization requirements. Although this section requires the Department to disregard "any State law provisions which are not then currently in effect as permanent law or which are subject to discontinuation" when certifying state laws, it does not prohibit the state's legislature from repealing these provisions in the future.

As a result, if a state eventually decides to repeal or modify any of these provisions, it may do so, and it will not be required to return any incentive payments. However, in providing the incentive payments, Congress clearly intended to support states that had already adopted certain eligibility provisions and to expand eligibility to additional beneficiaries by encouraging other states to adopt these provisions. By specifying that the provisions must be in effect as permanent law, Congress also made clear its intention that the benefit expansions not be transitory. While states are free to change or repeal the provisions on which modernization payments were based subsequent to receipt of incentive payments, Congress and the Department rely on states' good faith in adopting the eligibility criteria.

I'm struck by a few things here ... As I understand it, currently, unemployment law disregards the last 3 months of employment for eligibility for unemployment insurance, a result of a bygone era where employment records were kept by hand. I believe most employers in Louisiana have modernized their payment systems, and have put everything on their computers, or their accountants' computers.

The second thing I'm struck by is the fact that the Deputy Assistant Secretary is quite cognizant of the power the executive branch has compared to the power of Congress. Would this even have been a consideration under the Bush Administration?

The last thing I'm struck by is the fact that while the law states that the states should make any changes to state law permanent, they are quite willing to overlook it to ensure that as many people get the help they need.

That, folks, is what good government is about. Making sure that as many people are helped. This is a SEA change from the Bush Administration ... especially when dealing with Louisiana, as we are all too well aware of.

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LA-Gov: Jindal USES Big Guv'ment to Save Chicken Plant

by: Mike Stagg

Sat Mar 21, 2009 at 23:48:11 PM CDT

When the national media spotlight last shone on our beloved Guv'nah Bobby Jindal, he was making some noise about how government could do no right and the private sector could do no wrong in response to President Obama's near-State of the Union Address.

Cynics among us noted that the Louisiana economy about which Jindal boasted was floating on a sea of federal disaster relief funds that had flooded our state as the waters of hurricanes Katrina and Rita ebbed. Jindal's speech proved once and for all that he is a card-carrying member of the immune to facts faction of the Republican Party.

But, fate being what it is, Jindal has recently had an opportunity to revisit the role of government in the marketplace right here in his own state and -- gasp! -- has come down firmly on the government intervention side of the argument.

More after the jump ...

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LA-Gov: Transparency, Anyone?

by: ryan

Wed Mar 18, 2009 at 13:44:47 PM CDT

Governor PBJ campaigned for Governor on the reforming Louisiana's image. One of the policy platforms he ran on was: (pdf alert)

Provide citizens on-line, easy-to-understand access to all sectors of state government
We should upgrade Louisiana's sunshine laws to improve access to public records and meetings by expanding Internet-based access to filings, reports, and announcements in all departments.

Presumably, he meant to include the Governor's Office in "state government." Since the special session that he called last year to reform the ethics laws, and let the sunshine filter into the state government, he has touted the reforms he pushed through the Legislature.

However, he has restricted public access to documents, filings, and reports that his office deals with. And I don't just mean his office, but the entirety of the Executive Branch of the Louisiana government. Current law allows for Governor PBJ to shield documents under the custody of his press secretary, legislative director, director of boards and commissions, and other officials on his executive staff, as well as all records in the Homeland Security Office as well as the State Military Department.

Trying to get a Freedom of Information Act request out of the Governor's office is so difficult that the Citizen Access Project, a program undertaken by the Marion Brechner Institute for Open Government at the University of Florida, declared that Louisiana's open records laws, "particularly when applied to the Governor's office, [are] the darkest sunshine laws" in the nation.

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Louisiana GOP Bars Independent Voters From Their Primaries

by: ryan

Mon Mar 16, 2009 at 12:52:15 PM CDT

This past Saturday, the Louisiana Republican State Central Committee held a meeting in Shreveport. One of the issues on the agenda was whether or not to open up the party primary to Independent and third party members. It was voted down by a vote of 114-5. They even made it one of the bylaws of the Louisiana Republican Party, making it even tougher to change it, as such a change would require a 2/3 vote to open the GOP primaries.

What does this mean? It means that the Louisiana GOP just made it much, much tougher for a challenger to defeat David Vitter in a GOP primary, especially since John Cooksey, and Tony Perkins have decided NOT to challenge the mercurial SINator.

The only potential challenger left standing amongst GOP elected officials is Secretary of State Jay Dardenne. While he has pointedly kept his name circulating in GOP circles by not issuing a Shermanesque statement closing the door on a potential challenge, I cannot see him challenging the SINator, as I believe he wants to keep his powder dry until 2015, when Governor PBJ will be term-limited, providing, of course, that he wins re-election.

All of this leaves Stormy Daniels as the only candidate still seriously considering a challenge to the SINator.

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LA-Gov: Governor PBJ's Popularity Comes Tumbling Down

by: ryan

Fri Mar 06, 2009 at 08:01:06 AM CST

The poll that I linked to earlier on the 2010 Senate race has some really useful information for politicians considering running against Vitter, but also tells about how Louisianans feel about a few of their elected officials:

Candidate Very Favorable Favorable Unfavorable Very Unfavorable No Opinion Net (Fav - Unfav)
President Obama 14% 33% 31% 13% 9% 3
Sinator Vitter 12% 37% 21% 21% 9% 7
Governor PBJ 21% 33% 23% 16% 7% 15
Sec State Dardenne 15% 33% 12% 10% 30% 26

Governor PBJ has a net favorable/unfavorable rating of 15. Only 54% of Louisianans now have a favorable opinion of him, and that's after it was in the 60's for most of last year. Why folks are surprised that PBJ's numbers aren't that hot is beyond me, really. He's had a rough year and a third as Governor thus far:

  • He had to be pressured by the public to veto the outrageous legislative pay raise.
  • His tax cut is partially responsible for the budget shortfall we will find ourselves in for the next few fiscal years.
  • The public is being told that he spends a lot of time raising campaign cash outside of the state.
  • He is misperceiving the public mood out there ... folks actually want the government to step in and fix the problem. They are realizing that the robber barons of Wall Street caused this problem, not the government. And they also realize that the only entity with any power to rein in said robber barons is ... well ... the government. And his speech last Tuesday night made that crystal clear to Louisianans.
  • Events like this aren't gonna help, especially when the Governor is committing what they call political suicide in Texas by leaving millions in federal money on the table.

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"Hundreds of Millions" of Dollars Coming To Louisiana

by: ryan

Thu Mar 05, 2009 at 14:55:34 PM CST

This morning, the Secretaries of Homeland Security and HUD announced that Louisiana will see "hundreds of millions" of dollars committed to the state's long-term hurricane recovery plans.

While this is welcome news, I just have two questions about this photo published by the Times-Picayune:

1. Where's C. Ray?
2. Where's Ed Blakely? (hat tip to Jeffrey)

Also, why is Governor PBJ hanging in the background? Is it because he doesn't believe that the federal government should be spending money nowadays?

UPDATE: The Advocate reports on the same event, but the photo they published, taken at the same general location - SUNO - has Nagin, but not Governor PBJ or Lt. Gov. Landrieu. What's up with that? And why does the Times-Picayune's photo have PBJ and Landrieu, but not Nagin?

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Governor PBJ HEARTS Rush ... Ditto the LA GOP?

by: ryan

Wed Mar 04, 2009 at 10:17:54 AM CST

In the wake of the brou-haha over RNC Chairman Michael Steele's apology to Rush Limbaugh over his comments about him:

"So let's put it into context here. Let's put it into context here. Rush Limbaugh is an entertainer. Rush Limbaugh, his whole thing is entertainment. Yes, it's incendiary. Yes, it's ugly."

Then not even 48 hours goes by before we get this from Mr. Steele:

""My intent was not to go after Rush - I have enormous respect for Rush Limbaugh. I was maybe a little bit inarticulate ... There was no attempt on my part to diminish his voice or his leadership."

So what did the Lousiana GOP have to say about this? Here's Governor PBJ on CNN's Larry King Live:

King: All right, governor, here was Rush Limbaugh at this weekend's CPAC Conference. Watch.

Rush Limbaugh: What is so strange about being honest and saying I want Barack Obama to fail if his mission is to restructure and reform this country so that capitalism and individual liberty are not its foundation? Why would I want that to succeed?

King: Governor, do you think people are thinking about capitalism now or are they thinking about problems?

Jindal: Look, clearly, the American people are worried about paying their mortgages, keeping their jobs and paying their health care bills. I think Rush is a great leader for conservatives. I think he articulates what a lot of people are concerned about.

King: Do you want him [Obama] to fail? Jindal: I don't want those policies to be adopted. I want my country to succeed, but I don't want policies to be adopted.

King: What if the policies work?

Jindal: Well, again...

King: What if they work?

Jindal: This is where we have a fundamental disagreement. I don't think it's going work ... to spend in excess of our revenues.

And just for the sake of comparison, here's what Joseph "Holy" Cao's Chief of Staff told Big Red Cotton:

Cao's chief of staff Clayton Hall says on the record:

"No... the problems in this country are too big. Rush Limbaugh can say whatever he wants to say. Congressman Cao does not want the president to fail."

So I asked him does Cao want the stimulus package, which he voted against, to fail. Hall gave a curt "No".

Heh. There's a schism within the LA GOP regarding the power of Rush. Obviously, Governor PBJ is a wimp. Cao, like Oyster notes, knows kung fu.

What about the rest of Louisiana's GOP delegation?

We already know that Sinator Vitter listens to what Rush says. Whither Scalise, Fleming, Alexander, Boustany and Cassidy? What do they think?

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What Is The Governor's Job?

by: ryan

Tue Mar 03, 2009 at 21:34:39 PM CST

I know what the Governor is supposed to do according to the Louisiana Constitution. But I have some real questions as to what exactly Governor PBJ does during his day.

After all, he's been a busy fundraising for his 2011 campaign ... $3.5 million in his first year as Governor. Lately however, he's been all over the nation raising cash:

Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Fundraiser - Palo Alto, CA (1,834 mi.)
Fundraiser - Fairfield, CA (1,834 mi.)
Fundraiser - San Diego, CA (1,537 mi.)

Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Fundraiser - Malibu, CA (1,626 mi.)

Wednesday, February 25, 2009 - Sunday, March 1, 2009
Vacation at Disney World - Orlando, FL (623 mi.) Fundraiser - (February 26)

Saturday, February 7, 2009
Fundraiser - Bentonville, AR (444 mi.)
Fundraiser - Springdale, AR (432 mi.)
Address to Washington County Lincoln Day Dinner - Springdale, AR (432 mi.)

Friday, February 6, 2009
Fundraiser - Fayetteville, AR (426 mi.)

Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Fundraiser - Charlotte, NC (682 mi.)
Fundraiser - Cary, NC (803 mi.)
Address to John Locke Foundation's annual dinner - Raleigh, NC (811 mi.)

Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Fundraiser - Henleyfield, MS (90 mi.)

So far this year, it seems that his job is to raise money for his re-election campaign. Indeed, tonight and tomorrow, he'll be at FOUR separate fundraisers out in California to raise his profile out there, along with some more cash for his 2011 re-election campaign. I wonder what California can teach Governor PBJ about Louisiana, other than how NOT to run a state government.

But it'll be so nice when he decides to put his re-election and Presidential aspirations on the back-burner and focus on the job he was elected to ... governing this great state.

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