<<Republicans Grooming Jindal for Presidential Candidacy?>>

Lol...I hope so. It will send the Republicans even further out into the
desolate wasteland in which they find themselves. Ron Paul was the
republicans last chance. Its 10 years before they recover.

OffWorld








--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "John" <jr_...@...> wrote:
>
> To All:
>
> Jindal is in the news again. He's getting a lot of media exposure. We
wonder why?
>
>
> ***********************************************
> La. Gov. Jindal urges GOP to stand up to Obama
>
> FOX News By BEN EVANS, Associated Press Writer Ben Evans, Associated
Press Writer – 2 hrs 55 mins ago
>
>
> WASHINGTON – Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal again found himself
carrying the Republican mantle opposite a primetime appearance from
President Barack Obama on Tuesday, saying Republicans must be ready to
defy the president when they disagree with his policies. He also joked
about his widely panned response to Obama's address to Congress last
month.
>
> "We are now in the position of being the loyal opposition," Jindal
said at a Republican congressional fundraising dinner that only by
coincidence fell on the same night as Obama's news conference. "The
right question to ask is not if we want the president to fail or
succeed, but whether we want America to succeed."
>
> Saying "the time for talking about the past is over," Jindal said
Republicans have begun to find their voice after back-to-back elections
losses — motivated by what he called historic Democratic spending
excess.
>
> Jindal is widely considered a potential 2012 GOP presidential
candidate, but his televised response to Obama's speech at the Capitol
last month was widely panned. Some compared his delivery to the late
children's television host Mister Rogers and said the address could hurt
Jindal's national potential.
>
> At Tuesday's $2,500-per-plate dinner — which President George W.
Bush headlined last year — Jindal opened his speech by poking fun of
himself. He threatened to deliver a reprise of the earlier performance
and then jokingly compared it to torture.
>
> "They're not allowed to show my speech at Gitmo anymore," he said.
"They've banned that."
>
> The National Republican Congressional Committee, which works to get
Republicans elected to Congress, said it raised more than $6 million at
the event.
>


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