Bobby Jindal 2012?

by Stephan Tawney on Thu, Feb 28, 2008

Gov. Bobby Jindal has two goals as governor: 1) Chew bubble gum, 2) Kick special interest ass. And folks, he’s all out of bubble gum.

BATON ROUGE, La. — Downstairs, legislators gnashed their teeth, while upstairs at the Capitol here this week, the new governor claimed victory against the old customs down below.

Six weeks into the term of Gov. Bobby Jindal, an extensive package of ethics bills was approved here this week, signaling a shift in the political culture of a state proud of its brazen style. Mr. Jindal, the earnest son of Indian immigrants, quickly declared open season on the cozy fusion of interests and social habits that have prevailed among lobbyists, state legislators and state agencies here for decades. Mostly, he got what he wanted.

Gov. Jindal has already been successful in forcing the Louisiana legislature to begin reforming itself, and is doing so with public opinion solidly behind him.

When the legislative session ended Tuesday, lawmakers had passed bills aimed at making their finances less opaque, barring their lucrative contracts with the state — some have been known to do good business with them — and cutting down on perks like free tickets to sporting events. The bills, which advocates say will put Louisiana in the top tier of states with tough ethics rules, now await Mr. Jindal’s signature, which should come early next week…

The new requirements will force all state legislators, as well as most other elected and appointed officials around the state, to disclose all sources of income, real estate holdings and debts over $10,000. (Judges are exempted.) Lawmakers and executive branch officials will no longer be able to get contracts for state-financed or disaster-related work. Lobbyists will also have to disclose their sources of income and will be limited to spending no more than $50 per elected official, per meal; splitting the tab, say among other lobbyists or legislators, will also be prohibited.

The new income disclosure requirements for legislators are comparable to those of Washington State, ranked first in the country by the Center for Public Integrity

Say we lose in November, and we need to begin look for a candidate for 2012. How does Gov. Jindal sound? If he keeps this up, he’s certainly a candidate who can run on cleaning up Washington.

One Response to “Bobby Jindal 2012?”

  1. Mary Says:

    Sounds like this may be happening!


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