Jindal: Something Is Wrong With The GOP
- From: jose <josefsoplar@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2008 08:03:56 -0800 (PST)
Jindal: Something Is Wrong With The GOP
Nov. 16, 2008
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When asked about the future course of the Republican Party following
their losses on Election Day - losing not only the White House but
also considerable ground in the House and Senate - Gov. Bobby Jindal
of Louisiana said it is imperative his party offers solutions to
voters, and not just be the opposition.
"As Republicans, we need to do three things to get back on track," he
said on CBS' Face The Nation. "Number one, we have got to stop
defending the kind of spending and out-of-control spending that we
would never tolerate in the other side. You know, when voters tell us
that they trust Democrats more to cut their taxes [and] control
spending, that tells you something is wrong with the Republican Party.
We've got to match our actions with our rhetoric.
"Number two, we've got to stop defending the kinds of corruption we
would rightfully criticize in the other party. The week before the
election, our most senior senator is convicted on federal charges -
and that's only the latest example.
"Number three, we have got to be the party that offers real solutions
to the problems that American voters, American families are worried
about. We don't need to abandon our conservative principles; we can't
just be the 'party of no.' We need to offer real solutions on making
health care more affordable, on the economic challenges facing
families, on the international threats."
Also on the program, former House speaker Newt Gingrich said that
Republican Governors represented the GOP's future.
"When you look at the governors - Governor Jindal and what he's doing
in Louisiana; you look at Governor Mitch Daniels, who won by 20 points
in Indiana, while McCain was losing it; Governor Jon Huntsman, who has
the lowest unemployment rate in the entire West in Utah and a $1
billion surplus last year, about a $300 million surplus this year -
there are a lot of lessons to be learned out there."
Another name that came up was Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who appeared to
dominate news from the conference of Republican governors last week.
"The natural pattern in the news media is going to be, they know how
to spell Sarah Palin's name; they have it locked in their word
processor," said Gingrich (left). "She's going to be a much bigger
story in the short run. But, I think, as she goes back to being
governor and as she works in Alaska, you're going to see a group of
governors emerge, not just Sarah Palin. And there are 36 governorships
up in 2010.
"I think focusing on rebuilding the Republican Party from state
legislature and governor to Senate and House is the right model. And I
think that the Republican Governors Association is probably more
important than the Republican National Committee in trying to get this
done."
"So you do not see [Palin] as the de facto leader of the party at this
point?" Schieffer asked.
"No," said Gingrich. "She's a wonderfully, intelligent, aggressive
hardworking person who got, you know, hammered very badly by the press
in, I think, fairly distorted ways.
"I think that she is going to be a significant player. But she's going
to be one of 20 or 30 significant players. She's not going to be the
de facto leader."
Gingrich was wary of writing the party's obituary, despite the
resounding electoral and popular vote victories by Democrat Barack
Obama. "I've been through this," he said. "I've been through the '64
collapse when the Republican Party was going to disappear, and the '74
Watergate collapse when the Republican Party was going to disappear,
and the '92 defeat of President Bush.
"And in each case, I watched us, within a short time, focus on new
ideas and new solutions and, within a very short time, come back as a
stronger and healthier party."
Also on the program, Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the House
Financial Services Committee (left), and Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala.,
a member of the Senate Banking Committee, discussed the proposed
bailout of the auto industry.
Frank said the House is ready to pass a bailout package, saying
failure to do so would inflict pain on an already very weakened
economy.
Shelby, however, said that a bailout of the auto industry would be
"the wrong road to go down right now," and said he would prefer
troubled automakers file for bankruptcy rather than get taxpayers'
money.
"Some people believe that Chapter 11 bankruptcy would be a lot better
management than what they have today," said Shelby (left), "where they
would reorganize, they would get rid of the management that has
brought them to where they are today, bloated contracts, everything
that goes with it. No profits, no products to sell, to speak of.
"[It's] headed down this road to oblivion. Should we intervene to slow
it down, knowing it's going to happen? I say no, not for the American
taxpayer.”
Frank disagreed: "It might be one thing to tolerate a bankruptcy if we
had a lot of jobs out there, if there was prosperity.
"When you talk about the negative shock that would result from
bankruptcies of these companies right now - and by the way, I wouldn't
be blithe about Chapter 11. There are suppliers out there who are owed
money, smaller businesses. They get hurt in a bankruptcy. There are a
whole range of people who didn't make bad decisions at GM here."
.
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