RepubliKlan 'Voodoo Economics' FAIL -Gov. Jindal’s Implosion- State $$$$ Fractures

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Gov. Jindal’s Implosion


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by Charles M. Blow | March 23, 2015 | http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/23/opinion/charles-blow-gov-jindals-implosion.html



What happened to Bobby Jindal?

He was the next wave of Republican. He was young and smart — a Rhodes scholar. He was the son of immigrants and the first Indian-American governor in this country’s history.

He had even bounced back from his disastrous rebuttal to President Obama’s first State of the Union address. (Personally, I thought that his claim of having participated in an exorcism performed on his friend in college would have been more of an issue than it was, but that was just me.)

Jindal had all the right rhetoric.

He told the syndicated columnist Cal Thomas: “As Republicans we don’t need to obsess about our opponents, we don’t need to define ourselves in opposition to our opponents. Let [Democrats] look backward; we need to look forward.”

In 2013, he demanded that the G.O.P. “stop being the stupid party.”

Jindal was the brainy Moses coming to deliver his people from the bondage of inanity. But that was then.

Now, Jindal has gone from being one of the most popular governors in the country to one of the least popular.

In the latest CNN/ORC poll of Republicans and independents who lean Republican, only 1 percent said that he was the candidate they would most likely support for the Republican nomination. Even “none/no one” got 6 percent.

And in a desperate attempt at relevancy — and press — he has lately been sliding further into Islamic hysteria.

In January, he doubled down on a controversial claim that parts of Europe were “no-go” zones because of Muslim extremists. A Fox News guest had said days earlier that there were cities “where non-Muslims just simply don’t go in.” Prime Minister David Cameron had replied to that assertion: “When I heard this, frankly, I choked on my porridge and I thought it must be April Fools’ Day. This guy is clearly a complete idiot.”

That hasn’t stopped Jindal. Last week on Fox News, he set about defending his statement that America “shouldn’t tolerate those who want to come and try to impose some variant, or some version, of Shariah law.” But he went so far as to say of prospective immigrants:

“In America we want people who want to be Americans. We want people who want to come here. We don’t say, ‘You have to adopt our creed, or any particular creed,’ but we do say, ‘If you come here, you need to believe in American exceptionalism.’ ”

What? Where is that written? I can’t find this “need to believe in American exceptionalism” anywhere in the Immigration and Nationality Act. Isn’t American exceptionalism itself a creed?

The smart-on-paper Jindal increasingly comes across as nuttier than a piece of praline.

On Friday, Robert Mann, a columnist at The Times-Picayune in New Orleans, called for Jindal’s resignation, citing all of the problems in the state that the governor isn’t focusing on as he tries to gin up a greater national profile:

“We have some of the nation’s highest poverty and worst health outcomes and you’ve done little to address them. Baton Rouge, your hometown, has the nation’s second-highest H.I.V. rate (New Orleans is fourth), but you’ve done nothing to address that crisis. What you have done is hollow out higher education and inject needless confusion and rancor into the state’s elementary and secondary education system. Meanwhile, the state’s health care system is a fractured, dysfunctional mess under your privatization schemes. Now, you’ve outsourced the state’s tax policy to Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform.”

Louisiana’s fiscal picture is dire. As Politico reported in February:

“Jindal is preparing a budget to close a $1.6 billion shortfall in Louisiana, a particularly daunting task after the $400 million in additional money he had to scare up to fill a budget gap for the current year. The president of Louisiana State University said earlier this month that the state’s flagship school is preparing for a 40 percent cut in its operating budget next year.”

In fact, The Times-Picayune reported in January that “Gov. Bobby Jindal’s administration said Louisiana’s colleges and universities should be prepared to sustain anywhere from $200 million to $300 million in cuts during the 2015-16 school year.”

In February, Jindal strained credulity, claiming, “The total higher education budget, including means of total finance — is actually a little bit, just slightly, higher than when I took office.” The Washington Post’s Fact Checker blog quickly smacked that down, awarding Jindal three Pinocchios.

Jindal has made a mess of Louisiana and wrecked his reputation in the process. His odds of becoming president of the United States have shrunk to nil.

Sometimes what looks good on paper is a disaster in practice.



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...The news from Governor Jindal's office and the (RepubliKlan controlled) State Legislature has attained a level of buffoonery and comedy before unseen; in a state with a long history of both. Our beloved LSU university is being systematically dismantled and as a result of our Governor and a significant portion of our Legislature (twenty-six) pledging allegiance to a Washington lobbyist with the long history of shady dealings...who are the human equivalent of pond scum....

READ the rest HERE





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Re: RepubliKlan 'Voodoo Economics' FAIL -Gov. Jindal’s Implosion- State $$$$ Fracture


When Gov. Bobby Jindal took office in January 2008, he inherited a state budget that included a $1 billion surplus.
READ: HERE


What-The-Fuck did Piyush and his RepubliKlan cabal do to Louisiana??? Are ALL the people in Louisiana asleep waiting for Jesus to rapture them up into the clouds???



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Bobby Jindal Robs Louisianans Of A Chance At Higher Education


May 1, 2015 |http://crooksandliars.com/2015/05/governor-jindal-robbing-louisianans-chancev


I am proud to have received a world class education at Louisiana State University, where I studied medieval Literature. I am not proud, however, of how Governor Jindal has treated the people of Louisiana by systematically defunding Higher Education.

Since taking office, the governor has slashed state spending on Higher Ed by at least 42 percent. For the upcoming fiscal year, Jindal plans to cut an additional $608 million, a staggering number that would reduce funding for public universities by 82%.

LSU President and Chancellor F King Alexander has asked university administrators to begin drafting a plan for financial exigency. This almost unfathomable scenario would allow the state’s flagship university to eliminate whole programs as well as to terminate the contracts of tenured and non-tenured employees’ at will.

Filing for exigency would also further damage LSU’s already tarnished credibility. The university has been under censure by the American Association of University Professors for the better part of four years.

Moody’s has also downgraded the university’s credit rating from positive to stable, and LSU announced that it will postpone issuing some $115 million in bonds to national investors for new construction projects. Dark times indeed.

Yet this is not the first time the LSU system has contemplated exigency. Then System President William Jenkins floated the idea back in 2012.

Faced with similar cuts, smaller public universities around the state have likewise had to make tough decisions to remain open, including mandatory furloughs, talks to merge with other imperiled schools, and other equally drastic measures. In October of 2012, Southern University in Baton Rouge took the step that LSU was contemplating and declared exigency.

Once upon a time, Louisiana’s financial situation was less dire. The ongoing crisis partly can be traced to Jindal’s decision to repeal the Stelly Plan in 2008 (a decision, it should be noted, the legislature went along with).

The progressive plan, which voters approved in 2002, raised rates on the highest state income tax brackets while reducing state sales tax. To no one’s surprise, repealing Stelly led to a budget deficit that nearly matched the revenues the plan was expected to generate.

Today, Louisiana’s deficit has ballooned to $1.6 billion. Nor have repeated cuts to the state’s Higher Ed budget solved the state’s perpetual financial woes so much as acted as a salve that must be applied each mid-year and end-of-year budgeting session.

Meanwhile, tuition rates at the state’s two-year and four-year institutions have gone up on by 62 and 54 percent respectively since 2009-2010. To add insult to injury, Jindal gives taxpayer dollars to multimillion dollar industries. To give just one example, the A&E program Duck Dynasty receives over $300,000 in state subsidies per episode.

When did forcing Louisiana’s public universities to resort to such drastic measures become the status quo? When did forcing state employees to work in constant fear of budget cuts become acceptable policy? Why are Louisiana’s taxpayers subsidizing popular entertainment programs as budget shortfalls have soared, all the while forcing the state’s traditionally low income students to take on the cost of receiving a quality education?

During the Middle Ages, German lords gamed the toll collection system that had been set on shipping routes along the River Rhine. These robber barons, as they became known, went to great lengths to ensure that passing ships could not sail by without first paying exorbitant fees. Towards the end of the nineteenth century, the term applied to American railroad magnates who swindled investors and low wage laborers alike in order to accrue massive amounts of wealth.

Governor Jindal may very well be a modern day robber baron. With one hand he manufactured a financial crisis when he repealed the Stelly plan, and with the other he has given away taxpayer dollars to industries that have little incentive to put that money back into the state’s coffers. Beyond these preventable losses in revenue that are crippling the state’s public universities, higher tuition rates are robbing many of the state’s people of a chance to receive a quality education. Yet that is increasingly one of the only routes they can take to enter the middle class.

 
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