As the public waits for President Obama’s fourth State of the Union (SOTU) address on Tuesday night, Sen. Marco Rubio is preparing to deliver the Republican response to the speech.
Besides Rubio there remains significant attention on another member of the Republican Party: Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal. The governor became a recognizable national figure after he delivered his (unimpressive) response to the president’s 2009 SOTU address. Before the blunder, hopefuls were considering Jindal as a viable 2012 GOP presidential candidate.
Since his national debut, Jindal has made an overwhelming number of decisions in Louisiana that sparked heated response from concerned observers. Host Melissa Harris-Perry addressed these decisions in an open letter to Jindal in November, which coined the hashtag, “#FBJ”: Forget Bobby Jindal. As we fast-forward to 2013, the governor is still in the news for his questionable policy changes.
Harris-Perry discussed with her panel the motives behind Jindal’s actions.
On Jan. 29, Gov. Jindal sent a note to the president via the Washington Post requesting a meeting about Medicaid to “give states more flexibility” in deciding the future of the program. This op-ed was published just as Jindal’s new Medicaid cuts went into effect in his own state. “Over the last five years, governor Jindal has cut Medicaid every year,” said Louisiana senator Karen Carter Peterson to the panel. She described the low eligibility rates in the state–one of the lowest in the country–and how this, in addition to Jindal’s other political ideaologies, is “to the detriment of our citizens.”








