Just a week after a judge smacked down Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal’s attempt to repeal Common Core education standards in his state, the Republican upped the ante: he filed a lawsuit against the federal government, saying the standards he’d so enthusiastically supported years ago actually violate the Constitution.
“It’s simple: the federal government has hijacked and destroyed the Common Core initiative,” Jindal told msnbc.
The lawsuit, filed on Wednesday in a federal court in Baton Rouge, catapults the Jindal, a possible 2016 presidential hopeful, to the center of yet another big policy feud — one that has particularly animated tea party supporters and other conservatives who form the core of the party’s base.
In the last few months, Jindal has worked to raise his profile nationally — offering up policy alternative after policy alternative on many contentious issues.
It’s clear his party is taking note of the onetime rising star, famously remembered for flubbing a Republican state of the union rebuttal speech in 2009.
The 2012 GOP nominee Mitt Romney mentioned Jindal’s name in a Tuesday interview as one of the handful Republicans with “extraordinary records” and “great capability.” Texas tea party darling Sen. Ted Cruz—another potential 2016 candidate—dodged questions in Iowa about whether or not he’d be supporting the Louisiana governor for president, laughing and saying merely “I am a big fan of Bobby Jindal.”
On “Morning Joe” earlier this month, Jindal said he’s “thinking and praying” on 2016 and wouldn’t decide until November. But GOP insiders tell msnbc that it’s quite clear where his head is.
“The signs are pretty obvious—you see people traveling to certain states, putting together a finance team, putting staff together, then you know they’re at least considering it,” GOP operative Henry Barbour told msnbc of Jindal’s recent visits to states like Iowa and New Hampshire.
“A lot of these candidates are really worrying about positioning, the governor’s not thinking that way,” added Curt Anderson, a Jindal consultant who’s been with the governor since he first ran for office. He argued that Jindal is focusing on policy, because that’s just who he is.
In the last two months, besides his fight against Common Core, Jindal has released a playbook on helping Republicans oppose Obamacare while speaking out on everything from immigration (the president “simply needs to man up”) to ISIS and Iraq (the president’s “naive”.) He’s also planning to announce policy initiatives on energy, school choice and charter schools later this year, Anderson said.
An Ivy League graduate and Rhodes scholar, Jindal is a self-styled policy wonk. When he first ran for office, Anderson said he attempted to dissuade Jindal from putting out policy proposals.
“We of course said, ‘oh let’s go a little easy about it, if they put stuff out there they’ll use it against us’ and his response was ‘I don’t care, if you’re going to run you should put out there what you’re going to do,’” Anderson recalled. Jindal would later write more than 100 white papers during his gubernatorial campaign.
On “Morning Joe,” Jindal spoke about a possible 2016 candidacy.
“If I were to decide to run, I certainly think that our country is hungry for a big change in direction, not incremental change,” he said. “There’s a lot of frustration with both Democrats and Republicans in both parties that all they want to do is make incremental changes.”
In the last few months, Jindal has made moves on those big changes — including an about-face on what had once been a priority for him.
In 2010, Louisiana became the 45th state to adopt the Common Core standards, of which Jindal was a strong supporter. The Core—a set of academic standards and assessments students much learn in each grade—was first developed at the request of the National Governor’s Association, adopted by the federal government, and lauded by everyone from teacher’s unions to conservatives as an educational reform that would bolster American students’ educations to that of their international peers. As implementation began, some states began to sour.
Sensing the backlash, Jindal sued to repeal Common Core, calling it a federal “scheme.” A judge struck down his effort with an unusually furious ruling, blaming the governor for causing “anxiety and other harm to the parents, teachers, administrations, and students in Louisiana.”
Undeterred, Jindal launched another lawsuit against the federal government, claiming that the educational standards violate the 10th Amendment.
When the federal government made states’ participation in the Core a requirement to receive federal education funds, Jindal argues in the suit, they “hijacked and destroyed the Common Core initiative.”
“What started out as an innovative idea to create a set of base-line standards that could be ‘voluntarily’ used by the states has turned into a scheme by the federal government to nationalize curriculum,” Jindal told msnbc.
“He is grandstanding — in my view — for political reasons, so he is well-positioned to run for president,” education historian and analyst Diane Ravitch told msnbc by email.









