The people want a president just like me, Lousiana Gov. Bobby Jindal explained Wednesday morning. Though he’s not in the race yet, Jindal wasn’t shy about making a case that he has what this country needs.
“We need a president who wants to do something, not just be somebody,” Jindal said on Fox & Friends. He touted the policy proposals he’s been releasing for months on various issues, adding, “I’m surprised others aren’t doing that.”
Jindal became the latest Republican to draw clear parallels between himself and the ideal presidential candidate. “I do think our nominee should be a reform minded, conservative governor with a proven track record,” he said in a thinly-veiled pitch Wednesday morning.
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“What people want to hear is a candidate that’s going to say, ‘I’m going to take on the threat of radical Islamic terrorism. Forget the political correctness.’ We need a candidate that says, ‘I’m going to cut the size of government,’ not just slow down the rate of the growth, actually balance the budget,” Jindal said.
He continued: “We need a candidate that says, ‘I’m going to get rid of all of Obamacare.’ Some of the Republicans are already saying I’ll keep some of the tax increases, some of the spending, we don’t need to keep any of it.”
Jindal’s words on Obamacare echoed those of Ted Cruz, the first official candidate in the 2016 race for president. During his first speech after announcing his presidential bid on Monday, the Texas senator vowed to repeal “every word” of the Affordable Care Act — the very same legislation that will soon provide his family with health insurance coverage.








