Just days after calling President Obama’s love for his country “immaterial,” Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal says actually, the president does love his country.
“The president loves America, he loves our country. There’s no doubt about that,” Jindal, a likely 2016 Republican presidential contender, said outside the White House Monday following an event with Obama and the nation’s governors.
It’s a surprising shift for Jindal, who sided with Rudy Giuliani after the former New York City mayor questioned the president’s love of country at a private dinner for Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walter, another likely 2016 GOP contender. Walker side-stepped questions about Giuliani’s remarks the next day, saying he “didn’t know” if the president loved his country. Jindal, for his part, went further, calling Obama’s feelings “immaterial” because he’s an “incapable” leader. In case there was any question, a Jindal spokesman sent out a blast email promoting the remarks, titled, “Gov. Jindal Refuses to Condemn Mayor Giuliani.”
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Jindal did soften, however, after GIuliani published an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal walking back his remarks.
“As I’ve said all along, I think the mayor should have used different words to express what he wanted to say. I didn’t want to throw him under the bus. I know the media loves to see Republicans attacking other Republicans,” Jindal said. “I think the point that the mayor was trying to make is an important one.”
Jindal has been working to raise his profile in recent weeks by focusing on national security and terrorism. In London, he spoke out about the existence of “no-go zones” in Europe—a widely discredited claim that certain areas of Europe are ruled by rogue Muslims. Jindal has also vehemently critized Obama for refusing to tie violent extremism directly to Islam.
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