America
Jindal sells himself as 'full-spectrum conservative'
By
Arun Kumar Washington, March 13
As he explores a 2016
presidential bid, Louisiana's Indian-American Governor Bobby Jindal is
wooing his Republican Party's right wing by working hard to prove
himself to be what he calls a "full-spectrum conservative".
He embraced former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani after he questioned President Barack Obama's love of country, CNBC noted.
Jindal
also "endorsed the letter to Iran signed by Republican senators seeking
to undercut nuclear talks, and decried Muslim no-go zones' in Europe
that the mayor of London said do not exist".
A Brown University
graduate and Rhodes scholar, Jindal, 43, opposes gay marriage and
declines to express belief in the theory of evolution, CNBC noted.
"A
child of Indian immigrants, he rejects the idea of 'hyphenated
Americans' and calls for those of different national origins to fully
assimilate as a means of strengthening the American fabric."
That, he told CNBC, is why he decried Muslim "no-go zones", which he insists that researchers have documented.
"If
we are not careful, if we do not insist on assimilation and
integration," Jindal was quoted as saying, "we will develop those same
kind of areas in our country."
He rejects accusations from Democrats and Republicans alike that he is pandering to conservative primary voters.
"This
goes back to the arrogance of the left, the folks that say you can be
smart or conservative, you can't be both," he was quoted as saying.
"It's
not just the president, it's not just the liberal media - there are
some folks in our party that as soon as they get to Washington they give
up trying to fight for their principles."
"I think it's
confusing for a lot of people to see a guy who went to Brown University
and is a conservative," Jindal was quoted as saying.
"Maybe I'm
not what they think a conservative should look like. There's an
arrogance that thinks that everybody that has an education must think a
certain way."
Jindal, who converted to Catholicism as a young
adult, told CNBC he's "praying about" a possible race for the White
House and intends to decide by summer.
(Arun Kumar can be contacted at [email protected])