Given that I was asked about it on a radio program yesterday and an opinion writer pondered about it recently, it’s a good time to review the possibility that if Gov. Bobby Jindal has political aspirations beyond Louisiana, that these may include if needed an attempt to land in the U.S. Senate next year.
Since my previous
post on the matter right after his reelection and another
a few months ago, several things have happened. The 2014 contest is shaping
up with the entrance of Republican Rep. Bill
Cassidy, the heaviest-weight opponent Democrat Sen. Mary Landrieu ever has drawn. A year
down the road from then, it is looking
more likely that Sen. David
Vitter will pursue, and if so would become the favorite to succeed in, the
chance to replace Jindal. As for the governor, he doesn’t
seem to be making much progress if he wishes to capture the 2016 nomination
for the presidency among Republicans.
As a result of the 2012 elections, the decision about the presidency was
forced more onto Jindal. There would be no GOP incumbent running in 2016 so he
either has to go all in now or not at all. But that means his next opportunity
could be as far away as 2024, which would make for him sitting out nine years
unless he finagled a cabinet slot in a GOP presidency if that chance presented
itself – out of sight, out of mind is not a good recipe to win the White House.
And with his uncertain prospects for a 2016 nomination, only the Senate
provides a quick opportunity as he would have to wait until 2019 to run for
governor again because of term limits and probably would face an incumbent for
a difficult comeback.
In doing so, however, he writes off the presidency any time soon. Further,
candidates who lose Senate contests essentially end their political careers, even against the weakest presidential fields.
And losing it now is more likely with the entrance of Cassidy, inducing added
difficulty even against a vulnerable incumbent like Landrieu.
Cassidy will be well-funded and perhaps is even better at exploiting
Landrieu’s key weakness, her support of the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act (“Obamacare”), by his consistent opposition to it in Congress and his
being a medical doctor, while Jindal has had to criticize from the sidelines while
becoming a lightning rod for controversy over health care spending in the
state. Cassidy’s lesser name recognition also allows him to introduce himself
to the state in a way that can attract the populist base of the political right
in the state, many of whom are critical of Jindal. All in all, unless he
withdrew, he would be a formidable opponent for Jindal, who would have to use considerable
resources to dispatch him before really being able to concentrate on unseating
Landrieu, if he even could make it to the general election runoff.
There’s also the consideration that if Jindal goes for 2014, he has to
commit very soon. Such a campaign would interfere considerably with his gubernatorial
duties, where in 2013 he achieved dramatically less than he did in the
admittedly ambitious 2012 session. For long term planning, he may consider that
state policy achievements for two years builds a better record for the White
House than risking becoming one of 100 senators after one. He also would be
chided by some for giving up early on his state duties and scorned by some as
being too overly ambitious, which also could affect negatively his chances in a
race against Landrieu.
All in all, as far as if it were only a choice between 2014 vs. 2016,
on balance Jindal probably prefers the latter, or doing something that does not
include a presidential run in 2016 but may enhance prospects later. And the
inching of Vitter closer to running to succeed him may provide that chance.
If Vitter were to, then his Senate seat opens. Unlikely to pull
a Chris Christie, he would appoint somebody to fill the spot until his term
would have been up the year after. If Jindal defers in 2014 but Landrieu beats
Cassidy, it would be difficult politically to appoint Cassidy with the intent
of giving the appointee a leg up in 2016. If Cassidy wins, he’s already taken
care of.
The most logical thing then for Vitter would be to appoint Jindal. Note
that the two are very different politicians, which to some degree has set them
up as competitors in Louisiana GOP politics. Jindal is an ideas guy who wants
to transform the culture of the state, while Vitter places more emphasis on the
building of an infrastructure to use political power based on realizing a
similar set of ideas. Jindal wants to use ideas to persuade people of his
leadership, while Vitter wants to lead by having the organizational muscle to
implement. They are complementary but different ways of governing. This is not
to say that Jindal won’t throw around clout to get things done, nor that Vitter
doesn’t regularly make philosophical pronouncements about policy, only that
they are valued in a different order to the pair.
So if Vitter wishes to become the king of the state’s Republican Party
and to use it to mold policy, by exiling Jindal to Washington, he removes his
main factional competitor to the hearts and minds of the state’s party faithful.
By indulging Jindal in his presumed preference for national policy-making, big
ideas on a bigger stage, Vitter better enables himself to achieve what he apparently
wants – dominance of the state political scene. It also assures the seat will
stay in GOP hands – with a free ride for Jindal for almost a year, could any
Democrat seriously have a chance to knock him off?
A Vitter move to Baton Rouge also quietly acknowledges reality –
because of his “serious
sin” admission a half-dozen years ago, he never will rise above his current
station in the Senate GOP nor in national politics. But a return to state
governance is quite realistic and provides a whole new and intriguing challenge
for him to play out his ambitions. For his part, if he thinks he needs Senate
service, if he can get Vitter on this same page this is a much safer electoral
route for Jindal to pursue. Even if Vitter didn’t cooperate in this way, Jindal
would be a formidable Senate candidate in 2016, although Jindal could point out he could be quite helpful for a Vitter gubernatorial camapign in exchange. By contrast, Jindal’s chances
are weaker in 2014, even if Cassidy bowed out (perhaps in the hopes Vitter ran
and won the governorship, then appointed him senator).
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