Almost 20 years ago I remember
reading a news story about former Gov. Mike
Foster appointing an untested young guy not long out of Oxford as
Louisiana’s health secretary. I wondered who this guy Bobby
Jindal was to get such an important gig. Foster gushed with such praise
about him that it seemed he had come to save the state.
Now as Jindal prepares to leave the
Governor’s Mansion, through his tenure in that job, as head of today’s
University of Louisiana System, and as governor, the state still needs saving
from lots of things that only will multiply with his successor. But he made
progress, and well before I retire from academia scholars will consider him one
of the five most consequential governors in the state’s history.
Academicians holding the political
beliefs they do, most will pan his policies, but they will be unable to dismiss
his impact, one that at its heart abnegates what they typically support programmatically.
The similarly-situated mainstream media, when the occasion rises to discuss
his legacy, will find themselves in the same boat. Jindal’s tenure, best
understood in context, marks the decisive turn that eventually frees the
state’s political culture from its populist ethos.