Bobby Jindal: Sanctuary City Mayors Should Be Arrested
It came in the form of an interview with Boston Herald Radio, where he opined that so-called “Sanctuary City” mayors who fail to turn in undocumented immigrants to the feds should be arrested (via Mediaite). “We also need a nominee, a candidate who will endorse our own principles”, he said.
Jindal launched his campaign later than many of his cohorts, and I’ve always thought there was something different about the way he was doing things. The RNC-endorsed Thursday event in Cleveland that included Jindal followed a typical debate format, with the candidates arrayed together on the stage.
-During the prime-time debate, from which Jindal is excluded, the pro-Jindal Believe Again political action committee will air a 60-second ad in Iowa, highlighting Jindal’s commitment to the Hawkeye State.
Louisiana’s Indian-American governor, who along with six other bottom candidates has been relegated to a secondary forum earlier in the day by hosts Fox News, went elbow to elbow in a “push-up contest” with his top foes in a BuzzFeed video. “Carly Fiorina, in. Rick Perry, in”.
Meanwhile, Former presidential candidate Michele Bachmann said that Jindal won the yesterday night debate. When he did speak, he repeated pretty much verbatim some of his favorite lines, such as that the “socialist” Clinton and Democrats are working “to turn the American dream into the European nightmare”.
Asserting that the country needs “a doer and not a talker”, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal has said he will provide “real leadership” to America if elected president in the November 2016 elections.
-Both debates will air on Fox News.
There was little criticism of Republican rivals, although Jindal scored a couple of hits.
“Jeb Bush says we’ve got to be willing to lose the primary in order to win the general”.
Other GOP candidates, including Mike Huckabee of Arkansas and Scott Walker of Wisconsin, have resorted to inflammatory remarks to try to close the double-digit polling gap opened by businessman Donald Trump. Candidates and US Sens. Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) and Ted Cruz (R-Texas) are now pushing legislation that would block some federal funding to cities that do not comply.
Jindal, 44, is nearing the end of his second term as governor.