lunes, 5 de mayo de 2008

Suena Jindal















William Kristol vuelve a señalar al Gobernador Bobby Jindal, de Louisiana, como la opción que está tomando más cuerpo para acompañar a John McCain en el ticket republicano. Los sondeos señalarían que el candidato republicano necesita un acompañante poco convencional, y la idea estaría calando entre algunos de sus más cercanos asesores. McCain-Jindal?

(...) Still, Obama is the likely Democratic nominee. Some conservatives are giddy at the thought — kidding themselves that the general election will therefore be easy, that Obama will be another Dukakis. I was struck, though, in several conversations this week with McCain campaign staffers and advisers that they’re pretty sober about the task ahead. About the Dukakis analogy, for example, one McCain aide said: If in 1988 Ronald Reagan had had a 30 percent job approval rating, and 80 percent of the voters had thought we were on the wrong track, Dukakis would have won.

And the McCain campaign knows the environment for Republicans remains toxic. They noticed that on Saturday night Republicans lost their second House seat in a special election in two months — this one in a district they had held since 1974 and that Bush had carried by almost 20 points in 2004.

Another McCain staffer called my attention to this finding in the latest Fox News poll: McCain led Obama in the straight match-up, 46 to 43. Voters were then asked to choose between two tickets, McCain-Romney vs. Obama-Clinton. Obama-Clinton won 47 to 41.

(...) Maybe that’s why, in separate conversations last week, no fewer than four McCain staffers and advisers mentioned as a possible vice-presidential pick the 36-year-old Louisiana governor, Bobby Jindal. They’re tempted by the idea of picking someone so young, with real accomplishments and a strong reformist streak.

It might also be a way to confront the issue of McCain’s age (71), which private polls and focus groups suggest could be a real problem. A Jindal pick would implicitly acknowledge the questions and raise the ante. The message would be: “You want generational change? You can get it with McCain-Jindal — without risking a liberal and inexperienced Obama as commander in chief.” I would add that it was after McCain spent considerable time with Jindal in New Orleans recently, and reportedly found him, as he has before, personally engaging and intellectually impressive, that the campaign’s informal name-dropping of Jindal began. (...)

4 comentarios:

Jim dijo...

Puede ser una buena opción. Habrá que ver si Jindal quiere...

Jordi Coll dijo...

Fue Guardiola. Una lástima.

Antxon G. dijo...

No lo había visto. Me acabas de dar el disgusto del último lustro.

Gawyn dijo...

A mí me parece el candidato ideal. Pero él dice que no...