Showing posts with label Jindal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jindal. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2013

The Giant Big Oil Lawsuit That Bobby Jindal Wants to Make Disappear

In late July, the Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority–East, an independent board created by the state legislature in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina to shore up the state’s levee system, filed a lawsuit against the oil companies. All of them. The committee targeted nearly 100 petroleum producers with operations on the Gulf Coast—including titans such as BP America, Exxon-Mobil, and Chevron—for what it termed a “mercilessly efficient, continuously expanding system of ecological destruction.”


But in a state where even the lawn in front of the governor’s mansion is sponsored by Dow, the flood board’s lawsuit has faced a massive pushback. And no one has been more forceful in their opposition to lawsuit—and in the defense of the oil companies—than Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal. He dismissed it almost immediately as nothing more than a “windfall for trial lawyers” and alleged that the legal action would interfere with the administration’s own unfunded long-term plans. When the nominating committee that appoints flood board candidates met for the first time on Friday, it received a warning from Baton Rouge: The lawsuit would be a litmus test for the governor, and any nominee who supported it would be rejected.


“I don’t think they’re evil,” says the board’s vice president John Barry, an award-winning historian and one of the members whom Jindal has promised not reappoint, referring to the oil companies. “But by the same token, we think we have a very strong case that they broke the law, and I don’t think anybody is immune from prosecution just because they provide jobs. Those jobs aren’t gifts.”


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Politics | Mother Jones



The Giant Big Oil Lawsuit That Bobby Jindal Wants to Make Disappear

Friday, August 30, 2013

Bobby Jindal Takes a Shot at BP"s Gulf Oil Spill PR Campaign

Bobby Jindal isn’t happy with BP’s faltering response to the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill, and he isn’t shy about letting them hear about it. At an event on Wednesday, the Governor of Louisiana blasted the company for spending “more money on television commercials than they have on actually restoring the natural resources they impacted.” Three years after the spill, in which a drilling rig blowout killed 11 men and poured 4 million barrels into the gulf, BP has started to push back on damages claims, and Jindal seems determined to make the company pay for it.


Addressing the Gulf Coastal Ecosystem Restoration Council (GCERC) Jindal said, ”BP needs to stop spending hundreds of millions of dollars on their public relations campaign telling us how great they are and start proving it by addressing their Clean Water Act and Natural Resources Damage liabilities now.” The GCERC is responsible for allocating money from the Clean Water Act fines paid after the Deepwater spill to restoration and economic recovery projects, and controls about 60 percent of the funds from those fines.


With the $ 8 billion dollar damages fund that BP set up after the spill has dwindled now looking like it will fall as much as $ 6 billion short, the company has rolled out a PR campaign alleging that it has been the target of fraud. BP has requested, and twice been denied, that the federal judge who presided over the settlement negotiation freeze payments until a state appointed investigator can look into potentially fraudulent claims, with the most recent refusal coming on Wednesday. Earlier this summer, the company set up a hotline for residents to “do the right thing” and report fraudulent claims (1-800-NO-2-FRAUD), and took out full-page ads in three of the county’s largest newspapers pleading the case for honesty and fairness. (“Whatever you think about BP, we can all agree that it’s wrong for anyone to take money they don’t deserve,” the ad read. “And it’s unfair to everyone in the Gulf—commercial fishermen, restaurant and hotel owners, and all the other hard-working people who’ve filed legitimate claims for real losses.”)


BP’s cries of foul play have found some sympathetic ears. In June, Bloomberg Businessweek ran a cover that read “BP is getting rolled in the Gulf,” with a story cataloging the injustices that the company was up against: a feeding frenzy for settlement money, fraudulent claims, an uncooperative judge, and a generally unsympathetic public. And on top of it all, the line that BP has been spending more on commercials than on ecological restoration has become a familiar refrain coming from the governor’s office, which the company has called “both false and irresponsible.”


“Today we are working to ensure that our willingness to do the right thing is not taken advantage of and distorted to provide windfalls to undeserving businesses, including law firms,” said BP spokesman Geoff Morrell in a statement earlier this week. The company has paid some $ 25 billion thus far, and is staring down another $ 3.5 to $ 17.5 billion, depending on a court ruling on the company’s level of negligence.


But before Jindal gets a reputation as some kind of environmental hero, note that earlier this month he asked the courts to kill a lawsuit by the Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority–East that hits many of the same issues that have him so fired up at BP. This might very well pan out just like things did after the spill, when critics pointed out that his sharp response had been overshadowed by his support for the kinds of anti-regulatory policies that had facilitated the blowout. It could be that the governor has found a good target, but his bluster doesn’t match his politics.



Political Mojo | Mother Jones



Bobby Jindal Takes a Shot at BP"s Gulf Oil Spill PR Campaign

Monday, August 5, 2013

Jindal turns up heat on McAuliffe

Bobby Jindal is shown. | AP Photo

Jindal said the Virginia gubernatorial candidate had disqualified himself. | AP Photo





MILWAUKEE—Republican Governors Association chairman Bobby Jindal called on Democrats Sunday to drop Terry McAuliffe as their nominee for governor in Virginia.


The governor of Louisiana seized on a report that the Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating GreenTech, the electric car company McAuliffe co-founded, over its conduct in soliciting foreign investors.







“The bottom line is Terry McAuliffe has disqualified himself to be the governor of Virginia … this scandal is just the final nail in the coffin,” Jindal said at a press conference here during the National Governors Association meeting.


(PHOTOS: Terry McAuliffe’s career)


He also unveiled a new ad by the RGA charging that McAuliffe can’t be trusted and his attacks on Republican Ken Cuccinelli are an attempt to “shift attention away from the news about this federal investigation…a possible ‘visa-for-sale scheme,’ with the Chinese financing McAuliffe’s own business.”


McAuliffe denied wrongdoing in a statement late Saturday night and said he was not aware of the SEC investigation until contacted by The Washington Post.


But that story is the latest in a string of damaging stories about McAuliffe’s business dealings that have boosted Republican hopes of holding the Virginia governorship.


Jindal called on his counterpart at the Democratic Governors Association, Vermont Gov. Peter Shumlin, to look for an alternative candidate. This obviously will not happen, but the call is bold enough to generate more attention for the underlying story.


“As the governor of Louisiana, this scam’s so bad it would even embarrass politicians in Louisiana,” he said. “This is beyond the pale.”


Democrats fired back by highlighting the scandal swirling around the GOP.


The Post reported Sunday that mega-donor Jonnie Williams is cooperating with federal prosecutors in a public corruption investigation of sitting Gov. Bob McDonnell. McDonnell apologized last week for accepting luxury gifts and said he is returning the more than $ 120,000 given to him and his family since 2011.


Jindal praised McDonnell’s performance as governor


“I think he did the right thing by returning those gifts and by apologizing to the people of Virginia,” said Jindal.


But Cuccinelli also received $ 18,000 in gifts from Williams and so far has declined to return them.


Jindal declined to say whether he thinks Cuccinelli should now return the gifts.


“I know the McAuliffe campaign would like to make this election about Bob, but the reality is this election is about Terry and Ken,” he said, adding that a prosecutor recently cleared Cuccinelli of breaking the law.


Both the McAuliffe campaign and the DGA responded by highlighting this comment from Jindal.


“You know it’s bad for Ken Cuccinelli when his Washington backers refuse to defend his decision to keep $ 18,000 in gifts from Star Scientific and Jonnie Williams,” McAuliffe spokesman Josh Schwerin said in an email.


DGA spokesman Danny Kanner said Jindal hurt more than he helped.


“Jindal’s right – McDonnell did the ‘right thing’ by returning his gifts,” he said, “and he should obviously call on Cuccinelli to do the same for the sake of Virginians who have lost faith in their state government through this scandal.”




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Jindal turns up heat on McAuliffe