Bobby Jindal Becomes Latest Governor to Drop Out of Presidential Race

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, who campaigned as an unstinting champion of social conservatives but found himself crowded out by other more forceful, dynamic personalities, on Tuesday abruptly ended his bid for the Republican presidential nomination.

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By Kurtis Lee and Mark Z. Barabak

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, who campaigned as an unstinting champion of social conservatives but found himself crowded out by other more forceful, dynamic personalities, on Tuesday abruptly ended his bid for the Republican presidential nomination.

Jindal, 44, had staked out far-right territory_with a particular focus on social conservatives_but never gained traction during a primary that's been dominated by outsiders with similar or more conservative views, particularly Donald Trump and Ben Carson.

Jindal noted that the policy papers his campaign had unveiled in recent months, on issues such as energy and education, hadn't resonated with voters.

"During this crazy, unpredictable election season, clearly there just wasn't a lot of interest in those policy papers," he said Tuesday in an announcement on Fox News.

Jindal consistently drew support in polls in the low single digits and never made it to the main stage in any of the Republican debates. His exit from the crowded GOP primary comes after Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and former Texas Gov. Rick Perry also departed the race.

"The Republican Party has to lay out the pathway for why we are the party for opportunity and growth," Jindal said Tuesday.

Earlier this week, a blow to Jindal's campaign came when Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, a firebrand among tea party conservatives, threw his support behind Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas. King had been heavily courted by the Louisiana governor for his endorsement.

Jindal spent the majority of his time campaigning in Iowa_by some tallies, more than any other GOP candidate_where caucusgoers will kick off voting in the 2016 election cycle in February.

Craig Robinson, former political director of the Iowa Republican Party, said that while grass-roots social conservatives in Iowa supported Jindal's message, he just lacked the appeal of Cruz.

Cruz "just brought more juice and generated a lot more enthusiasm," Robinson said.

Dennis Goldford, a longtime student of the Iowa caucuses who teaches political science at Des Moines' Drake University, noted the large amount of time Jindal spent in Iowa, dating back to last year.

"Jindal would always get a good response from audiences, but that enthusiastic support never showed up in his poll numbers," Goldford said.

Moreover, Goldford noted that Jindal was vying for the social conservative vote along with Cruz, Carson and Mike Huckabee, winner of 2008 caucus. Collectively, those candidates took "all the oxygen out of the room."

Yet Jindal's campaign on Tuesday did not highlight other candidates as a reason for his exit.

Curt Anderson, a chief strategist to Jindal, said Tuesday that his lack of fundraising_which hovered near a paltry $1.1 million_was among the deciding factors for his exit from the race.

"We were far behind," Anderson said. "Say what you want, it takes money to win elections."

(Barabak reported from Des Moines and Lee from Los Angeles.)

(c)2015 Los Angeles Times

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