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Bobby Jindal sparred with Obama over Gulf oil spill response, reveals book | Bobby Jindal, the Indian origin Governor of Louisiana, has used his new book to criticise US President Barack Obama over the Gulf oil spill, alleging that he was more focused on the political aftermath than the actual impact of the crisis. According to Jindal, on Obama's first trip to Louisiana after the
disaster, the President took him aside on the tarmac after arriving to complain
about a letter that he had sent to the administration requesting authorization
for food stamps for those who had lost their jobs because of the spill, Politico
reports. As Jindal describes it in his book "Leadership and Crisis," the letter
was entirely routine, yet Obama was angry and concerned about looking bad. "Careful,"
he quotes Obama as warning him, "this is going to get bad for everyone." He also
describes how nearby on the tarmac, then-White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel
rebuked his own chief of staff, Timmy Teepell, saying "If you have a problem pick
up the f--n' phone." Obama and Emanuel were probably angry with Jindal because
he had released his food stamp request the previous day to the media and indicated
that he wanted a response by the close of business. After Obama instituted a moratorium
on offshore drilling, Jindal recounts that the president dismissed his concerns
about the economic impact of the ban, the report said. "I understand you need
to say all of this, I know you need to say this, that you are facing political
pressure," Jindal quotes Obama telling him. When the governor said he was concerned
about people losing their jobs, he said the president cited national polls showing
that people supported the ban. "The human element seemed invisible to the White
House," he writes. On being asked to respond to Jindal's assertions, White House
spokesman Adam Abrams pointed to the president's overall response to the spill
saying, "From Day One, President Obama has directed his administration to work
with state and local governments to respond to and help Gulf communities recover
from the BP oil spill." After losing his first bid for the governorship in 2003
and then serving two terms in Congress, Jindal has enjoyed wide popularity since
winning the governor's mansion in his native Baton Rouge in 2007.
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