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Jindal defended those positions again Monday, despite criticism from political commentators
-- both Democratic and Republican -- that the speech was too simplistic and offered few new ideas for battling the country's economic woes. "Our children and grandchildren have to pay that debt back. It's important to get control of that spending in Washington," he said. Jindal called "a diversion" the claims that his criticism of government spending was hypocritical because he continues to push for hurricane recovery spending, particularly money to repair levees in the New Orleans area damaged by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The governor said the federal government failed to design and build the levees properly, so the federal government should repair them to the promised standard and help the state recover from the resulting damage. "I think that is a simple concept: You break it, you buy it," Jindal said. And despite the repeated criticism over the last week, the Louisiana governor refused any suggestion he might hire a speechwriter.
[Associated
Press;
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