On Today, Matalin baselessly claimed Jindal's "education reform" made Louisiana "one of the top states in the country"
SUMMARY: Mary Matalin claimed that Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal "made more progress in Louisiana in the shortest period of time in the history of the state and probably in the country. Education reform and ethics reform -- everything that put Louisiana down in scale is now one of the top states in the country." In fact, the Louisiana Department of Education noted that the 13th edition of Education Week's "series of annual report cards tracking state education policies and outcomes" found that "gains were minimal" in the state since the previous report and that "[i]n overall rank, Louisiana dropped from 21st last year to 35th this year."
During the February 26 edition of NBC's Today, Mary Matalin, chief editor of the conservative publishing imprint Threshold Editions, claimed that Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) "made more progress in Louisiana in the shortest period of time in the history of the state and probably in the country. Education reform and ethics reform -- everything that put Louisiana down in scale is now one of the top states in the country." Matalin cited no evidence in support of her suggestion that Louisiana is "now one of the top states in the country" in education due to Jindal's "education reform" since he became governor in January 2008. In fact, as the Louisiana Department of Education stated in a January 7 press release, Quality Counts 2009 (subscription required), the "13th edition of Education Week's series of annual report cards tracking state education policies and outcomes," found that, in the Department's words, "gains were minimal" since the previous report and that "[i]n overall rank, Louisiana dropped from 21st last year to 35th this year." Indeed, in two of the three broad categories in which states and the District of Columbia were graded in Quality Counts, Louisiana ranked in the bottom five states, while in the third category, Louisiana dropped in rank since 2008.
The report -- based in part on surveys distributed to all states and the District of Columbia July 7, 2008, and dealing with policies "in place at the time of the survey or for the 2008-09 school year" -- provides grades to states in three categories: "the Chance-for-Success Index, policies related to transitions and alignment, and educational spending patterns and the equity of school finances." The report also provides "Overall Grades & Scores" -- Louisiana received a score of 74.4 and a grade of C, compared with the national average of 76.2 and C.
In the Chance-for-Success Index, which the report describes as "combin[ing] information from 13 indicators intended to offer perspective on the role that education plays as a person moves from childhood, through the formal K-12 school system, and into the workforce," Louisiana ranked 48th and received a grade of D+; the nation as a whole received a C+. The Louisiana Department of Education stated that "Louisiana's grade remained the same, D+, but the state did improve its ranking from 50th last year to 48th this year."
In school finance, based on analysis of "school spending patterns and how equitably that funding is distributed among districts within each state," Louisiana ranked 49th and received a grade of D, compared with the C+ grade for the average state. Louisiana's rank is last overall, as Hawaii and the District of Columbia do not receive grades for school finance, because as single-district jurisdictions, "it is not possible to calculate measures of financial equity, which capture the distribution of funding across districts within a state." The Department stated that Louisiana "went down in rank" from the previous year, when it received a C+ and was ranked 25th in this category.
Concerning transitions and alignment, an assessment of "how well the states smooth the transition through the educational pipeline, including early-childhood education, college readiness, and the economy and workforce," Louisiana ranked 23rd and received a grade of C, the same as the average state. However, according to the Department's press release, the "state dropped in rank from 19th in 2007 to 22nd in 2008" in this category.
From the February 26 edition of NBC's Today:
MEREDITH VIEIRA (co-host): You know, you talk about a united Republican Party, but I want to read to you something that David Brooks said. Now, he's a conservative columnist. This was after Governor Bobby Jindal gave the response to President Obama's speech on Tuesday. Brooks said, "To come up at this moment in history with a stale 'government is the problem,' 'we can't trust the federal government' -- it's just a disaster for the Republican Party. The country is in a panic right now." And he went on to suggest that the party is out of touch with where this country is and where it is headed. So you do not agree with what he said?
MATALIN: No, I don't, and I live in Louisiana now, as you know, and Bobby Jindal is an extraordinary public servant. He's the greatest public policy innovator in the country today, and that isn't what he said. That's David Brooks' rendition of it -- who's a friend. But his -- Bobby Jindal has made more progress in Louisiana in the shortest period of time in the history of the state and probably in the country. Education reform and ethics reform -- everything that put Louisiana down in scale is now one of the top states in the country.
What people were objecting to about Governor Jindal's presentation was the presentation itself, and you know, demonstrably, he was much stronger on Meet the Press and much stronger on the Today show than he was in front of a teleprompter. I think if you want to take the measure of the man, I'd rather see him be able to go up against you than stand in front of a teleprompter.
VIEIRA: But you know, Mary, it wasn't just that. It was -- and he -- again, conservatives were criticizing him for stale ideas. He didn't say anything, nothing new.
MATALIN: These are -- no, these are not stale ideas. These are the essence of the -- of fiscal conservativism upon which this country was founded and prospered, and he is applying in the state of Louisiana.















Holy crap, how does she do it?! I wonder what she thinks of the $98 million in pork that Jindal got for Louisiana his last year in Congress. (14th place amoung House members!)
I thought Katrina did more for LA's education reform than anything Jindal did. Of course, being from Texas, I don't think we have as high an opinion of that reform...
Careful, Snoop, someone might interpret differently than the way you intended (or at least the way I felt you intended).
You're right. I was inferring about all the coastal folks being displaced here. Good catch, Oscar.
P.S. Overwatch. Saturday. Cross fingers.
I understood what you were saying...and it's a good point. A lot of the poorest people who evacuated to Texas ended up staying there. Now, I hear that whenever New Orleans residents are required to evacuate for a hurricane Texas puts up a big DETOUR sign on I-10 outside of Houston. ;>)
Fingers, toes, eyes, anything else??????
When you can cross your nose, you're ready for the majors.
Tried that, it hurts, but it did stop my sinuses from draining externally.
OK, just wish me luck. It's up to me now to sell myself.
Knock 'em dead, Snoop (in a rhetorical way), but don't bite any ankles!!!!;>)
Did Ms. Matalin pull a Boehner about Jindal's "more progress"?
fiscal conservativism upon which this country was founded and prospered, and he is applying in the state of Louisiana
The repubs appear to be really, really desperate for a "qualified" presidential candidate in 2012 to be lying about Jindal this much.
Wait a minute; are you suggesting that Jindal is not "the greatest public policy innovator in the country today"? Do you honestly believe that he's not the single most bestest American in the world today? Seriously, it sounds as if you don't think Jindal is the greatest human being ever to step foot on planet earth. I guess there's just no pleasing some people.
Not only that, but I'm suggesting Jindal lies about a lot of things.
Jindal may have fudged the facts in his Katrina boat story Stephen C. Webster
Published: Thursday February 26, 2009
Now VC, you know that it is really Sarah Palin who fits that description.
Will someone tell me how this country was founded on fiscal conservatism?
It's hard to tell what anything she says means. Just today she called Limbaugh an "educator" and Jindal "the greatest public policy innovator in the country today". By "fiscal conservative" she could very well mean "broken stapler" or "my pretty pony". We're could be witnessing perhaps the greatest implosion in the history of major American political parties.
Especially since the righties have been telling me all along it was founded on christian values straight outta the bible.
It boggles my mind to contemplate how JAMES CARVELL puts up with her.
She must give incredible head-ache.
I'll agree with that . Listening to her does giv me a headache.
LA has dropped 14 places in one year, and she's speaking of Jindal as if he walks on water and has resurrected a few dead people. Talk about messianic delusions.
Randy
LA has dropped 14 places in one year, and she's speaking of Jindal as if he walks on water and has resurrected a few dead people.
There were a lot of candidates for resurrection aftter the "great job" Brownie did with the Katrina aftermath......
Well, he did help with an exorcism.
For a while, that was about the only way to get around in New Orleans.
i saw her this morning. her lips were moving so i knew she was lying. and there was no one on opposite her.
"Matalin baselessly claimed..."
The number of times MMFA has to say this would justify creating a macro key. That way the MMFA contributor could type the entire phrase with a single keystroke.
How do you know they don't already have one?
Of course it should have occurred to me that they already have one. The others they probably have, or should, include:
"Limbaugh falsely claimed."
"Savage insults..."
"The New York Times advanced the false Republican claim that..."
"RNC talking point that Halperin reprinted verbatim..."
"Matthews falsely asserted about Hillary Clinton that..."
"glenn beck claims scientists disagree on global warming".
and for some posters "why is this here".
"Lou Dobbs blames mexicans for..."
"O'Reilly denied saying it but a recording of his previous show proves he did."
In Mr. Matalin's "mind:" 35 is bigger than 21, so this is progress!
Mary Matalin was out doing the 'read-a-teleprompter-the-wrong-way damage control tour' on the morning shows because she can not have another Neo-Conservative/Republican Presidential hopeful go down in flames like Gov. Palin did in 2008. Ms. Matalin mission was to calm the cable chatter about Gov. Jindl's poor performance because it's too much at stake for them right now, and they will do whatever it takes to get their guy picked for the party's nominee in 2012. Ms. Matalin said Gov. Jindl did great in speaking about... Wink, wink.
Hmm, 35th place, not really at the top of the country, last I checked, we still had 50 states. 35 is bottom half.
I see through you, Mag, you're just baiting one of the trolls to hit Obama's "57 states" comment.
Read this if you want an idea of where Bobby Jindal really stands on education.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/17/us/17boycott.html?_r=1&ref=us
Jindal signed into law a bill, supported by the Lousiana Family Forum, which essentially provides a back door for the teaching of creationism as science. Accordingly, science groups are beginning to boycott Louisiana.
Why do you think the conservatives love Jindal? Because he's just another right wing religious nut job.
And as for Mary Matalin, why should I believe anybody who was a mouthpiece for Dick Cheney? Give me a freakin' break...!
BTW, we see Matalin's husband, James Carville, walking in the park all the time here in New Orleans...even chatted with him one day. Seeing Carville being married to Mary Matalin reinforces my belief that both of them are frauds...because I doubt if anyone with strong liberal beliefs could possibly be married to a right wing shrew such as she. It's all a show, ladies and gentlemen...
Love is blind (and sometimes deaf).
You were very disciplined to not add that marriage is an institution for the blind, Oscar.
It does help to be a little blind and deaf sometimes, but don't tell my wife I said that. Would like the 42+ years together to go on a little longer.
Maybe he's paying off a karmic debt? That's the best defense I can come up with for him.
IRONY,You are correct about JINDAL. He tries to come across as reasonable but reading between the lines you find that he is another, PALIN,a far right wing religious whacko.
I don't see MMFA questioning the baseless claims made by progressives.
Click on the "about us" tab up at the top of the page.
As a watchdog group looking for conservative bias in the media they are adding liberal bias to their arguments by targeting conservatives while using the same bias as that same conservative media. There is most certainly a liberal bias on the part of MMFA since they think other liberals in the media are actually conservatives. There is no way in heck that Chris Matthews is a conservative commentator. MMFA is one step below CPUSA in terms of leftist thinking.
MMFA is one step below CPUSA in terms of leftist thinking.
A big fan of hyperbole, are you...? I enjoy MMFA because it's a great source of facts...facts that I can check out on my own if I like.
No, you're confused. The "conservative" in "conservative misinformation" refers to whose cause that misinformation serves. It doesn't say anything about the person who forwarded it.
Good point...MMFA's mission statement says nothing about conservative media. It refers to conservative misinformation in the U.S. media.
Maybe you should read the mission statement before posting next time.
MMFA's statement:
Media Matters for America is a Web-based, not-for-profit, 501(c)(3) progressive research and information center dedicated to comprehensively monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media.
MMFA is clear in its reason for being.
The same can be said of Schmedie. How soon before he threatens to call the IRS?
Ain't it interesting, EW? You can actually track their regression, like watching fruit rot.
Sorry Mary - Jindal's light looks bright only against the background of your dim Red bench (godawful) - was it about a year ago that four of seven of your prez contenders denied belief in evolution ?, C'mon. And McCain basking in applause when telling a church crowd that life begins at conception, and caving in to the Palin debacle ? C'mon. Your invoking ed reform and fiscal issues is pure bull - a transparent mask over "return-to-Jesus" politics, as cynical and corrupt as anything we've experienced . . a disgraceful cap to a questionable career, Nixon, Reagan, Bushies two, Gingrich, Rumball, Rove, Gonzalez, Harriet Myers for Suprme Court, and on and on - may flights of angels guide thee to your graceful retirement.
I just LOVE the hypocricy that Republicans so completly embrace. First, after losing to a black democrat, they then rush ouot and put a black man in as head of the RNC. Then after Obamas first speech to congress, they get what is probably the only other minority they have in their party, Jindal.
How shallow can they be? With Rove being a stalward of the constitution now, DeLay suddenly becoming the voice of fiscal conservatism and republican values, just about every place one looks they have someone saying exactly the opposite of what they did when in office we now get this republican minority representation whenever there's a big platform event.
Barry Goldwater must be spinning in his grave right about now.