BATON
ROUGE, La. (AP) — Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal dropped out of the 2016
race for president Tuesday, ending a campaign that failed to gain much
support among Republicans sifting through a long list of contenders for
the GOP nomination.
"I've
come to the realization that this is not my time," Jindal said on Fox
News Channel as he announced the decision to suspend his campaign.
The
44-year-old governor said he wasn't ready to endorse another candidate,
but intended to support the eventual Republican presidential nominee.
Term-limited
and out of office in January, Jindal said he will work with a think
tank he started a few years ago, called America Next, to devise what he
called "a blueprint for making this the American century."
"Going
forward, I believe we have to be the party of growth and we can never
stop being the party that believes in opportunity. We cannot settle for
the left's view of envy and division," Jindal said in a statement.
The
nation's first elected Indian-American governor, Jindal focused his
entire campaign effort on Iowa, first courting evangelical voters and
then trying to broaden his appeal as a candidate with conservative
policy plans that others weren't offering.
But
he never won much support in Iowa or elsewhere against higher-profile
Republican candidates such as Donald Trump, Ben Carson and Florida Sen.
Marco Rubio.
Jindal's
low poll numbers kept him off the main debate stages where he could
have drawn more attention, and his fundraising lagged. He was facing a
major cash crunch to keep the campaign going, after wrapping up the last
fundraising period with $261,000 on hand.
He
also was saddled with low approval ratings and criticism about his
governing back in Louisiana, which followed him as he campaigned for the
White House.
Jindal's
advisers blamed finances as well as the debate criteria that locked him
out of the prime-time events for the governor's decision to exit the
competition.
"He's
been thinking about it for a few weeks," said campaign strategist Curt
Anderson. "It's not easy. He's a fighter and his instinct is to never
give up, but also you have to be realistic in politics."
Tamara
Scott, a national GOP committeewoman from Iowa, said the response was
strong when Jindal spoke to crowds there. She said the Louisiana
governor was damaged by a debate process that used national polling,
rather than early state polling, to determine who appeared on the main
stages.
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