Nation's First Indian Gov. Vows to Clean Up Louisiana

'Whiz kid,' 36, pledges ethics, economic reform
By Peter Fearon,  Newser Staff
Posted Jan 15, 2008 3:50 AM CST
Nation's First Indian Gov. Vows to Clean Up Louisiana
Governor-elect Bobby Jindal and his wife Supriya walk to the podium Monday, Jan. 14, 2008 at the start of his inauguration ceremony on the steps of the Louisiana State Capitol in Baton Rouge, La. Jindal became the first elected Indian-American governor in the United States. (AP Photo/Tim Mueller)   (Associated Press)

Louisiana's first non-white chief executive since Reconstruction—and the first elected Indian-American governor in US history—vowed yesterday in his inauguration speech to clean up the corruption-plagued state. The charismatic Piyush "Bobby" Jindal, a Roman-Catholic convert from Hinduism, is a conservative Republican who also becomes, at age 36, the nation's youngest governor in office.

"We have the opportunity—born of tragedy but embraced still the same—to make right decades of failure in government," said Jindal, referring to the devastating effects of Hurricane Katrina. He pledged to immediately convene a legislative session on ethics reform, and seek to improve economic conditions in Louisiana. "He's a fresh face, a do-gooder—a whiz kid," gushed one observer. (More Louisiana stories.)

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