
McCain will meet with Bobby Jindal.
The Louisiana National Guard is suffering from low morale, leadership problems and nepotism, according to a group of retired generals appointed by Gov. Bobby Jindal to review the military department's operations.
The governor's office, however, has dismissed some of the suggestions made by the generals and has refused to release the report, citing executive privilege.
In a practice often called “bundling,” a single businessman gives the maximum $5,000 in the names of a number of different entities he controls.
Chouest gave $5,000 on May 18, as did other family members, according to the financial disclosures submitted to the Louisiana Board of Ethics by Jindal’s campaign.
Additionally, companies in which Chouest is listed as a president or chief executive officer on corporate records filed with the Secretary of State’s Office, also donated the maximum $5,000 amount to the Jindal gubernatorial campaign.
Chouest’s companies further donated to the Louisiana Committee for a Republican Majority and the Republican Party of Louisiana.
Both organizations contributed to Jindal’s campaign and provided mailings of campaign literature that personally attacked Jindal’s opponents.
The Chouest-related contributions that could be tracked through public records totaled at least $135,250.