66.8 F
Alexandria
Saturday, December 21, 2024
spot_img

Jeff Landry, Louisiana Attorney General, officially launches campaign for Louisiana Governor

Lafayette, La. (10/5/2022) —

Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry formally announced Tuesday, October 5, 2022, his bid for Governor of Louisiana.

His campaign posted the following message Tuesday morning:

Today, Jeff Landry officially launched his campaign for Governor of Louisiana. In his video announcement (see below), Landry shares his life story. He starts a conversation with voters about the problems facing our state and ways we can fix them.

“We deserve a government as good as our people, and we’re not getting it,” Landry explained. “During my life, I have walked in the very shoes of people who struggle more than they should in a state as blessed as this one. We must join together to build the Louisiana we want, our neighbors need, and our children deserve.”

Landry shares his personal history, not only as a former Congressman and current Attorney General, but growing up working in the sugar cane fields, serving our nation in uniform, and our communities as a police officer and Sheriff’s Deputy. Landry also discusses the need to tackle crime that has gripped Louisiana’s major cities and places the blame on failed local leadership driven by “woke” district attorneys.

“To the people in those cities, we care about you. We know you are good people living with a bad government. Your family deserves a safe neighborhood because when you hurt, our entire state hurts,” Landry added.

Landry also took time to highlight the crisis in our local schools where our children are pulled into social culture wars to score political points instead of being taught the basics, like reading, writing, and arithmetic.

“I believe the most important voice in a child’s education is the parents,” Landry said. “As the son of a schoolteacher, I think it’s a sin that, right now, seventy-four percent of our fourth graders can’t read the way they should, and nearly eighty percent of our eighth graders can’t do basic math. I’m angry that our children’s education isn’t a priority.”

Over the weeks and months to come, while continuing his service as Louisiana’s Attorney General, Landry will tour the state. His objective is to meet with voters and local leaders to discuss their vision for Louisiana’s future.

Related Articles

Stay Connected

48,500FansLike
- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest Articles