Posted on 08/14/2013 12:48:24 PM PDT by Kaslin
While many conservatives still may be wondering what went wrong with New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, for most of us, the handwriting has been on the wall for some time. He is a liberal masquerading as a conservative.
Christie rose to Republican super-stardom after handily defeating Democrat incumbent Governor Jon Corzine, breaking a streak of Democratic victories in a state where John McCain lost to Barack Obama by more than 15 percent. Christie seemed poised to become the GOPs electoral savior, emerging from the northeast political wasteland to lead Republicans to the Promised Land.
It started as a love fest. Early in the 2012 primary season, Christie was the most prominent candidate conservatives were hoping would throw his hat into the ring. His brash, in-your-face style contrasted favorably with that of more traditional and cautious GOP establishment candidates, like Mitt Romney. Christies public battles with New Jerseys teachers unions solidified his street cred with conservatives, as he excoriated union bosses. Many conservatives actually were disappointed when Christie decided to forgo the presidential race in 2012 to focus on New Jersey, and -- it was assumed -- to establish a foundation for a run in 2016.
But all was not well in Oz; there always was something troubling about Christies conservative conversion. In the primary, Christie ran as a conservative, but ever since he's been lurching to the left, New Jersey Star-Ledger columnist Paul Mulshine wrote in July 2009, a month after Christie won the Republican Primary. Christie is still lurching, if not racing in that direction.
Time, as it so often tends to do, has revealed a side to Christie that was well-observed by New Jersey politicos during the gubernatorial contest, but was largely hidden from outsiders until Christie was thrown onto the national stage. As Mulshine observed in 2009, Christies conservative credentials were nothing more than ambiguous sound bites, coupled with a masterful strategy of bobbing and weaving to deflect questions that would have forced him into articulating a conservative position on issues.
So today, we see a Christie more comfortable in the company of Barack Obama than in front of a crowd of grassroots conservative activists. For example, rather than recognize the shifting political landscape against unchecked government surveillance of U.S. citizens, Christie attacked Sen. Rand Paul with a vehemence more pronounced than Harry Reid would use actually calling Pauls mainstream concern about such policies dangerous. Christies embrace of the Surveillance State may be the final straw after a long string of conservative disappointments from the Guv, including his uncomfortably and continuing cozy relationship with Obama following Storm Sandy.
Christie now finds himself in the middle of a Second Amendment battle, where both gun control advocates and gun owners are closely watching his next move. Three bills sitting on his desk would have a significant and negative impact on Second Amendment rights in the Garden State. Considering Christies track record over the last year, conservatives have good reason to worry.
There is little doubt Christie is trying to lay a path to the White House in 2016 -- branding himself as a reformer not afraid to walk across the aisle to get things done. Cooperation, of course, can be a productive trait in a political arena paralyzed by partisanship. Ronald Reagan, the Great Communicator, had a knack for bringing together coalitions to win key legislative victories for conservatives. However, Reagan always remained firmly rooted in conservative principles, which gave him unassailable credibility with the conservative base.
With a pedigree resembling that of Richard Nixon, Christie is no Ronald Reagan.
What the GOP needs in 2016 is a leader who can be trusted to reverse the dangerous fiscal, social and national security policies of the Obama Administration. Christie has not exhibited any indication he is willing to do this; in fact, just the opposite.
There should be no room in the GOP for Christies nebulous, if not disingenuous, political games; and, it is time conservatives show him the door before his carefully self-nurtured image as the GOP tough guy -- able to take on all Democratic comers -- destroys any remaining semblance of the conservative GOP base first constructed by Reagan two generations ago. If Christie really wants to take on Hillary, let him do so in the arena far better suited for liberals and moderates like him the Democrat Party.
Mark Levin on Cavuto yesterday
It's probably going to have to be a garage door.
That’s okay as long as he gets booted out of it
Did anyone catch the subtle dig Rush gave Christie today?
He was talking about the NYT story on the Clintons getting rich off their charity. He was speculating about who may benefit from the story. Checked off a list of possible democrat nominees, Biden, Rahm Emanuel, Christie, ....
He can take Rubio with him
Christie is the East Coast lib version of a Republican.-
Basically a liberal who got elected with an ‘R’ next to their name.
Rush listed Christie today as a possible Democrat primary opponent for Hillary
Why are we being so antagonistic toward Christie? Isn’t he one of the champions of the Vichy Republican party?
Christie at some point will turn Democrat.
He is what I’ve been calling him here ad infinitum, A fat ass Lou Costello-look-a-like f**king RINO and I knew that about him from his days as a federal prosecutor. I knew he was no f**king good when, as he was campaigning and still in his capacity as a federal prosecutor he was speaking before some ‘’Latino’’(racist) civil rights’’ group and said “Illegal aliens haven’t broken any laws’’. I live in Jersey and had to hold my nose and vote for this fat piece of shit and McLame too and I refuse do to that anymore. I only did it caving into pressure from the conservative members of my family and friends to just get out and vote ‘’conservative’’. I’m not doing that anymore. I’m sick and tired of being betrayed by RINOs and liberals wearing conservative e clothing. I was a liberal once. I know how they think and act. I came to the Republican Party fifteen years ago and have watched it turn into some kind of “Democrat Lite’’.
The New Jersey Star Ledger might well be called “Das Kapital’’ as far as I’m concerned. It’s a Leftist rag and always has been and Mulshine is it’s token ‘’conservative.
It’s a big door.. not for Christie to just fit through but to have all the RINO’s thrown out with him.
Did he ever say he was a conservative? He is simply apart of the GOP who are frauds!
As far as Christie goes, while he is not a conservative, in his home state he is a bane to Democrats. As long as he stays in his home state, and stays out of the national spotlight, he will be good in making New Jersey more purple, instead of reliably blue. And this matters at the national level, because it erodes the national Democrat bloc.
Not a good situation, but it could be far worse.
Christie's Early Primary May Have Helped Booker's Landslide
Christie Won't Help Cory Bookers GOP Opponent in Senate Campaign
It's probably going to have to be a garage door.
Or the door to a Krispy Kreme.
Christie is this year’s John Anderson, i.e., a liberal Democrat who masquerades as a Republican. In the 1980 election, Bush was the liberal Republican, akin to Lamar Alexander. We don’t have many of the really far out there Republicans left any more—Chafee and his kind have finally left the party. Christie is in that mold and needs to just switch.
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