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The Knives Come Out -- for Christie
Townhall.com ^ | November 8, 2013 | Pat Buchanan

Posted on 11/08/2013 6:52:38 AM PST by Kaslin

"Maybe the folks in Washington, D.C., should tune in their TVs right now and see how it's done," said the big winner of Tuesday last.

"I did not seek a second term to do small things," Chris Christie went on, but "to finish the job -- now watch me do it."

Humility is not the governor's strong suit.

Yet, Christie registered a remarkable victory. He won with 60 percent in a blue state, winning 55 percent of women, half of the Hispanic vote and 20 percent of African-Americans.

If he could replicate those numbers in New Jersey and nationally in 2016, Chris Christie would be elected president in a landslide.

"[T]his fellow is really on the right track," says seven-term Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, "if the Republican Party is not too stupid." To fill out Christie's ticket in 2016, Hatch proposes Susana Martinez of New Mexico, who made eight campaign stops with Christie on Monday.

Democrats concur with Hatch. The headline on the lead story on page one of Thursday's Washington Post reads: "Democrats Take Aim at Christie: He's Seen as GOP's Best Hope for 2016."

"The Elephant in the Room" is the title of Time's cover story.

And with the corporate contributors and Beltway bundlers gravitating to him, Christie is emerging as the establishment's hope to recapture the GOP from its Tea Party, libertarian, social conservative and populist wing.

Will Christie be the candidate in 2016?

Put me down as a skeptic.

Some of us yet recall James "Scotty" Reston of the New York Times writing in 1963 that Nelson Rockefeller had as much chance of losing the Republican nomination as he did of going broke.

Comes the retort: Christie is no Nelson Rockefeller, but a pro-life conservative with five kids and Middle American values.

Why then the skepticism?

Geography, persona and culture -- for openers.

The Republican Party is a Southern, Midwestern and Western party, suburban and rural. Not since Tom Dewey in 1948 has the GOP nominated a candidate from the urban Northeast.

And Chris Christie is not only from New Jersey; he is indelibly and proudly so.

The candidate who comes closest to him is Rudy Giuliani, hero of 9/11. Christie may be the hero of Hurricane Sandy, but Sandy is not remembered nationwide like the shock and horror 9/11.

As Rudy won two terms in the toughest turf in America for a Republican, New York City, Christie has now won two terms in New Jersey.

So, how did Rudy, who started off 2008 as the front-runner in the Republican polls, do? He did not win a single primary.

Then, there is the "in-your-face" persona of Christie, a pol who does not suffer fools gladly and is forever finding them along rope lines and at town hall meetings.

Not a good fit for Cedar Rapids or Sioux City.

Moreover, Christie seems to have no coattails. Despite his triumph, he failed to make significant gains in the state House or state Senate, both of which remain solidly Democratic.

Then there is the reputation Christie has built as a self-centered politician. At the 2012 GOP convention, his prime-time address was the political counterpart of Walt Whitman's "Song of Myself." Mitt Romney went unmentioned until 16 minutes into the speech.

According to Chuck Todd of NBC, though heading for a blowout, Christie rebuffed a desperate plea to come down to Virginia for a few hours to help Ken Cuccinelli, whose late surge almost won the state.

And while Christie embraced and thanked President Obama profusely for federal assistance during Sandy, when asked about a visit by his party nominee Romney to view the damage, he retorted, "I have no idea, nor am I the least bit concerned or interested."

Christie trounced state Sen. Barbara Buono, who was abandoned by her party. Yet, according to an NBC poll, were he running for president against Hillary, Christie would lose New Jersey 48-44.

In congratulating the governor, the Wall Street Journal noted that Christie has failed "to improve the state's economy. New Jersey ranks 49th in the Tax Foundation's state business tax climate index, ahead of only New York. The state jobless rate is still 8.5 percent, among the 10 highest in the country."

Christie appears to be peaking more than two years before the Iowa caucuses. And not only will Democrats be spending 26 months blocking him in Trenton and trashing him nationally, so, too, will those elements in the GOP who see in the coalescing Chamber of Commerce-Beltway elite alliance a plot to seize the party from them.

These folks will not be going gentle into that good night.

Nor is Christie being helped by all the bouquets being tossed his way by a media that regards his party's base as extremist. If a civil war is coming inside the GOP, does Chris Christie wish to be the champion of the establishment?

Because that is where the forces assembling are pushing him.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections; US: New Jersey
KEYWORDS: chrischristie
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To: Timber Rattler

Not since Tom Dewey in 1948 has the GOP nominated a candidate from the urban Northeast.

Whut? Romney doesn’t count?

...I chalk it up to short term memory loss...


61 posted on 11/08/2013 11:21:26 AM PST by IrishBrigade
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To: Timber Rattler

And this guy?

Born George Herbert Walker Bush
June 12, 1924 (age 89)
Milton, Massachusetts, U.S.


62 posted on 11/08/2013 11:26:08 AM PST by JediJones (The #1 Must-see Filibuster of the Year: TEXAS TED AND THE CONSERVATIVE CRUZ-ADE)
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To: longfellowsmuse

I will not vote for Mr. Christie if he is the Republican nominee even if Satan himself, horns and tail for all to see, is on the democratic ticket.

...I assume then that you would vote third party, or a write in, two equally useless actions...curious, would you do that just as a feel good measure, to burnish your conservative bona fides...

...I always thought feel good measures were left wing options...


63 posted on 11/08/2013 11:28:00 AM PST by IrishBrigade
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To: Kaslin

Unless there was a 2/3rds vote of Congress to override his veto, he wasn’t forced.


64 posted on 11/08/2013 11:35:56 AM PST by JediJones (The #1 Must-see Filibuster of the Year: TEXAS TED AND THE CONSERVATIVE CRUZ-ADE)
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To: IrishBrigade

His support for amnesty, capitulation to the gay lobby and his pandering to Obama after Sandy seals the deal for me.

You may think my vote is akin to a liberal feel good measure, I think it’s principled, and I have no desire to prove any “bona fides” to anyone.


65 posted on 11/08/2013 11:44:37 AM PST by longfellowsmuse (last of the living nomads)
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To: Jim Scott

Couldn’t agree more. He is going crash and burn, all because he has the ego the same size as barry.

The madness of it all just gets stranger and stranger.


66 posted on 11/08/2013 11:49:42 AM PST by AllAmericanGirl44 ('Hey citizen, what's in YOUR closet?')
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To: JediJones

“Unless there was a 2/3rds vote of Congress to override his veto, he wasn’t forced”


Exactamundo


67 posted on 11/08/2013 12:57:24 PM PST by steelhead_trout (MYOB)
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To: longfellowsmuse

His badmouthing of people justifiably concerned about NSA eavesdropping seals the deal for me. If he’s for amnesty, that’s just icing on the cake. But I don’t think he “capitualted” to gays. 2/3s of the people of NJ wanted him to drop his appeal of the decision that legalized same-sex “marriage.” In that respect, he was merely being a good representative of his constitutents. Had he done otherwise, he would have been, in essence, insubordinate.


68 posted on 11/08/2013 1:00:48 PM PST by steelhead_trout (MYOB)
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To: Kaslin
[Art.] The Republican Party is a Southern, Midwestern and Western party, suburban and rural. Not since Tom Dewey in 1948 has the GOP nominated a candidate from the urban Northeast.

That's because people living on the Atlantic Slope share values among themselves that are half-European and more than a little authoritarian, and have little use or affection for the interests, politics, or aspirations of the gomers who live on the wrong side of the Blue Ridge.

Atlantic Seaboard people are selfsatisfied snobs and it shows. Just pull up Commentary and look at all the New Yorkers sneering at Sarah Palin -- they hate her guts and will tell you so -- because of what she represents. She's the apotheosis of Midwestern (her ancestors were from Minnesota) and Western values, and it shows -- and they dislike her for all that, and that shows, too.

Shoot a gun? Ewwww! </pansy>

69 posted on 11/08/2013 2:32:41 PM PST by lentulusgracchus
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To: AngelesCrestHighway
Donut Boy will not beat Thunder Thighs ... they will slice and dice his big white @ss into nothing.

Called!

Can't-improve-on-that bump.

70 posted on 11/08/2013 2:35:18 PM PST by lentulusgracchus
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To: AllAmericanGirl44
The madness of it all just gets stranger and stranger.

In the wake of the precipitous decline of values after FDR (maybe after the Roaring Twenties), we've been treated to a succession of presidential candidates who more and more closely resemble a Caligula or a Caracalla.

Politicians aren't running for anything so boring as the constitutionally-bound offices of a federal republic. These guys are all running for the imperial purple and have egos to match.

William F. Buckley pointed out once that it's easy to embarrass a Swiss citizen, simply by asking him to name the last five presidents of the Swiss Confederation. That's because Swiss presidents do their jobs and aren't chasing after notoriety.

71 posted on 11/08/2013 2:39:58 PM PST by lentulusgracchus
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To: lentulusgracchus

Very interesting what Buckley said, and how tragic for us.

I agree, these little men have no interest in anyone imho, other than their own egos and desires. They sicken me and they are perpetuating a sickness on this nation.

Where are the men? Grown men with honor and integrity?
Do they exist anymore?! What barry has done to the office is shameful, aside all the dictator crap he pulls, his petty and smallness reduces everyone and everything around him.


72 posted on 11/09/2013 12:33:23 AM PST by AllAmericanGirl44 ('Hey citizen, what's in YOUR closet?')
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To: Smokin' Joe
Huh? Maybe Romney wasn't from there but he was there.

I seem to recall a point in time when folks were pretty sure Mittens would run for governor and then, sooner or later, President. They just weren't sure about which state. Would he run for president as governor of Utah or of Massachusetts?

Might have worked out better, had he chosen Utah ...

73 posted on 11/09/2013 12:46:02 AM PST by cynwoody
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To: AngelesCrestHighway

“Donut Boy will not beat Thunder Thighs...That’s why liberals will go easy on him and if his butt ends up the republican nominee they will slice and dice his big white @ss into nothing.”


Many of us thought that Cankles would do the same thing to Zero, back in the 2008 primaries. That turned out to be very wrong. Hillary Clinton is not Bill Clinton. She is harsh, shrill, and has the personality of cat droppings. In short, she has NONE of her husband’s oily charm or innate political skills. Wait until the nutcrakers and ex-wife jokes come out. She’ll even turn off women. In modern political history, Richard Nixon was probably the only POTUS who flunked the personality test and somehow still got elected.


74 posted on 11/09/2013 5:32:38 AM PST by steelhead_trout (MYOB)
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To: Kaslin

When the GOPe says they hope to one day roll out Christie as their candidate, they mean that literally.


75 posted on 11/09/2013 5:41:26 AM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: central_va

Once Christie gets momentum he’ll be unstoppable. Well, maybe with spike strips.


76 posted on 11/09/2013 5:45:07 AM PST by RegulatorCountry
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To: lentulusgracchus

That attitude ends north of Richmond. You paint with too broad a brush.


77 posted on 11/09/2013 5:47:29 AM PST by RegulatorCountry
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