Posted on 05/19/2015 8:47:14 AM PDT by VinL
He told ABC five years ago that he supported citizenship, leaving him with two options now. One: Stick to his guns and give conservatives another reason to treat Christie as a curse word. Two: Follow Scott Walkers lead by pleading ignorance in his earlier views and claiming that hes since seen the light. Actual quote from Christie: I have now learned some of the ramifications for all of these things. What those things might be isnt clear, but itd be impolite after such an earnest pander to badger the poor guy for details. Hes trying, Republicans. A for effort?
This clip is interesting less because of Christies reasoning which Kelly, sensing the pander, doesnt bother asking about and he doesnt offer than what it signals about his campaign strategy. The night he was reelected governor, people expected Christie to be the establishment hero in the 2016 race, the one guy who might be able to go a bit further left on issues like immigration than the rest of the field because hed have so much donor-class money propping him up. Two years later, after Bridgegate and Jeb Bushs entry into the race, hes a guy without a niche. Hes not going to out-establishment Jeb so pandering to centrists now on illegals will earn him nothing except more enmity from the right. (Bushs own feelings about a path to citizenship have been nuanced to the point of opacity, which Im sure is just how he likes it.) Meanwhile, hes burned way, way too many bridges with grassroots conservatives to hope theyll fill the vacuum of his lost support in the center. The obvious solution is to try to keep pace with Walker and Marco Rubio by competing for center-righties who might find Jeb a bit too squishy and conservatives like Ted Cruz a bit too ideological. I think his speech a few weeks ago about entitlement reform was a bid to show center-righties that he could be even bolder on fiscal reform than Walker was when he overhauled PEU collective bargaining in Wisconsin. That was a gamble, calculating that somewhat conservative voters would be more impressed by his show of leadership than alienated by the thought of tweaking Social Security and Medicare, but he needed to try something to grab their attention. Now hes signaling to them that he might be a good fit for them on immigration too, not quite the notorious sellout that Rubio was when he joined the Gang of Eight but also not necessarily a guy who may try to curb legal immigration, as Walkers recently hinted at. (Ironically, Christies apparent legalization-without-citizenship position also happens to be the position of alleged right-wing nutjob Cruz.) If he can remain kinda sorta politically acceptable to center-righties through the summer, then hell show up at the debates hoping to leapfrog Walker and Rubio through sheer force of personality and charisma. Its a longshot but thats what hes got.
I can only assume, though, that this means Christies written off whatever claim he once had to having special appeal to Latino voters. His reelection campaign in New Jersey worked hard to run up the score with that group in hopes that itd be a credential for his eventual presidential run. He ended up with 51 percent of the Latino vote in his landslide victory, a 19-point improvement over 2009. Now that Bush is in the race, though, and Rubio seems a legit threat to become the first Latino major-party nominee, maybe Christie figures that his path with Latinos is sufficiently blocked that he might as well flip on citizenship and see if that gets him anything among center-right voters generally. Exit question: What will his response be when Democrats inevitably accuse him of wanting second-class status for illegals by barring them from citizenship? Kind of surprised Kelly didnt press him on that.
He was for it before his finger in the wind was against it.
I think he better settle in to the idea of being Governor of the quagmire soviet of Jersey for a while longer.
We the people have had it with Amnesty, Immigration, and Social Justice. That he, for now, is willing to concede that doesn’t mean that much.
The time to change a policy position is BEFORE you start considering running for POTUS.
Otherwise, you just look opportunistic.
Don’t believe him. If he were to be elected, he would continue the past 25 years policy of ignoring illegal immigration.
Ah....The [Hispanic vote] force is strong in that young Jedi......
Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results is the sign of....what? Everyone at one time or another has changed their mind. Just look at the high divorce rate.
You gotta love milquetoasts.
Great. Another Mitch McConnell trying to get elected.
Just further evidence most politicians cannot be trusted.
Yeah, but you lose sight of what’s important - what the huckster pollsters are hawking about Hispanic vote as invincibility.
...also, I am now thin. Please refer to me as the slender Governor of New Jersey who wishes to secure the border.
Christie: no wait, did i say oppose...what meant to say...
“After making a few phones calls and reviewing my prior long standing position, I now believe the complete opposite of my prior expedient position and adopt this new expedient position—for now. “
Of course my current position can most certainly “evolve” at a later date
Who is Chris Christie?
[I now oppose a path to citizenship for illegals]
I’m glad he cleared THAT up because before that I opposed his path to running for the presidency.
Rush always says, when they want to get elected they always move to the right.
I might believe him if he stated this in Spanish.
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