The never-shy, always controversial Donald Trump has been sucking up nearly all the 2016 oxygen over the last few weeks — and in the process, he’s drawn more than a few comparisons with another big-talking presidential candidate: Chris Christie.
They’re both northeastern Republicans. They’re known for a bold and unfiltered style. It’s not hard to see how they might be duking it out for the title of the true “tell it like it is” 2016 presidential candidate.
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There have been op-eds about how the billionaire real estate mogul stole the New Jersey governor’s brand; declarations that with Trump’s controversial remarks about immigrants being “rapists” and “killers,” Christie “suddenly seems more palatable” to voters; and a political cartoon depicting Christie battling Trump for the biggest bully mantle. Even comedian Jon Stewart recently joked on “The Daily Show” that the two are competing in the “loud Northeastern egomaniac primary,” asking “How far must Christie have fallen to be a two-term governor unfavorably compared to a perfume-selling escalateur like Donald Trump?”
But is “The Apprentice” host really stealing the Garden State governor’s thunder? Not really.
“It’s the difference of telling it like it is in Christie’s case and literally blowing your brains out on the sidewalk with no filter in the case of Donald Trump,” said Ford O’Connell, a GOP strategist and former John McCain campaign adviser. “For Christie it’s about him looking for footing in a very crowded field, a campaign tactic. For Trump, that’s the way his ego runs.”
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Love him or hate him, there’s no denying that Christie also trumps Trump in this regard: He has years of public service under his belt as a twice-elected governor and as a U.S. attorney of New Jersey. He’s also served as chairman of the Republican Governors Association. The same can’t be said of Trump, perhaps better known for hosting a reality television show, demanding President Obama’s birth certificate, and seemingly writing off Mexican immigrants as criminals.
“There’s a difference between being a straight talker and being able to operate in a political environment as a public official,” said Jeanne Zaino, a professor of political science at Iona College and of political campaign management at New York University.
And that’s the thing, analysts say: There’s a big difference in telling a teacher to shut up or calling someone an idiot, as Christie has, and making sweeping generalizations about immigrants, to the point where your own party is begging you to tone it down, as RNC committee chairman Reince Priebus reportedly told Trump, a claim the business magnate disputes.
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