There are more than 1,100 days until Election Day 2016, but just by looking at Chris Christie and Hillary Clinton, it’s as if campaign season is already in full swing.
In the past two weeks, it has seemed as if Team Clinton can’t wait for presidential campaigning to begin. At the American Bar Association in San Francisco, she gave a speech about efforts to restrict voting rights around the country, using some of the fiercest political rhetoric heard from Clinton since she left the Obama administration earlier this year.
“We’ve seen a sweeping effort across our country to construct new obstacles to voting, often undercover and addressing a phantom epidemic of election fraud,” she said. “Now, not every obstacle is related to race. But anyone that says that racial discrimination is no longer a problem in American elections must not be paying attention.”
She is planning a series of policy speeches. The New York Times has already assigned a reporter to cover Clinton full time.
“Suddenly it’s as if she’s the next president even if Barack Obama’s still president,” said Hardball’s Chris Matthews on Monday night.
Some analysts wonder if she’s coming out too far ahead of schedule.
“I am surprised in the first year that she is getting political this quickly,” NBC News political director Chuck Todd said during Meet The Press. He noted Clinton has high approval ratings, and that she risks lowering them by entering the fray so soon.
Former Obama press secretary Robert Gibbs said he agreed. “I, as a strategist, am fairly floored that she has decided to enter the public fray so quickly.”
But Democrats aren’t alone in their angst. Enter New Jersey Gov. Christie.









