Is New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie too fat to be president? Not according to him.
The Republican dismissed the concern on Wednesday night when ABC News’ Barbara Walters asked if he was too heavy to hold the highest office in the country.
Christie, 50, acknowledged he was “more than a little” overweight, but said it’s “ridiculous” to say it would affect his performance.
“I think people have watched me for a number of weeks during Hurricane Sandy doing 18-hour days, and getting right back up the next day and still being just as effective in the job, so I don’t really think that would be a problem,” said the governor.
Of course, there are legitimate health concerns with being so overweight, which some commentators have pointed out.
“Being obese, and he certainly is, makes everyone assume he is a heart attack waiting to happen,” Ed Rollins, a veteran GOP operative, tells the Washington Post.
Being president is hard, and it takes a toll on your body, writes Atlanta-Journal Constitution columnist Jay Bookman.
“If you look at how George W. Bush visibly aged over his eight-year presidency, and how Barack Obama has aged, the toll taken by the job and the campaigning becomes pretty clear. And unlike Christie, both Bush and Obama are pretty serious about staying in good physical shape. It’s perfectly legitimate, even necessary, to consider health when electing a president.”









