New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie — once a rising star in the GOP and a man the party elite all but begged to run in 2012 — has fallen to the back of the pack of emerging 2016 Republican presidential hopefuls, all while being battered by lousy poll numbers and economic problems in the Garden State. But Christie’s political salvation may not be far away from his native New Jersey. And that’s why he’s setting his sights on New Hampshire.
Christie will be all over the early-voting state for an action-packed week – meeting with community leaders, holding two of his signature town hall events, hosting restaurant meet and greets, and delivering a speech on entitlement reform – before joining many of his potential 2016 competitors at the “First in the Nation” Republican summit in Nashua.
The trip to New Hampshire, which is emerging as a do-or-die state for Christie — a northeastern moderate who experts say would face difficulties in other critical early-voting states like Iowa and South Carolina (where voters tend to cast their ballots for strict social conservatives) — is coming at a crucial time. GOP Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Rand Paul of Kentucky have officially jumped into the race, with Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida expected to announce his intentions on Monday in the early evening. On the Democratic side, front-runner Hillary Clinton officially launched her campaign on Sunday.
Meanwhile, Christie says he won’t make a decision until late spring or early summer.
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That’s why Tom Rath, a former New Hampshire attorney general who advised George W. Bush and Mitt Romney’s presidential campaigns, told msnbc that the timing of Christie’s trip is “very important.” “It’s still early, but it’s pretty late in the early stages. You’ve got to get going.” While Christie has been to the Granite State many times in the past year, many of those trips were under the umbrella of him stumping for other candidates during the midterm election cycle as chairman of the Republican Governors Association. Christie, Rath said, must prove he’s serious about running, adding, “Can he relate to an audience that has been colored by the stories about him in New Jersey? … He needs to be here from now on, on a regular basis.”
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Indeed, it’s been a rough year for Christie. His approval ratings as governor are at an all-time low, and debates over the budget and the state’s beleaguered pension system rage in New Jersey. Nationally, it’s been rocky too, controversial remarks about vaccinations, a New York Times report detailing the governor’s questionable luxury trips and as headlines about the scandal known as “Bridgegate” — which has rocked his administration — continuing to drip out, including that indictments may be on the way. On top of that, Christie and Paul were recently the only two potential GOP candidates not invited to the influential National Rifle Association’s annual convention, which took place over the weekend in Nashville, Tennessee.
But the socially moderate, fiscally conservative state of New Hampshire could provide a perfect backdrop for Christie to make a comeback. His bold and brash style – a liability in some places—is a plus in the fiercely independent state, whose motto is “Live free or die.”
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