New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie suggested Monday that officials find a “balance” between requiring vaccinations and allowing parents to turn them down. But his run in with the issue may go back much longer.
Related: Chris Christie urges ‘balance’ on vaccination choice
Louise Kuo Habakus, an anti-vaccination activist who runs the site FearlessParent.org, provided a letter to MSNBC Monday in which Christie purportedly wrote that he understood their concerns about ties between vaccine mandates and autism — long discredited by public officials — and supported their push for parental choice. She shared a photo showing Christie meeting with her and what she said were other anti-vaccination activists with her organization, the NJ Vaccination Choice Coalition, as well as other autism groups at a meeting they organized with the then-candidate in August 2009.
“I have met with families affected by autism from across the state and have been struck by their incredible grace and courage,” Christie wrote in the letter. “Many of these families have expressed their concern over New Jersey’s highest-in-the nation vaccine mandates. I stand with them now, and will stand with them as their governor in their fight for greater parental involvement in vaccination decisions that affect their children.”
A spokesman for Christie did not immediately respond to repeated requests for comment. The letter’s existence was first reported by The Daily Beast.
“I spent a lot of time with Governor Christie working on this,” Habakus said. “He’s been absolutely constant on this issue since I first met with him in 2008.”
Habakus added in a follow-up call that, despite the letter’s mention of autism and vaccine mandates, the group’s in-person meeting with Christie did not touch on claims of a link between the two.
“Vaccines were one of many topics discussed and he expressed support for parents who wanted more of a dialogue and more participations and more say in this,” she said. “He believed parents should have more say and involvement.”
Nonetheless, she said autism was one of her many concerns with vaccinations.
Christie was not the only politician to address fears of an autism/vaccine link around the same period: The Washington Post’s Fact Checker blog called out then-presidential candidates Barack Obama, John McCain, and Hillary Clinton in 2008 for suggesting the science around the issue was unsettled despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary. The anti-vaccination movement has garnered more attention — and scathing criticism — since then thanks to a resurgence of illnesses that experts complain are tied to parents refusing to vaccinate their children.
“I understand that there are families that in some cases are concerned about the effect of vaccinations,” Obama told NBC on Sunday. “The science is, you know, pretty indisputable. We’ve looked at this again and again. There is every reason to get vaccinated, but there aren’t reasons to not.”
Clinton joined in on Monday night, tweeting her support for vaccines. “The science is clear: The earth is round, the sky is blue, and #vaccineswork. Let’s protect all our kids,” she wrote, adding #GrandmothersKnowBest.
Christie appeared to discuss his meetings with anti-vaccination groups in a 2009 interview with radio host Don Imus in which he said he gave parents who were concerned vaccines cause autism a “seat at the table” and that mandates to get flu shots and vaccines presented “a real tough choice” based on their concerns.
His latest comments come amid a multi-state measles outbreak that public health officials say has been exacerbated by an anti-vaccine movement that rejects established medical science. Experts warn that even relatively small numbers of parents who refuse to vaccinate their children can threaten entire communities by giving once-controlled diseases an opportunity to return.
“All I can say is that we vaccinated [our children],” Christie told msnbc’s Kasie Hunt in England on Monday when asked about the outbreak. “That’s the best expression I can give you of my opinion. It’s much more important, I think, what you think as a parent than what you think as a public official.”
He went on to add that “there has to be a balance and it depends on what the vaccine is, what the disease type is and all the rest” when it comes to mandating vaccinations.









