According to Chris Christie, we’ve all been living in a fantasy.
The New Jersey governor and potential presidential candidate argued Tuesday that President Obama and the Washington D.C. “culture” created a deceiving landscape, and went so far as to call Obama the “worst economic president since Jimmy Carter.”
Speaking from the early voting state of New Hampshire, Christie kept up his uber-confident demeanor. And despite a recent string of bad news (including sinking poll numbers and federal authorities recently bringing charges against three of his former allies) he laid out his vision to create economic growth in the United States.
And the Republican wants voters to know that if he runs for the nation’s highest office in 2016 he’ll do a better job than Obama.
The president, Christie said in his roughly hour-long speech at the University of New Hampshire in Manchester, has tried to give the impression to Americans that the past six years have been a great success “when wages are flat, full-time employment for the middle class is shrinking, and wealth is at all-time highs only for the privileged,” adding that Obama’s policies have only widened the gap between the rich and the poor.
Related: Chris Christie shells out $300k on food, alcohol: Report
To rectify this, the governor put forth a five-point proposal, which, among other things, called on simplifying the country’s tax code (including a cut in the top income tax rate), reducing federal regulations, and creating a more effective national energy strategy, which includes green-lighting the controversial Keystone XL pipeline.
The “bottom line,” said Christie, is that “the fed’s easy money policies and the president’s anti-growth policies have made the rich even richer and made our middle class work longer and harder for less pay and less promise for their future.”
Christie’s specific proposals included decreasing the number of income tax brackets to no more than three rates from the existing six. He said the top rate should not surpass 28% (the top income tax rate is currently 39.6%) while the bottom rate should stay in the single digits (as opposed to the current 10%). He stressed his plan would mean lower rates for every American and that it would be revenue neutral.
“It should take 15 minutes to do your taxes—not days, weeks, or months,” the governor said.








