New Hampshire better get ready to see a whole lot more of another state’s governor.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a potential 2016 Republican presidential candidate, made his first visit of the year to the critical early voting state this week, and several business leaders who met with him told msnbc that Christie relayed the message that he’d be coming back a whole lot more. He’ll also hold a series of town hall meetings this year in the Granite State, a format with which Christie is very familiar — he’s held more than 125 such events in New Jersey.
“The more I come back, the less speech you’re gonna get and the more time you’re going to get to ask me questions and challenge me,” Christie said at the Lincoln-Reagan Day dinner hosted by Republicans Monday in Concord.
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New Hampshire is emerging as a do-or-die state for Christie, a northeastern moderate who experts say would have trouble in other critical early voting states like Iowa and South Carolina – where voters tend to cast their ballots for strict social conservatives. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, a fellow moderate with a big head of steam heading into the still-nascent 2016 race, is expected to have a big home-state advantage in the early and political powerhouse state of Florida if he does jump into the race. That leaves Christie looking at New Hampshire as his best hope for early momentum.
Dante Scala, a political science professor at the University of New Hampshire, put it more bluntly: For Christie, New Hampshire is “a must win, period.” If Christie loses the state, his White House prospects would be all but dead, he said.
Socially moderate, fiscally conservative New Hampshire is a state almost tailor made for Christie. Even his bold, brash style — a liability in some places — is a plus in fiercely independent New Hampshire, whose state motto is “Live free or die.”
Of course, you can’t count on New Hampshire or any other single state to swing the race for you. John McCain – who concentrated his limited resources in New Hampshire in 2000 — handily beat George W. Bush but was unable to win the party’s nomination. Placing all your eggs in one basket isn’t a good idea either, as Rudy Giuliani found out in 2008 when he decided to largely abandon New Hampshire and concentrate on the Florida primary. Shortly after his crushing defeat, he dropped out.
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Still, New Hampshire seems promising for Christie.
“He’s from the northeast, and he’s already been coming here as chairman of the Republican Governors Association,” said Tom Rath, a former New Hampshire attorney general who advised George W. Bush and Mitt Romney’s presidential campaigns. “He had a very, very good trip this week but he needs to be here on a regular basis. That’s sometimes hard for governors and he needs to demonstrate to New Hampshire voters that he has not just the capacity but the personality and the ability to govern.”
According to a new NBC News/Marist survey that asked New Hampshire Republicans whom they would vote for if the primary were held today, 18% said they’d vote for Bush. Christie came in fourth with 13%, with former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker in second with 15%, and Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky in third with 14%. The good news for Christie, however, is that the poll’s margin of error was 5 percentage points, meaning he’s in a statistical dead heat.
Christie was well received this week during his visit to the Granite State, where he also held a private roundtable with New Hampshire business leaders in Bedford.









