New Jersey Governor Chris Christie is off to Mexico Wednesday for what’s being billed as an economic trade mission for the state — but the three-day trip is fueling further speculation he’s seriously considering a 2016 presidential run, trying to beef up his foreign policy credentials and win over potential Hispanic voters.
“If there was any doubt about the governor’s presidential ambitions, this trip should allay them,” Ben Dworkin, the director of the Rebovich Institute for New Jersey Politics at Rider University said. “You don’t make these kinds of trips from New Jersey at this time of the year with the chatter going on about your presidential ambitions unless those ambitions are true.”
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The governor plans to tour local companies, meet with business leaders in Mexico City, and visit with the country’s president, Enrique Pena Nieto. He’ll also stop in the state of Puebla, where many Mexicans living in New Jersey come from.
Christie, an outspoken critic of President Obama’s handling of the border crisis, said at a recent news conference in Sea Bright N.J. that the “main thrust” of his trip will be to strengthen economic opportunities between New Jersey and Mexico.
Despite skewering Obama over the summer for his unwillingness to visit the Mexico border—where tens of thousands of immigrants are illegally crossing into the U.S., Christie said his trip does not include a stop there.
Related: Border crisis could play a big role in 2016 campaign
Christie, at the news conference, asked “What would I do exactly? … Bring troops with me or something? I mean, come on. This is silliness.” He argued, “The president has his responsibilities. I have mine.” Potential 2016 candidate, Louisana Gov. Bobby Jindal – who has said he wants to deport most of the unaccompanied immigrant children and teens who have crossed into the U.S. — visited the border last month.









