Chris Christie will take over as the chairman of Republican Governor’s Association (RGA) on Thursday during the second day of the group’s annual meeting.
The job will give Christie a powerful platform to test his brash, bold leadership style on a national scale through RGA-related travels; it will also connect him with powerful, national donors and expand his Rolodex on the eve of what many expect will be a Christie bid for the White House.
“Everybody’s excited, you know that I’m gonna take over the chairmanship and I’m getting good responses from donors and from my fellow governors,” Christie told NBC News on Wednesday night, following the first day of the RGA meeting
At the event, Christie focused on the job at hand: next year’s 36 governor’s races.
“Elect and re-elect Republican governors. That’s priority one, two, and three. That’s it,” Christie told NBC News. “You don’t have any other agenda. The agenda is defend our incumbents and try to see if you can pick up a few seats. Although with 30 governors, there’s not a lot of targets left, but we got a few.”
Christie takes over just as the governor’s association looks to temper the party in light of Washington’s extreme conservatism.
“It is striking, this whole RGA event this week seems to be more about these governors desperately wrestling the party away from Washington,” NBC News White House correspondent Chuck Todd said on Morning Joe. “You can just feel the tension – how moderate in tone these governors were. It was like they were screaming at Washington, ‘boy, you guys really have just so messed up the Republican Party right now.’”









