The controversial Keystone XL pipeline project may have temporarily died in the Senate this week, but New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is eager to bring the issue back to life ahead of a potential 2016 presidential run.
He’ll visit Canada in early December — his second trip outside of the U.S. since September — where he’ll meet with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper. The Garden State governor is expected to give an energy policy speech in which he’ll aggressively trumpet the pipeline, which would create an oil transport system from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. On a recent trip to Mexico, he also forcefully pushed the for construction of the pipeline and not-so-subtly dinged the Obama administration for blocking it.
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For Christie, “this is all about keeping up the momentum” after a very successful stint in the midterm elections, said Republican strategist Ford O’Connell. After all, as head of the Republican Governors Association, Christie helped propel seven new GOP governors into office, leaving scandals like so-called “Bridgegate” seemingly in the dust. “For someone like Christie, foreign affairs isn’t in his wheelhouse, so it’s a winning issue for him … It’s also an issue [lawmakers] are going to want to bring up immediately when the new Congress is seated.”
Jeanne Zaino, a professor of political science at Iona College and of political campaign management at New York University, believes the trip shows he is trying to shore up his GOP base, something she describes as Christie’s “biggest challenge.” Many on the right have hammered Christie for being too moderate on issues like gun control and gay marriage. To them, he represents the cautious establishment — not the sort of true conservative the grassroots supporters desire.
“It’s still an uphill battle for him to play in the Midwest and the South. He really does feel like he needs to shore up the Republican base and make inroads there,” said Zaino. From that perspective, going to Canada to support an oil pipeline that environmentalists have long opposed is like throwing red meat to the conservative base, she noted.
The Keystone issue could not come up at a more opportune time. The GOP-led House voted last week to approve the project, but the Senate (in which Democrats previously avoided bringing up the controversial project) narrowly rejected it by one vote. The project gained new momentum with Democrats in the upper chamber of Congress abandoning their effort to block a roll call from taking place. They did so in hopes of helping embattled Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu win a December runoff race in her state.
The issue is expected to come up again in the new Congress, reigniting a political battle for Obama, who has suggested he might veto legislation even if both houses of Congress approve it.
RELATED: Senate votes down Keystone XL pipeline
Proponents of Keystone — mainly labor unions, oil companies, Republicans and moderate Democrats like Landrieu — argue the plan would create thousands of jobs and make the country less dependent on oil from the Middle East. Critics say the project would release dangerous greenhouse gas emissions, would not bring in significant numbers of new jobs, and would have no effect on U.S. gas prices.
Christie’s two-day trip, scheduled to start Dec. 4, includes stops in Calgary, Toronto and Ottawa. The official purpose of the trip is to encourage economic and business ties with Canada, but it’s also being viewed as a way for the governor to beef up his foreign policy résumé. He has only taken two trips outside the country as governor — to Israel in 2012 and Mexico this past September.









