It has been 19 months since access lanes to the George Washington Bridge were mysteriously closed, causing massive traffic delays in the New Jersey town of Fort Lee, and more than a year since the feds began their investigation into who ordered those closures and why. And now comes word from The New York Times that indictments are expected to be handed down soon – as early as this week.
The stakes for New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and the presidential hopes he still nurtures are huge. Before Bridgegate, he was one of the Republican Party’s brightest stars – a charismatic Republican who’d proven he could win in a big, blue state. But now, after all of the revelations, all of the questions, all of the critical press coverage he ranks as one of the least popular candidates among Republicans.
Only 32% of Republicans say they could see themselves supporting Christie, according to a recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, compared with 57% who say they couldn’t.
Related: Christie tries to recapture discarded persona
But Christie still has time to undo the damage, and he has real skill as an off-the-cuff communicator – get him on the debate stage with the other Republican candidates and it’s possible he’ll have a breakthrough moment.








