Two weeks after the election, they’re still griping about how lavishly Chris Christie praised Barack Obama during Hurricane Sandy–which, of course, hit New Jersey just days before the election.
I said at the time that there probably wasn’t a political calculation behind Christie’s words–that they were a very understandable and very human response from a man who’d just watched a monster storm ravage the state he loves.
But I also said that his response would nonetheless help Christie politically, and oh how it has. There’s a new poll out from Rutgers today that gives the governor a 67% favorable rating. That’s six points better than Barack Obama, who carried the state by 16 points last month, and includes a 27-point spike from the last Rutgers poll for Christie among Democrats.
We see bounces like this at the presidential level sometimes–think George W. Bush after 9/11, or George H.W. Bush after the 1991 Gulf War. Those examples show how temporary polling surges after major events can be, so Christie will probably fall from his perch a bit in the weeks and months ahead. But he has a buffer now–he can fall a lot and still not have to worry much about winning reelection in 2013.
And that’s very significant. We all know that Christie has national ambitions. He wants to run for president in 2016. But he also loves the job he has, and wants to keep it. And it’s very hard for Republicans to win elections in New Jersey. The state hasn’t sent a Republican to the Senate in 40 years and counting, and Christie’s narrow victory in 2009–a four-point margin, with less than 50% of the vote–counts as the second-biggest Republican landslide in New Jersey in that same period. A loss in his reelection campaign in 2013 would probably take Christie out as a White House candidate in 2016.









