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GOP candidate Christopher J. Christie, in Toms River last week, has seena double-digit lead in the polls dwindle. He has faulted a Corzine ad.
MEL EVANS / Associated Press
GOP candidate Christopher J. Christie, in Toms River last week, has seena double-digit lead in the polls dwindle. He has faulted a Corzine ad.
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It's not weight that's dragging him down

'Big Boy," to use former President George W. Bush's nickname for Republican gubernatorial candidate Christopher J. Christie, wants us to believe that gibes about his weight helped cause his fall in New Jersey's polls.

"What did you think when the governor comes out with this ad [about] you 'throwing your weight around'?" Fox News' Sean Hannity asked in a recent interview.

"I wish he'd just step up and admit it," Christie said. "I mean, admit that's what they were trying to do. And the fact of the matter is, I've struggled with my weight for a good number of years."

I feel for you, Chris, being a bit, ahem, portly myself. But hey, what about your ads accusing Corzine of "being in bed" with the unions? Isn't that a reference to Corzine's old girlfriend, former Communications Workers of America Local 1034 president Carla Katz?

Neither innuendo did much more than produce a few chuckles. Christie has dropped from double-digit leads in the polls to a statistical dead heat due to two factors - an attractive third candidate who is pulling voters from both Christie and Corzine, and voters' realization that Christie is full of hot air.

He still hasn't produced the specifics about his budget plans that his opponent in the Republican primary, Steve Lonegan, began asking for nearly a year ago. Christie no longer even promises to be more specific, saying Corzine hasn't revealed all his plans either.

But Corzine has a record as governor that voters can look to in evaluating how he would handle their money. Christie has no such record and won't produce specific plans. Trust me, he's saying. But that's not enough to put him in charge of the state.

Christie says he will cut taxes, cut spending, and keep handing out property-tax rebates. But he won't tell voters how. Will he drop the top income-tax rate? Will he reduce the number of tax brackets? He won't say, and voters are taking that to mean he doesn't know.

That's hard to swallow when Christie has plenty of criticism for the very specific tax plan of independent candidate Chris Daggett. Voters may not like Daggett's idea to expand the sales tax to more businesses, but they like that he is at least offering an idea that could lower their property taxes.

All Christie is offering is platitudes, and that's not enough to warrant putting him in Corzine's place.

Christie knows this. So, his whole campaign has been designed to pull attention from him by focusing on Corzine. He's hoping voters won't remember that much of the economic mess Corzine inherited can be traced to another Christie - former Republican Gov. Christie Todd Whitman.

She was swept into office after campaigning, much like her namesake, to cut taxes and spending. She cut taxes all right, but tripled the state's debt. That pattern continued through the administration of Democratic Gov. Jim McGreevey, who even wanted to borrow money for operating expenses.

Who brought some sanity to the situation? Corzine.

He is the first New Jersey governor in 60 years to actually reduce the size of government. The state has 8,200 fewer employees. He has cut state spending two years in a row, with a budget for fiscal 2010 that is $1.8 billion smaller than his first budget in 2006, yet he has increased school funding.

Speaking of schools, it took Corzine to finally get rid of the long-criticized dual system of funding education that gave a disproportionate share of state dollars to the "Abbott" schools at the expense of other schools that had almost as many poor students. It was an outstanding achievement.

There's more. The unions' bedmate has increased the retirement age for state workers to 62 from 55, has state employees for the first time contributing to their health care, and negotiated a 7.5 percent wage cut for public employees. Meanwhile, he's added 90,000 more children to the state's health insurance program.

Corzine's background in finance has been an asset in the recession. You can't discount his leadership in New Jersey's having a home-foreclosure rate 50 percent lower than the national average.

And Corzine is correctly pointing out that Christie's mantra to cut spending is only a partial answer. The state's massive debt must be addressed. It has grown from about $5 billion when Whitman became governor in 1994 to more than $30 billion now, requiring $3 billion in annual debt service.

Give Corzine credit for a constitutional amendment that requires all new borrowing by the state to be approved by voters. He also issued an executive order that requires new spending to match recurring revenue.

Unlike past governors, he has not shirked the state's duty to fulfill its pension obligations, and he's made New Jersey a leader in reducing carbon dioxide pollution.

So, if Corzine is all that, why is he in a dead heat with Christie, with Daggett nipping at their heels?

First, property taxes are too high. Then, there are the fear and anger that come part and parcel with a recession, much of that anger rightly aimed at public officials at all levels, whom the public had trusted to keep tabs on Wall Street (where Corzine headed Goldman Sachs).

People want to throw all the bums out, and Corzine just happens to be the only governor up for reelection this year. Members of Congress, you're next.

Corzine also has been hurt by Christie's attempts to tie him to every corrupt Democrat that ever crawled from under a rock. Christie wants voters to ignore Corzine's executive orders that have closed loopholes in pay-to-play laws and tightened financial-disclosure rules.

Corzine's ads accusing Christie of "throwing his weight around" as U.S. attorney to avoid paying penalties for traffic, tax, and ethics-rules violations may have helped him some. But that tactic originated with Lonegan, who questioned Christie's ethics with radio ads that said he gave pals no-bid federal contracts.

So, who's going to win? Months ago, I couldn't go to my gym in Turnersville without hearing someone say Corzine had to go. But now - maybe because people would rather talk about the Phillies and Eagles, maybe because they're tired of all the TV ads - they're not complaining about Corzine.

Ergo, the collapse of Christie's lead.


Contact editorial page editor Harold Jackson at hjackson@phillynews.com.

Comments   
Posted 04:56 AM, 11/01/2009
janann
Corzine has done the right thing for the state increasing the retirement age for teachers, and did something about the Abbott School System funding. That took alot of courage,,,, and like the Republicans false claim that the media is Liberal,,,, the lack of support on the part of teachers this year will prove another thing...... those profiting the most from union teacher Salaries are and always have been Republicans.
Posted 06:22 AM, 11/01/2009
beermoney
Its funny how no experience and unspecified "plans" didn't matter last November. It was all about change then, but NOW since its a guy from the "other side" you need to be more specific, change just isn't enough. What HYPOCRITES!
Posted 07:05 AM, 11/01/2009
socialism=unamerican
Corzine does not deserve to be re-elected. The state is 45 billion in debt through his failed policies and he wants to spend another 400 million on the open space scam. In Nj, we need lower taxes and less government regulation which will lead to JOBS. Vote this failure, Corzine, out of office. And vote NO on ballot question one.
Posted 08:35 AM, 11/01/2009
tr88
Goldman Sachs near billionaires with a terrible record are still OK in Harold's book. We have a black President and nothing else matters to racsts like him. Of course, the voiceless people Harold speaks for receive taxpayer money, they don't actually pay them.
Posted 10:12 AM, 11/01/2009
Accountable4All
There is rarely the perfect candidate in any election. Corzine seems the lesser of the two/three evils...
Posted 10:58 AM, 11/01/2009
overtaxed
It's not just Corzine. It's the entire legislative body. Will that change with Chrstie? Who knows? At least we know that Corzine has failed to meet all his promises. Oh, and by the way... He didn't save anything with the unions. Increases were only deferred to 2010 when they will be DOUBLE based on the existing contract. That will be a heck of a bill to pay no matter who is governor. Abbott program? Do some homework. NJ spends quite a bit of money on a very small group of students creating more local tax burdens for other counties. In addition, the Abbott program guidelines favor havuing union teachers and escalated salaries even in orivate daycare.
Posted 11:37 AM, 11/01/2009
TommyF
Who cares if Christie is short on specifics? I remember Corzine promising to increase property tax rebates 40% in 4 years. Look where that got us. With Corzine, you know what you are getting. And the getting ain't good. And I think Mr. Jackson is really reaching on blaming this on Whitman. Why not go back further? How about Florio? Or Tom Kean? Maybe Brendan Byrne had something to do with it? Bottom line...if you aren't a state worker or a teacher, there is no reason to live here. It's not even that Corzine is that bad (McGreevey, as the first governor ever to play the gay card, was much worse)...but it's the state of the Democratic party in NJ. They are inherently corrupt. Every time you blink, another state Democrat is getting arrested. One party rule has failed the state. I mean, even the attorney general is nominated by the Governor. No conflict-of-interest there! I'm a registered Democrat who voted for Obama last year, but I'm pulling the lever for the fat guy on Tuesday.
Posted 12:28 PM, 11/01/2009
mike l
Great civics involvement there, tommy. "Who cares if Christie is short on specificis?" Way to go. Facts? What facts? Specifics? Who cares. You don't know anything about christie, but you'd vote for him anyway. People like you deserve the lousy government you vote for.
Posted 01:33 PM, 11/01/2009
TommyF
Mike, If you actually lived in the state you would understand. You must not have read the whole message. Bottom line is that they all promise you the world (as Corzine did) and then fail to deliver. I know that Corzine stinks...and he had his chance. Not being Jon Corzine is more than enough for me. And apparently it's enough to make this deep blue state very competitive. How else could a well-funded Democratic incumbent actually lose on Tuesday?? Because he STINKS!! Christie wins by 4.
Posted 01:48 PM, 11/01/2009
fafafooey
Harold Jackson = Meet the new boss, same as the old boss
Posted 03:22 PM, 11/01/2009
beermoney
Mike, hows THIS for specifics.. Highest property taxes in the Nation One of the highest unemployement rates in the Nation Deficit in the millions of dollars and NO plant to resolve it NO property tax REFORM as promised Thats the current Governors record Enough said!
Posted 05:31 PM, 11/01/2009
JWS54
Right on Mike - you could make the same points for our recently elected President. Oh wait - that would be bad - right?
Posted 07:56 PM, 11/01/2009
JerseyDan67
Sorry, Harold -- your just another mouthpiece for the liberal loons, who are slowly but surely running this country into the ground. Corslimes is an absolute joke and you know it. Seems the only reason you have written this piece in his favor is because he has a "D" next to his name and the almighty false prophet Obama has come here to campaign for him. By the way, I hear Newsweek is hiring. They could use someone like you for that liberal rag. You'd fit there perfectly.
Posted 10:24 PM, 11/01/2009
camtheman
Another yawn....
Posted 01:03 AM, 11/02/2009
ppasq
Looks like Christie's lead is coming back and you'll have to eat your words. All your garbage in this column should really put on a few more pounds for you when you do on Tuesday night.
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