Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH  
share
email
print
reprint
font size
options
 
Chris Christie, the Republican candidate for governor of N.J.
RICH SCHULTZ / Associated Press
Chris Christie, the Republican candidate for governor of N.J.
READER FEEDBACK
Post a comment


Back Channels: The case for Christie

Republican Chris Christie has at least one thing going for him in the ever-tightening race for New Jersey governor:

A solid majority of voters do not want to reelect Democrat Jon Corzine.

Alas, with independent Chris Daggett in the race, that dissatisfaction doesn't translate into a winning majority for Christie. He and Corzine are roughly tied at 40 percent, with Daggett picking up about 14 percent in recent polls.

Some of this is Christie's doing. When he had a double-digit lead, it seemed smart not to draw too much attention to himself.

Christie had a sterling reputation as a corruption-fighting U.S. attorney, having put away 130 politicians, Republicans and Democrats, during his seven-year term. He certainly had positions on issues - lower taxes, leaner government, less spending - but mostly he just had to not be the increasingly unpopular Corzine. However, with two Not Corzines in the race, the anti-incumbent vote is split.

Given his expensive primary campaign and facing limits on what he could spend in the fall, Christie wasn't in a rush to forcefully define himself. Enter multimillionaire Corzine, a huge fan of campaign-finance limits - for others.

And so, the governor and his $30 million negative ad blitz would like you to believe Christie is somehow unfit for office because of some or all of the following half-truths:

Christie is a bad driver.

A good one from Corzine, who allowed his driver to fly at 91 m.p.h. on the Garden State Parkway, causing an accident that nearly killed the governor and endangered others.

Christie the bad driver would loan $46,000 to a colleague in need - and fail to report it on his income taxes.

This from Gov. I Paid Off My Union Leader Girlfriend's Mortgage and Lavished Her With Millions in Gifts, and no, that never ever presented a conflict for management - the state - and labor.

Christie the bad driver might not have a "Save the Ta-ta's" bumper sticker on his car.

In other words, if you're not with Corzine, you want women to die of breast cancer. Come on. This idiotic notion misses the very grown-up point Christie is making: To help lower insurance costs, policies should be affordable. That means more choice for consumers. Men and women should be allowed an affordable policy that fits their needs, not a one-size-fits-all, mandate-heavy plan they can't afford.

Christie might have some unsavory characters in that car he's driving badly - like his brother, who was investigated, and cleared of wrongdoing, by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

OK, let's talk unsavory characters, starting with Joe Ferriero, the Bergen County Democratic boss convicted of fraud and conspiracy charges just last week. Corzine has pumped more than $400,000 into Ferriero's operation over the years. Just as he's bought support from other crooked Democratic leaders and organizations. Here are just a few: former State Sen. Wayne Bryant, sentenced in July to four years for bribery and pension fraud; former State Sen. Joseph Coniglio convicted of extortion and mail fraud; former Newark Mayor Sharpe James, sentenced to 27 months for corruption. There are so many problem Democrats that the feds had to start busting them 40 at a time this summer.

Is the governor the boss of this statewide political crime syndicate? The Newark Star-Ledger got it right in a recent editorial when it said, "Corzine is the chaplain on a pirate ship, not really its captain."

But that's no reason to give the scalawags another four years of free sailing. In fact, it's a good case for electing a former U.S. attorney who's spent the last seven years bringing the pirates to justice.

Despite the silliness of Corzine's campaign, it's had an impact. His support has grown from roughly 39 percent to 40. Christie's has dropped significantly, from a comfortable lead to a dead heat.

Can Christie eke out a win? I say yes, by continuing to be straight with the people of New Jersey.

He'll cut taxes when he can, but he won't make crowd-pleasing promises - unlike Corzine's unfulfilled vow of '05 to cut property taxes 40 percent. Christie knows he'll face a fiscal mess that will take a while to clean up. But he's at least promising no tax increases, unlike his two opponents.

Christie is not dedicated to increasing spending. Corzine - whose campaign slogan should be, "I'm willing to spend all my money so I can keep spending yours" - certainly is.

Christie is willing to forcefully push for more options for children trapped in dysfunctional public schools.

And Christie is not part of the corrupt Democratic Party machine.

The ad campaign Christie has begun that features former Gov. Tom Kean is a good start. Political honesty and New Jersey should be perfect together.

For the state with too much corruption, too much debt, and too much spending and taxes, let's hope the message is not too little, too late.


Contact Kevin Ferris at 215-854-5305 or kf@phillynews.com.

Comments   
Posted 10:10 AM, 10/25/2009
independent_thinker
And the mudslinging goes on. Yes, Corzine's negative attacks on Christie are complete garbage, just like you said. So to counter them, you spend a whole article throwing it back. "Here's why the negative attack is untrue. But HERE'S why Corzine is even worse!" How mature. Honestly, listening to Republicans and Democrats argue with each other increasingly sounds like 3 year olds bickering to me. Did too! Did not! Did too! Did not! Yeah-huh! Na-uh! I'mma tell Mo-om! I think most people hear enough of that in their own homes. How about we talk about anything that actually matters? How about we vote for someone from outside the system who has conducted his campaign like an adult? You tried to gloss over Daggett in this article. Another irresponsible move. Ignore the one person who has actually presented plans and ideas in a positive way, because he has dared to try to break into the system. Your readers deserve more honest and reasoned arguments from you.
Posted 10:31 AM, 10/25/2009
socialism=unamerican
We can't afford four more years of Corzine. He is a failed governor. Christie is the only choice. The only way to get rid of Corzine is to vote for Christie. Don't waste your vote on Daggett, it is an exercise in futility.
Posted 12:37 PM, 10/25/2009
Wayne
Corzine is no prize, I'll admit, but Christie is a political appointee who has no experience in actual governance. And smooth move for Christie to blow off "Morning Joe" a week or so ago, though at least Corzine bothered to show up.
Posted 12:42 PM, 10/25/2009
ace88
Corzine must go. The guy is buying elections, giving $90,000 to African American churches to insure get out the vote efforts or other favors. He's in the pocket of all the unions. NJ has the highest property taxes in the US and I think the worst business climate in the US as well. Corzine has failed, and a vote for Daggett, a big spender himself, is just a vote for Corzine. Don't waste a vote on Daggett. Christie may not be perfect, but he is the only one who won't continue this absurd spending and get the state back in financial and ethical order.
Posted 01:42 PM, 10/25/2009
fafafooey
Wayne, what "experience in actual governance" did Corzine have before he bought his senate seat for two years then ran for governor?
Posted 04:45 PM, 10/25/2009
lefty
News Alert: Chris Daggett is an arm of the dem' machine, plugged in to draw 13-17% of the votes from the rep' candidate. For the price of two or three TV spots, the gov again buys his office.
Posted 08:21 PM, 10/25/2009
longshanks
Save the world, vote against fat Republicans.
Posted 08:34 PM, 10/25/2009
hairball
Exactly lefty. That's why the left-leaning Newark Star-Ledger endorsed Daggett. It's a sneaky way of endorsing Corzine without having to defend the garbage. The Dem's are pushing Daggett like crazy because every vote going his way is essentially a vote for Corzine. They want Daggett to do to Christie what Perot did to GWH Bush in '92.
Posted 09:58 AM, 10/30/2009
MikeP
Christie is a fraud. Corsine should not be punished for George Bush's economy. Any dope can say they'll cut taxes, eliminate waste, reduce the size of government, cut spending. That's what George Bush promised. Remember? No specifics. After he was elected, Bush increased the size of government, increased waste, cut taxes only for the most wealthy and funded it all by creating historic deficits and borrowing money from Communist China that needs to be paid back plus interest. Where will the funds come from to pay China back? Taxes. The reason that Chris Daggett is getting votes is because he is being chosen over the other two candidates.
Posted 02:58 PM, 10/30/2009
Hulk
MikeP, george bush is not running for governor of new jersey. Using him as your scape goat may have worked last year but that excuse lost it's legs. The fact is new jersey is the laughing stock of the nation, except for the residents of new jersey who aren't laughing. Taxes and corruption are rampant and big business is fleeing faster than you can say tony soprano. Christie is the only choice.
Posted 07:45 PM, 10/30/2009
MikeP
Hulk, sorry, but you are completely wrong. George Bush and core Republican policies created the current depression that is impacting the entire world - NJ included. Christie and Republicans are still proposing the same policies that led to the current situation. It's not using Christie as a scape goat. It's stating a fact. Tax cuts to the wealthiest, increasing spending and running up huge deficits and lax enforcement of regulations are failed policies. They didn't work at the national level and they won't work when Christie brings them to NJ. The only way we'll see Republicans change their policies is to keep voting Democrat.
Posted 04:14 PM, 10/31/2009
progressivepat
Vote for Corzine and you get what you deserve. If he wins and you voted for him, you give up your right to complain about absurd taxes.
12 comments
  • Top Jobs
  • Top Homes
  • Top Cars
 
SEARCH JOBS
Torresdale


$189,000
18 BONNIE GELLMAN CT #A18
Northern Liberties


$555,000
960 N AMERICAN ST
SEARCH CARS

Buy Inquirer, Daily News & Philly merchandise here including:

 
Books
 
Movies
 
Page Reprints
 
Photo Licensing
 
Photos