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Chris Christie a No Go
Chris Christie a No Go
Many of his supporters are looking at that last response, to a woman that asked for him to "do it for his country," as a sliver of hope that Christie will actually run. Of course, Christie is going to be coy about his chances. He's not an ideologue, making his brand of rhetoric a trademark for straight talk. He's also not a bow-dried candidate like Mitt Romney or Rick Perry. He's a heavy-set guy with a self-deprecating streak. These two qualities make him very different than the rest of the GOP field, a group of candidates that have yet to really mobilize the Republican base, or even sustain a lead in the polls. So far the Republican primary has been a series of fireworks, exploding in the polls before sliding back into more modest numbers. However, with so many conservative voters looking for a transformative candidate the likes of Obama's 2008 campaign for Democrats and liberals, Chris Christie seems like the next "great white hope".
Christie understands his ground swell of support, and even though the timeframe for him to enter is coming down to a couple of weeks, he could still enter the race, despite his refusals, and take no real political damage. In addition, building the support now, even if he does not run this year, bodes well for his political chances down the road. This is particularly true if he continues to downplay the "ego" required to run for president, a quality that he says is not becoming of himself.
New Jersey has taken some tough actions to balance their fiscal outlook, and Christie has a reputation for making tough decisions and saying tough-minded things. One of his more recent public statements to get attention was when he famously told his constituents to, "get the hell off the beach," just before Hurricane Irene hit the Jersey shore. He doesn't fit the Republican establishment on issues like climate change and immigration, but that might be exactly what his Republican supporters want.