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		 New 
		Jersey voters say U.S. not ready for president 'Jersey Guy' Christie: 
		poll 
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		[December 11, 2014] 
		(Reuters) - New Jersey voters say 
		the rest of the United States is not ready for a "Jersey Guy" president 
		and neither is the Garden State, where Governor Chris Christie's 
		presidential appeal continues to slide, a poll released on Thursday 
		showed. | 
			
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			 A telephone poll of 1,340 registered New Jersey voters by 
			Quinnipiac University found that Christie, and every other potential 
			Republican contender for the 2016 White House race, would lose the 
			state to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the possible 
			Democratic candidate. 
 Among voters in the traditionally blue state, Clinton tops Christie 
			50 percent to 39 percent; former Florida Governor Jeb Bush 53 to 31; 
			Kentucky Senator Rand Paul 55 to 31; and 2012 Republican nominee 
			Mitt Romney 52 to 35 percent, according to poll results.
 
			
			 Christie's popularity among his home-state voters has slipped, with 
			45 percent for Christie versus 49 percent for Clinton in February 
			2013, 42 percent for Christie versus 50 percent for Clinton in 
			August 2014 and 39 percent for Christie versus 50 percent for 
			Clinton in December 2014, the survey showed.
 "Since 'Bridgegate' broke, Christie’s numbers have been tepid at 
			best," said the poll's assistant director, Maurice Carroll, 
			referring to the political hijinks over a September 2013 epic 
			traffic jam on the George Washington Bridge.
 
 "It’s hurt him. Bad headlines translate into bad polls," Carroll 
			said.
 
 Asked to gauge the pulse of the rest of the nation, 49 percent of 
			respondents said American voters are not ready for a "Jersey Guy" 
			president such as Christie, but 43 percent said to bring it on.
 
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			"When you say 'Jersey Guy' some people think of a guy who likes to 
			pick a fight, others say it’s someone who tells it like it is. 
			Christie doesn’t take any crap," Carroll said.
 The poll conducted by landline and cell phone from Dec. 3 to 8 had a 
			margin of error of plus or minus 2.7 percentage points.
 
 (Reporting by Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Mohammad Zargham)
 
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