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		 New 
		Jersey Governor Christie's approval rating falls to lowest yet 
		
		 
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		[April 21, 2015] 
		By Hilary Russ 
		  
		 (Reuters) - New Jersey Governor Chris 
		Christie continues to lose favor at home, with a poll on Monday showing 
		his lowest approval rating as governor as he attempts to woo would-be 
		voters in other U.S. states for a possible 2016 Republican presidential 
		campaign. 
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			 New Jersey voters disapprove of the job Christie is doing by 56 
			percent to 38 percent, his lowest-ever approval rating, according to 
			a Quinnipiac University poll. 
			 
			Voters gave him the lowest marks for his handling of the state 
			budget, education, the economy and jobs. The results come just days 
			after the state of New Jersey's credit rating was downgraded for a 
			ninth time since Christie took office in January 2010. 
			 
			Moody's Investors Service cut New Jersey to A2 with a negative 
			outlook late on Thursday, citing "the lack of improvement in the 
			state's weak financial position and large structural imbalance," 
			stemming mostly from huge shortfalls in its public pension 
			contributions. 
			 
			New Jersey is the second-lowest-rated U.S. state, behind only 
			Illinois. 
			  The state government had shortchanged the public employees' 
			retirement system long before Christie, and under bipartisan reforms 
			in 2011, he began ramping up funding. But last year, he slashed the 
			Garden State's pension contributions because of a large, unexpected 
			drop in tax revenues. 
			 
			Labor unions sued over the issue and won in state court, but the 
			Christie administration has appealed. Arguments are set for May 6 in 
			New Jersey Supreme Court, which could force the state to add back 
			the $1.6 billion of payments Christie cut and put further pressure 
			on a strained budget. 
			 
			Meanwhile, the state's job growth since the recession has lagged its 
			neighbors and the country as a whole, recovering only 63 percent of 
			the jobs it lost. 
			 
			
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			That is compared to 133 percent job recovery for the United States 
			and 244 percent in neighboring New York state, according to the 
			think-tank New Jersey Policy Perspective. 
			 
			The state's sluggish economic recovery would be fodder for opponents 
			if Christie announces a run for the White House in a crowded 
			Republican field. 
			 
			Christie made a brief political circuit last week in New Hampshire, 
			giving him a shot at recapturing the spotlight after being 
			overshadowed by other presidential hopefuls like Marco Rubio and Jeb 
			Bush. 
			 
			Quinnipiac's poll of 1,428 voters was conducted by phone from April 
			9-14 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.6 percentage 
			points. 
			 
			(Reporting by Hilary Russ in New York, editing by G Crosse) 
			
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