Christie takes aim at 'self-serving' Trump as he launches White House
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[June 07, 2023]
By Joseph Ax and Eric Beech
(Reuters) -Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie on Tuesday launched
his 2024 presidential campaign with a withering attack on the Republican
front-runner, Donald Trump, calling him a "self-serving mirror hog" and
faulting other rivals for avoiding direct confrontation.
Christie, 60, was an adviser to Trump's successful 2016 White House
campaign but has since become a vocal critic over the former president's
false claims that the 2020 election was rigged.
A former federal prosecutor, Christie presented himself as the lone
Republican contender willing to go toe-to-toe with the bellicose Trump.
"A lonely, self-consumed, self-serving mirror hog is not a leader," he
said.
At one point, he delivered a mocking impression of Trump claiming he
would build a southern border wall at Mexico's expense and said Trump,
more than Biden, was to blame for the country's failed immigration
policy.
In a post on his social media site, Trump made a reference to Christie's
weight and called him a "failed governor."
Christie has not fared well in public opinion polling thus far. He
netted just 1% support from potential Republican primary voters in a
Reuters/Ipsos poll in May, compared with Trump's 49% support and Florida
Governor Ron DeSantis' 19% support.
Other Republicans seeking the party's nomination to challenge President
Joe Biden include former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and U.S. Senator
Tim Scott. Trump's former vice president, Mike Pence, is set to enter
the race on Wednesday.
Taking the stage to the sounds of Bruce Springsteen, Christie accused
both Trump and Biden of "making us smaller" by dividing Americans. He
called Biden a "nice guy" but said he was out of his depth, in a
reference to the 80-year-old's age.
Christie, who has always enjoyed the town hall format, answered
questions for nearly two hours after his initial remarks on everything
from his anti-abortion stance to his views on China.
When an attendee asked him about the recent debt ceiling agreement
struck by Biden and congressional Republicans, Christie praised both
sides for averting catastrophe.
"When did compromise become such a dirty word?" he said.
Christie ran for president in 2016 but ended his bid after a
disappointing finish in the New Hampshire primary and became the first
major figure in the party to back Trump.
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U.S. Republican Chris Christie speaks
during the Heritage Action for America presidential candidate forum
in Greenville, South Carolina on September 18, 2015. REUTERS/Chris
Keane
He has since disavowed Trump, a shift that may attract Republicans
ready to move past Trump. But it remains unclear whether any
Republican can prevail in a crowded field without the support of
Trump's still-loyal base.
As an underdog, Christie could end up playing the role of spoiler,
as he did in 2016, when his dissection of U.S. Senator Marco Rubio
at a debate days before Christie dropped out of the race blunted
Rubio's momentum.
Christie dismissed that notion that he was only running to stop
Trump, rather than win.
"How are those two things mutually exclusive?" he asked to laughter.
"The guy's ahead in the polls. Who am I supposed to be worried
about, Nikki Haley?"
As a Republican governor in Democratic-leaning New Jersey from 2009
to 2017, Christie was once seen as a rising political star whose
confrontational approach earned him plaudits from admirers and
accusations of bullying from detractors.
But his tenure was tarnished by the "Bridgegate" scandal, in which
two allies shut down lanes at the heavily trafficked George
Washington Bridge between New Jersey and New York City to punish a
local mayor for failing to endorse Christie's re-election.
Christie has said he was unaware of the plot, but witnesses at a
criminal trial for the two allies testified that the governor knew
about the lane closures. On Tuesday, he said he took responsibility
for putting his trust in the wrong people, calling it his biggest
mistake.
Despite his early support for Trump, Christie was passed over for
vice president and for attorney general, and was fired as the head
of Trump's transition team just three days after the 2016 election.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Additional reporting by Eric Beech; Editing
by Colleen Jenkins, Kieran Murray, Stephen Coates and Gerry Doyle)
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