Smoky Mountains Sunrise
Showing posts with label Governor Chris Christie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Governor Chris Christie. Show all posts

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Editorial: Chris Christie Should Resign If Bombshell Proves True


We have found it hard to believe that Governor Christie knew nothing of the lane closing political revenge scheme until after it was publicly revealed.  It was a scheme that created massive disruption and delays for thousands of motorists and one which had serious safety implications and may have threatened lives.  Senior staff to such political figures do not take such aggressive action against political opponents without the approval of the politician at whose pleasure they serve, or without being very certain that unethical and highly risky political action is implicitly sanctioned. 

As the media well-knows, Governor Christie has an "ethically challenged" history.  If he was involved in this story, as is likely, we believe the media may have done the GOP and the country a great favor in exposing him now.  We have no doubt that if Christie were the GOP presidential nominee in 2016, he would be yet another in a long line of "moderate" (RINO) Republican presidential nominees - Ford, Dole, McCain and Romney - and like them, would would be utterly unappealing to the GOP base and  unelectable.  It would be a campaign in which, one by one,  the many skeletons in Governor Christie's closet were revealed.  

Behind all the bombast and Jersey attitude, is just another RINO of the Nelson Rockefeller, Christie Whitman and John McCain stripe.  We will be far better off without Chris Christie in 2016.  Surely, New Jersey and the country can do better.



Forget about the White House in 2016. The question now is whether Gov. Chris Christie can survive as governor.

David Wildstein, the man who ordered the George Washington Bridge lane closures, is now pointing the finger directly at Gov. Chris Christie, saying the governor knew about the lane closures in September when they occurred.

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Anyone Else Tired Of Gov. Christie Brownnosing Obama?

Here is the bloviating, bombastic bore once again brownosing Obama for shekels from the federal government.  Or could it be insurance against federal inquiries into his ethically-challenged past?  Anyone remember General David Petraeus?





Friday, September 10, 2010

'Unvarnished Truth' from Governor Chris Christie




Governor Chris Christie responds to a teacher's question during a town hall meeting at Raritan Township. September 8, 2010.


Thursday, June 17, 2010

A Leader Equal to the "Day of Reckoning" That is Here


What a refreshing message - a "can do" tackling of problems, responsibility to future generations, accountability, and not a word of blame for his predecessor and others. All delivered without a teleprompter.




Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Gov. Christie: We're Not Raising Taxes


New Jersey Governor Says He Has Residents Covered Through Fiscal Year 2011 Despite $800 Million Hole

How Did He Do This? Remember The Budget Freeze? Looks Like It Worked


On the surface the news looked pretty grim for Garden State residents on Tuesday – thanks to an unanticipated drop in tax revenues of $402 million this year and $365 million next year.

But a new budget hole of nearly $800 million is not going to give Gov. Christie a single new white hair. At least this time, the governor's message is "gotcha covered."


"We're very confident we've been able to close the additional budget gap in (fiscal year) 2010 and in (fiscal year) 2011 we're going to be able to solve that problem without any new taxes at all and without any real significant cuts," Christie said.


Friday, May 14, 2010

Governor Christie Puts a Liberal MSM Reporter in His Place


Governor Chris Christie (R-NJ) is taking on the defenders of New Jersey's status quo as aggressively and thoughtfully as he once tackled political corruption and organized crime. He's showing the way for other states and the national government on how they can also dig out of their own crises caused by big government, high taxes and out-of-control spending. Christie's ruled out the possibility of seeking the Presidency, but he increasingly looks like the antidote to the Obama-Pelosi-Reid nightmare.



Sunday, April 18, 2010

New Jersey's 'Failed Experiment'


The new governor is on a mission to make his state competitive again in attracting people and capital.


From The Wall Street Journal
By James Freeman

"I said all during the campaign last year that I was going to govern as if I was a one-termer," explains New Jersey Governor Chris Christie on a visit this week to the Journal's editorial board. "And everybody felt that it was just stuff you say during a campaign to sound good. I think after the first 12 weeks, given the stuff I've done, they figure: 'He's just crazy enough to do it.'"

Call it crazy, or just call it sensible: Mr. Christie is on a mission to make New Jersey competitive once again in the contest to attract people and capital. During last fall's campaign, while his opponent obliquely criticized Mr. Christie's size, some Republicans worried that their candidate was squishy—that he wasn't serious about cutting spending and reining in taxes. Turns out they were wrong.

Listen to Mr. Christie's take on the state of his state: "We are, I think, the failed experiment in America—the best example of a failed experiment in America—on taxes and bigger government. Over the last eight years, New Jersey increased taxes and fees 115 times." New Jersey's residents now suffer under the nation's highest tax burden. Yet the tax hikes haven't come close to matching increases in spending. Mr. Christie recently introduced a $29.3 billion state budget to eliminate a projected $11 billion deficit for fiscal year 2011.

California and New York have attracted headlines for their budget woes. Yet, as Mr. Christie points out, "Their problems are much smaller than ours as a percentage. [Gov.] David Paterson's talking about an $8.2 billion deficit in New York—I only wish."

After taking office in January, Mr. Christie declared an official state of emergency. This allowed him to freeze $2.2 billion in spending that had already been authorized. Now he needs a Democratic legislature to turn his freeze into an actual cut and to enact the deeper reductions contained in his 2011 budget.

It might well happen. Many Democrats recognize the state's deep-seated fiscal woes. Mr. Christie has already signed into law a bipartisan plan that begins to reform the state's generous benefit system for government workers. Facing unfunded liabilities of $90 billion in pension and medical plans, Mr. Christie worked with lawmakers to change retirement benefits for new workers and to require all new state employees to pay 1.5% of their medical insurance costs. Until now they were paying nothing.

He wants to go further. "We need to move forward to try to make some changes in the pension system for current employees," he says. "There's all kinds of problems in doing that, some legal. . . . You can't take away vested benefits, but the argument of whether increases going forward are actually vested or not is an interesting legal issue that we're going to attempt to challenge. . . ." He adds that the current retirement age for state employees, 62, "needs to be moved up further."

As you can imagine, the Christie agenda is not wildly popular among presidents of government-employee unions. To put it more precisely, Mr. Christie is now in a political street fight with the head of the New Jersey Education Association, the teachers union that spent millions last year to defeat him.

The Journal Editorial Report discusses New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie taking on the state's most powerful union, the teachers, asking them to take a pay freeze that they refuse to accept. Video courtesy of Fox News.

NJEA President Barbara Keshishian visited his office this week to apologize for a recent email sent to thousands of teachers by a union official that included a mock prayer for the governor's death. According to Mr. Christie, the conversation went something like this: He accepted her apology immediately but asked if the email sender would be fired for "doing something that monumentally stupid." When the union chief questioned why the man should be fired, Mr. Christie promptly ended the meeting.

"I'm a product of public schools in New Jersey," Mr. Christie explains, "and I have great admiration for people who commit their lives to teaching, but this isn't about them. This is about a union president who makes $265,000 a year, and her executive director who makes $550,000 a year. This is about a union that has been used to getting its way every time. And they have intimidated governors for the last 30 years."

While the state lost 121,000 jobs last year, education jobs in local school districts soared by more than 11,000. Over the past eight years, according to Mr. Christie, K-12 student enrollment has increased 3% while education jobs have risen by more than 16%. The governor believes cuts in aid to local schools in his budget could be entirely offset if existing teachers would forgo scheduled raises and agree to pay 1.5% of their medical insurance bill for one year, just as new state employees will be required to do every year.

A new Rasmussen poll found that 65% of New Jersey voters agree with him about a one-year pay freeze for teachers. But the teachers union wants to close the budget gap by raising the income tax rate on individuals and small businesses making over $400,000 per year to 10.75% from its current 8.97%.

Mr. Christie doesn't think that state and local budget problems can be fixed without tackling education spending. That's because the state has a hybrid system in which local property taxes fund schools and some of the money is redistributed by the state from affluent areas to poorer communities. According to Mr. Christie, New Jersey taxpayers are spending $22,000 per student in the Newark school system, yet less than a third of these students graduate, proving that more money isn't the answer to better performance. He favors more student choice, which is why he's ramping up approvals for charter schools.

On another front, Mr. Christie is seeking a ballot measure this fall that would amend the state's constitution to limit increases in local property taxes to 2.5% annually. To put this question before voters he needs to win over three-fifths of the state legislature and expects legislators to vote in May or June.

Will New Jersey send a message across the country that state government can be turned around without federal bailouts? "We're such a long way away from a message," Mr. Christie says, "because, you know, the message might be, 'Look at that poor SOB. There he is lying dead on State Street in Trenton. It's over. OK, everybody back to our corners and let's go back to the normal game.' . . . I hope, that if we're successful, [the message] can be . . . that you can do this."

Meanwhile, Mr. Christie has started spreading the news that the Garden State aims to compete once again for businesses, jobs and residents. He notes that for years the state offered a better tax environment than New York, which encouraged city dwellers to discover New Jersey's beautiful suburbs. Mr. Christie says that he recently bumped into former New York Gov. George Pataki, who noted that he'd been shocked to learn that New Jersey now has an even higher burden than its tax-crazy neighbor. "See what happens when you're not looking?" he said to Mr. Pataki. "Snuck right up on ya."

The governor aims to move tax rates back to the glory days before 2004, when politicians lifted the top income tax rate to its current level of almost 9% from roughly 6%. Piled on top of the country's highest property taxes, as well as sales and business income taxes, the increase brought the state to a tipping point where the affluent started to flee in droves. A Boston College study recently noted the outflow of wealthy people from the state in the period 2004-2008. The state has lately been in a vicious spiral of new taxes and fees to make up for the lost revenue, which in turn causes more high-income residents to leave, further reducing tax revenues.

With a 9.8% unemployment rate (significantly above neighboring New York), Mr. Christie has plenty of data to make his case that the state's government has put too much of a burden on the private economy. He also is heartened by polls showing public frustration with the cost of the state's lavish programs. "The ones who pay are going to stand up and say, 'Enough already, I can't do it!'"

He needs them to stand up now and support him. While voters seem ready for a new approach to governance, the new governor's personal popularity has suffered a bit amid the acrimony. Mr. Christie says that the teachers union has spent $1.8 million in the last month on media advertising to defeat his budget plan. "That's just the beginning. We're in April. This budget isn't going to pass until June 30."

Still, allowing himself a bit of optimism, he envisions the impact if he succeeds. "What I hope it will do in the end is first and foremost fix New Jersey, and end this myth that you can't take these people on," he says. "I just hope it shows people who have similar ideas to mine that they can do it. You just have to stand up and grit your teeth and know your poll numbers are going to go down—and mine have—but you gotta grit it out because the alternative is unacceptable." He also strongly believes that voters elected him specifically to fight this fight. "They're fed up. They've had enough. In normal circumstances I wouldn't win," he says.

While debates over taxes and spending remain bitter, Mr. Christie has been pleased with an emerging consensus to address the state's regulatory morass. He is now working on a bipartisan bill with Democrats in the state Senate to reduce red tape in Trenton. "We have Democrats who are very interested in wanting to lower regulation because they know . . . it's a no-cost way of trying to spur business growth," he says.

He's tasked his lieutenant governor, Kim Guadagno, with reviewing 800 pages of regulations from the outgoing administration of Democratic Gov. Jon Corzine, regulations Mr. Christie froze upon taking office. On Monday, Ms. Guadagno will issue a report with recommendations on whether to let them go forward. She has already held 31 public meetings with business and government officials to discuss how to improve the state's regulatory climate. "You're not going to have to spend nearly as much money to start your business in New Jersey," says the governor.

And if he is successful in the budget battle of Trenton, the state's residents won't have to spend nearly as much to live there.


Mr. Freeman is assistant editor of the Journal's editorial page.



Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Gov. Chris Christie Declares 'Change Has Arrived' in His Inaugural Speech


From Home News Tribune
By Rick Malwitz

Taking the office at a time when New Jersey is facing historic economic challenges, Gov. Chris Christie declared in his inaugural address, "Today change has arrived.''

He made quite clear, as he became the 55th governor of New Jersey, that change is needed to turn around a state with enormous economic woes.

His theme: Change, change, change.

"Our economy is struggling. Our budget is in deep deficit and our state is losing ground. Our people are dispirited and wondering if our best days are truly still ahead of us,'' he said.


"I understand the task before me and I am well aware of your expectations for me and this government. You voted loudly and clearly for change and you have entrusted us with what may be our last, best hope for a stronger New Jersey,'' he said.

"New Jersey, you voted for change and today change has arrived - right here, right now.''

Republican Gov. Chris Christie interrupted his inaugural address to reach across the political aisle and clasp hands with Senate President Steve Sweeney, D-Gloucester, and Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver, D-Essex.

The gesture drew the loudest applause during his address.

"Let us shake hands as a symbol for our citizens of all that is possible in a future that demands that who gets the credit finally takes a back seat to doing something worth getting credit for,'' Christie said.

For the first time since Gov. Tom Kean took office in 1982, a Republican chief executive will govern with Democrats controlling both houses of the legislature.

Democrats have a 23-17 margin in the senate and 47-33 in the assembly.

Bret Schundler, who lost the governor's race to Jim McGreevey in 2001, is confident Christie can woo Democrats.

"He is a very charming guy. He will make connections with the Democrats to get things done,'' said Schundler, Christie's nominee to be Commissioner of Education.

In attendance yesterday was Michael Steele, Republican National Committee Chairman, who called the inauguration of a Republican governor in New Jersey, "A big deal, a very big deal.''

Coupled with the victory in November of a Republican in the Virginia governor's race - and anticipated success Massachusetts, where a conservative is poised to win the seat vacated by the death of U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy - a message is being sent to Washington, Steele said.

"This sends something very loud to the administration (of President Barack Obama),'' Steele said.

While he governs as a member of the minority party here, Christie made it clear he is in charge of the state's executive branch.

"Whether you voted for me or not, whether we have agreed or disagreed in the past - today, I am your governor. Young or old, Republican or Democrat, rich or poor, regardless of color or heritage, I promise you this: I will work every waking hour of every day for a better life for all of our citizens,'' he declared. While emphasizing his theme of change, the new governor said, "The era of runaway spending and higher and higher taxes has not worked. We have the largest budget deficit per person of any State in the Union. We have the highest tax rates in the nation. We have the highest unemployment rate in over a quarter century.''

He did not elaborate on specific plans to reduce taxes and spending.

"Our economy is stagnant and our people are suffering under the burden government has placed on them,'' he said.

"Today, a new era of lower taxes and higher growth will begin. The era of broken schools and broken streets and broken dreams in our cities has not worked. Too many urban school districts have failed despite massive spending per pupil,'' he said, while calling on the state to embrace school choice and charter schools.

"I stand here today as governor supremely confident that we are up to the challenge. Why am I confident? Because we have the tools to grow again. Because we have resources that few other states can match,'' he said.

While confident in himself, he said, "We are not a state of passive observers. We are a state of builders and doers.'' "This is not a time for just another season of cynicism. With a state in crisis, we must cast aside blame and embrace action. One person can make a difference. I will make a difference. And each of you will make a difference too, if you believe in a better tomorrow,'' he concluded.