(Photo: C-SPAN)
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie wasn't going to let something like record-low approval ratings get him down as he took the stage Thursday afternoon at CPAC's annual gathering in National Harbor, Maryland. Exuding that Sopranos-style confidence that's earned him notoriety, Christie, sitting on the CPAC stage for an interview with conservative radio talk-show host Laura Ingraham, dismissed the idea that, compared to other potential presidential candidates in the crowded Republican field, he's not well-positioned to run for president. (A January survey conducted by Bloomberg Politics and the Des Moines Register showed Christie was the first choice candidate among just 4 percent of Iowa Republican caucus-goers.)
Asked by Ingraham if such numbers disturb him, Christie retorted, "Uh, is the election next week?"
He continued: "I'm not worried about what polls say 21 months before [the election]," going on to point out that he won gubernatorial races twice in a blue state when everyone thought it was initially impossible.
All right-it's evident that Christie can hold his own through tough on-the-spot interviews questions, perhaps better than some of his competition-(think Scott Walker's recent 'gotcha' gaffe). Perhaps that's why he declined to make a speech to the CPAC crowd, preferring to do only the on-stage interview. (Other dignitaries and potential candidates delivered brief remarks, followed by an on-stage interview.)
But it's still not clear what distinguishes Christie from other more moderate Republicans like Jeb Bush.
"[I]f the elites in Washington, who make backroom deals" pick the Republican presidential nominee, then Jeb Bush "is definitely the front-runner," Christie said. By contrast, if "the people of the United States," looking for someone who they can actually connect with, pick the candidate, the governor said, then he will do just fine.
Meh. Though Christie likes to come off as your everyday dude, his anti-elitism shtick just doesn't hold when one actually looks at his receipt stubs. For an ostensibly ordinary guy, the governor has a big habit of traveling lavishly, drinking fancy Champagne, and quietly dumping the expensive bills on the taxpayer. (In 2013, New Jersey residents paid over $10,000 for Christie to travel with his wife and aides to the New Orleans Super Bowl.)
It was the New York Times that first reported the story about Christie's spending habits, and Christie made several digs,saying that he "doesn't care at all" what the paper's reporters have to say about him. "I'm still standing," he boasted. He even joked that he gave up the New York Times for Lent.
In an attempt to please a crowd that wasn't necessarily disposed to see him as a true conservative, Christie noted that he had vetoed funding "five times" for Planned Parenthood, and that among the people he thought should "sit down and shut up" were those in the White House.
Christie's bluster has some appeal, but there's only so long that he can use it to avoid owning up to some of his massive leadership failures. His state finances are out of control. New Jersey's credit rating has been downgraded eight times on his watch. The state's pension fund has lost billions of dollars. Just 37 percent of New Jersey voters have a favorable opinion of him. And, as I wrote in the winter issue of The American Prospect, he cancelled one of the most important and desperately needed infrastructure projects in the nation-a decision that threatens the safety of hundreds of thousands of New Jersey commuters.
It's a tough record to run on.