Krauthammer: C’mon, let Christie speak at CPAC

posted at 10:41 am on February 27, 2013 by Allahpundit

Just putting a bow here on all the Christie/CPAC coverage lately until the man himself finally chimes in, which should be soon. Over at the Times, Nate Silver argues that the conservative romance was Christie is ending essentially because it was always based on a lie:

[W]hat seems to have changed is the salience of different issues, as driven by major news events over the past year.

Mr. Christie has long been an advocate of gun-control policies, for example. But that issue has become far more relevant since the shootings in Newtown, Conn.

Mr. Christie has also taken moderate positions on immigration. Immigration was an issue in the 2012 campaign, but it seems to have grown in importance now, after the poor performance of the Republicans with Hispanic voters November, and the push by President Obama and by some Republicans in Congress for immigration legislation…

Contrast this to the political climate in late 2011, when Mr. Christie was winning praise from conservatives for his statements toward teachers’ unions — an issue that was then in the news because of the protests against efforts by Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin to curtail benefits for public-sector unions in that state. Mr. Christie also takes relatively conservative views on gay marriage and abortion, social issues that had the stage more to themselves in 2011, but which may have to compete more against immigration and gun control in the next political cycle.

Silver’s conclusion: If there’s anyone out there capable of making a third-party run kinda sorta viable, it’s Christie. Needless to say, I agree. You’ll know he’s thinking about that if he decides to double down on gun control in the next year or two. That’ll antagonize conservatives even further but it’ll also endear him to Bloomberg, who can marshal Wall Street money for him and who could, singlehandedly, fund a pro-Christie Super PAC to level the playing field with the major parties. In fact, his richest supporters are sticking with him, for now:

Ken Langone, the billionaire Home Depot founder and influential Christie donor, and Tom Kean, the former New Jersey governor and longtime Christie mentor, remain bullish on his political future. In interviews with National Review Online, both men say Christie remains a leading contender for the Republican nomination.

“If the governor can expand Medicaid without disrupting his budget and without raising taxes, then I don’t have a problem,” Langone says. “To the critics, I say, ‘give me a break.’ If conservatives are going to criticize him for doing what’s right for his state, then we’re on our way to becoming a minority party.”

Langone says he and several other prominent donors think Christie has the best shot of winning a presidential general election, and they’ll stick with him, even if some conservatives start to rule out the 50-year-old governor.

Still, despite the antagonism with righties, an indie bid would still be harder than winning the Republican nomination. In spite of everything, there may still be a constituency for him inside the GOP:

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Note that 36 percent. Not all of them would be instant Christie voters, but then not all of the 62 percent on the other side would be implacably opposed to him either. If conservatives splinter over Rubio, Ryan, Jindal, and Paul, then ~30 percent or so makes a contender. And if the answer to that is that the base would never turn out for him if he won the nomination, well, read this. The base is very, very, very forgiving of apostates when the alternative is another four years of Democratic rule. Plus, there may be some block of Republican voters who are thinking this way:

Christie could do worse than aspire to the role that Clinton played for Democrats in 1992. The young Arkansas governor was perceived as the solution to a problem that had dogged Democrats for 20 years by then. Before the primary that year in New Hampshire, one liberal Democrat after another told me that their hearts belonged to Tom Harkin or Bob Kerrey or Jerry Brown, but they were going to vote for Clinton. They were tired of losing with stereotypical liberals who were easily caricatured as soft on crime and defense, and they saw the Southern moderate as a game-changer.

Some centrists might back him purely for that reason, less because they love the candidate himself than because of the party reorientation he would represent. Because of that, with the possible exception of Rand Paul, he’ll be the most interesting Republican to watch for the next year or two. Does he tack back to the right after his reelection to try to atone with conservatives? Or does he actually inch a bit further to the center by partnering with Bloomy on guns, or “evolving” on gay marriage, or maybe pushing reform on marijuana laws to try to get the attention of younger Republicans? He’s got to pick a brand before other people pick it for him.



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Comment pages: 1 2 3

barky isn’t a shooter, he’s more of a ball handler.

VegasRick on May 20, 2013 at 5:35 PM

Ouch. :)

Bob's Kid on May 21, 2013 at 1:11 AM

There would have been a major scandal if any member of the White House senior staff had learned of the IRS malfeasance, without any pursuant investigation or comparable action.

bayam on May 20, 2013 at 5:42 PM

Oh, if only dear leader Stalin knew of these atrocities he’d certainly stop them…

Pull the other one.

I agree with you, whether Barky knew or not is “Irrelevant”.

Except in my mind even if it’s the crew who scuttled her, the captain goes down with the ship. In your mind, he gets a promotion.

Difficultas_Est_Imperium on May 21, 2013 at 1:41 AM

Obama, head of the Neo-Know Nothing Party.

Sgt. Schultz, chief of staff.

HOPE and CHANGE

I KNOW NOTHING, NOTHING!

profitsbeard on May 21, 2013 at 3:36 AM

Why bother the sock puppet? He’s busy shooting hoops.

mojo on May 20, 2013 at 5:28 PM

And all that practice shows. Two out of twenty-two. Not even Jason Collins is that bad.

Happy Nomad on May 20, 2013 at 5:31 PM

Oh, I so needed this. Thank you.

athenadelphi on May 21, 2013 at 4:15 AM

This is simply not believable. It seems Obama and his minions are all too young to have learned the lessons of Watergate.

claudius on May 21, 2013 at 8:57 AM

jimgeraghty ‏@jimgeraghty 4h

These abuses of the First Amendment wouldn’t be happening if we had a constitutional law professor as president.

That is precisely why they are able to use law as legal passes, such as “I don’t recall,” I did not know,” I drank too much tea” “No one informed me. I first saw this travesty on Fox none-news.”
Under oath, that would shift rapidly to: “Under advisement of my attorney, I plead the fifth amendment.”

Don L on May 21, 2013 at 9:02 AM

From the Sopranos:

It’s not good to go into the unknown, not knowin’.

claudius on May 21, 2013 at 9:02 AM

L*I*A*R

easyt65 on May 21, 2013 at 9:34 AM

Obama runs the white House like a terrorist cell! He probably uses couriers to communicate with his cohorts in other cells of the government! Find the couriers, water board them, and you’ve caught him in his crimes! Ha!

Marco on May 21, 2013 at 9:50 AM

There would have been a major scandal if any member of the White House senior staff had learned of the IRS malfeasance, without any pursuant investigation or comparable action.

bayam on May 20, 2013 at 5:42 PM

But what if the President not only knew about it, but started it…?

President met with anti-Tea Party IRS union chief the day before agency targeted Tea Party.

dominigan on May 21, 2013 at 10:24 AM

There would have been a major scandal if any member of the White House senior staff had learned of the IRS malfeasance, without any pursuant investigation or comparable action.

bayam on May 20, 2013 at 5:42 PM

But what if the President not only knew about it, but started it…?

President met with anti-Tea Party IRS union chief the day before agency targeted Tea Party.

dominigan on May 21, 2013 at 10:24 AM

Good question. Had this been any republican, bayam would call it proof, as undeniable as the sun rising in the east.

But bayam will simply pretend that it proves nothing, there is no smoke and therefore no fire. Hypocrite practices hypocrisy, who’s surprised?

On the other hand, bayam’s statement could be interpreted as stating that obama is responsible and should be held accountable. Is that what you’re saying bayam?

runawayyyy on May 21, 2013 at 10:40 AM

Two words: Valerie Jarrett

Pomai on May 21, 2013 at 1:37 PM

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