zitothebrave
Connoisseur of Minors
No, but they lost. Both have better personalities than Gary Johnson.
Really? McCain I can see as a maybe, but Romney is as dull as a baseball bat. Johnson at least has some personality.
No, but they lost. Both have better personalities than Gary Johnson.
Really? McCain I can see as a maybe, but Romney is as dull as a baseball bat. Johnson at least has some personality.
Good night Chris Christie. Don't let the door hit you ...
................
Before the bridge scandal, Christie was known as a governor who transcended New Jersey’s reputation for toxic politics and toxic dumps. He took on the exploding costs of the state’s pension system, reformed property taxes, and worked with his opponents in the legislature, and he provided decisive leadership after the devastation of Hurricane Sandy. But the scandal hinted at a darker story line: that Christie’s barrelling style, and the dealmaking that had secured his rise through New Jersey politics, might as easily undo him.
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/04/14/crossing-christie
I confess to liking Chris Christie, whatever his faults. If I were in NJ or anywhere close, I might feel differently, but from afar I kinda think he's ok.
BREAKING: David Wildstein testifies that he and Bill Baroni "bragged" to @GovChristie abt GWB lane closures as they were going on
There is a political analogy between Christie and Trump. Christie's original appeal was his image as someone who would tell it like it is and stand up to power. He was often shown on TV telling reporters and dissenters to "shut up!"
He promoted that tough image which he thought might propel him to become the Republican presidential nominee. As it turned out, we now know that both Christie and Trump are egregiously cynical politicians and liars unfit to hold any public office. The question isn't, should Christie be impeached?
It is how and when.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/28/nyregion/bridgegate-trial-chris-christie.html?_r=1