Trump critic Chris Christie to launch White House bid

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Trump Critic Chris Christie To Launch White House Bid
ARLINGTON, TEXAS - DECEMBER 04: Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie looks on prior to a game between the Indianapolis Colts and the Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium on December 04, 2022 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images)
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By Joseph Ax

Former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, who advised Donald Trump's White House campaign in 2016 only to become a vocal critic of the former US president in recent months, will launch a bid for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination next week, a person familiar with the matter said.

Mr Christie, 60, enters the race as a decided underdog, six years after his 2016 presidential campaign failed to gain traction amid a crowded field that included Mr Trump. Only 1 per cent of Republicans said he would be their preferred nominee in a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted May 9th-15th.

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Ending weeks of speculation about his intentions, Mr Christie will officially launch his campaign at a town hall at Saint Anselm College in New Hampshire on Tuesday, the person familiar with the matter said, confirming an earlier report by Axios.

Mr Christie has urged his party to move on from Mr Trump's baseless claims that the 2020 election was rigged, including in his book "Republican Rescue".

That stance could theoretically earn him some support from moderate Republicans eager to turn the page, though it will alienate Mr Trump's still-powerful base of voters.

In March, Mr Christie told Axios he would not vote for Mr Trump in 2024 even if the former president was the Republican nominee.

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In public appearances, Mr Christie, a former federal prosecutor, has argued he alone has the skill and the willingness to go toe-to-toe with the pugnacious Trump directly, in contrast to other potential rivals such as former vice president Mike Pence and Florida governor Ron DeSantis who have mostly sidestepped confrontation.

"As we all know here in New Jersey, the governor is a proven leader who fearlessly tells it like it is. He's never hesitated to confront the most challenging issues head on," Bill Palatucci, a longtime Christie advisor who will chair a super PAC supporting his candidacy, wrote in a message to New Jersey Republican state committee members on Tuesday.

Mr Christie has played the role of attack dog before: in a memorable presidential debate appearance shortly before he ended his 2016 campaign, Mr Christie mocked US senator Marco Rubio for memorising his lines, a performance widely seen as irreparably damaging to Mr Rubio's campaign.

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A former Donald Trump ally, Chris Christie is now a vocal critic of the former US president. Photo: Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

A two-term governor from a Democratic-leaning state, the brash and charismatic Mr Christie was once viewed as a rising Republican star who held rare cross-party appeal.

But his second term in office was tarnished by the only-in-New Jersey "Bridgegate" scandal, in which two of his aides were accused of deliberately closing lanes at the heavily trafficked George Washington Bridge to New York city to punish a local mayor who refused to endorse his re-election campaign.

Mr Christie's relationship with Mr Trump and his family has taken a winding path. As the US attorney for New Jersey, he prosecuted Charles Kushner, the father of Mr Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner, for tax evasion and other crimes.

He and Mr Trump exchanged plenty of barbs during the early stages of the 2016 campaign. But just weeks after dropping out of the race, Mr Christie endorsed Mr Trump over other rivals, giving his candidacy a boost at a critical juncture.

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While he served as a campaign adviser, Mr Christie became a political liability late in the race, when witnesses testified during the criminal trial of his aides that he knew of the bridge lane closures at the time. Mr Christie has denied knowing about the plot until afterward.

Nevertheless, he was passed over first for vice president and later for attorney general. Three days after Mr Trump's surprise victory, Mr Christie was fired as the head of Mr Trump's White House transition team.

Since the January 6th, 2021, attack on the US Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters, Mr Christie has jabbed at Mr Trump on numerous occasions. He blamed the former president for the Republicans' disappointing showing in the 2022 midterm elections and called Mr Trump's conduct "unacceptable" after a federal jury found Mr Trump liable for sexually abusing the writer E Jean Carroll in the 1990s.

Mr Christie was also a candidate for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination but was beaten by eventual nominee Mitt Romney.

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