Tag: new jersey governor
New Jersey GOP Nominee Opposes Citizenship Policy That Made His Family American

New Jersey GOP Nominee Opposes Citizenship Policy That Made His Family American

New Jersey gubernatorial candidate Jack Ciattarelli opposes birthright citizenship, even though his own ancestors benefited from it.

The 14th Amendment has long been understood to extend citizenship to all children born on U.S. soil, regardless of their parents’ nationality. President Donald Trump, however, issued an executive order challenging that interpretation, claiming the 1868 law only applied to the children of recently freed slaves.

Trump’s order is now before the Supreme Court. If birthright citizenship is eliminated, it will be a dramatic shift in domestic policy that could leave 11 million people born and raised in the United States vulnerable to deportation.

“Do I believe that someone should be able to just cross the border, give birth and have that baby be an American citizen?” Ciattarelli mused at a campaign event last month. “I don’t. That’s not what the intent was of the 14th Amendment.”

But a review of military and census records shows that Ciattarelli’s grandfather, Antonio, fathered at least two children in the United States before becoming a citizen.

Antonio wrote “no” on a World War I draft registration card from 1917 or 1918, asking whether he was a naturalized citizen or an alien. This was typical for Italian-born immigrants who had not yet begun the citizenship process but intended to.

The same card stated that Antonio had two children.

The 1920 census shows that Antonio had applied for citizenship but not yet been naturalized. It also states that he immigrated to the United States in 1908 and that his two children were born in 1914 and 1915, making them documented citizens.

By the time of the 1930 census, Antonio was a naturalized citizen and Ciattarelli’s father, Anthony, had been born. It’s not clear if Anthony was born before or after Antonio was naturalized.

Ciattarelli’s Democratic opponent, Mikie Sherrill, is a consponsor of the Born in the USA Act, which seeks to block Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship.

Reprinted with permission from American Journal News

Blasting Trump And GOP Rivals As 'Unfit,' Bitter Christie Quits Race

Blasting Trump And GOP Rivals As 'Unfit,' Bitter Christie Quits Race

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie announced during a Wednesday town hall that he is ending his presidential bid.

"It's clear to me tonight that there isn't a path for me to win the nomination, which is why I'm suspending my campaign tonight for president of the United States," Christie told the town hall, saying it was "the right thing" to do.

Christie’s exit chiefly stands to benefit former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, who has steadily gained ground in New Hampshire polls over the last several months while Donald Trump has slipped. Haley has taken second in the three most recent independent polls cited on 538, all taken since Dec. 15.

The latest, a CNN/University of New Hampshire survey of likely Republican primary voters, found the following:

  • Trump: 39%
  • Haley: 32%
  • Christie: 12%
  • Vivek Ramaswamy: 8%
  • Ron DeSantis: 5%

Christie, who has run as the field’s most vocal Trump critic, has concentrated his entire race in the Granite State, amassing what is a presumably solid block of anti-Trump GOP voters. Based on his campaign, his supporters are most likely to accrue to Haley rather than DeSantis, who has chiefly run as a Trump mini-me. Some quick back of the napkin math suggests such a boost from Christie voters looking for a new home could make Haley competitive with Trump.

Ahead of Christie’s town hall event, the candidate was caught in a hot-mic moment lamenting that voters didn’t seem open to his message.

“People don’t want to hear it. They don’t want to hear it. We know we’re right. But they don’t want to hear it,” Christie said. “We couldn’t have been any clearer. We couldn’t have been any more direct or worked any harder. So. You know.”

Later, before the mic was cut, Christie also suggested Haley didn’t have a chance of winning.

”She’s gonna get smoked. And you and I both know it. She’s not up to this,” he said.

It’s unclear from the recording exactly who Christie was speaking with, but the Biden campaign was happy to help disseminate Christie’s sentiments.

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos.

Chris Christie Endorses Mitt Romney

Mitt Romney received the endorsement of New Jersey Governor and Republican establishment favorite Chris Christie in New Hampshire today.

“I’m here for one simple reason: America cannot survive another four years of Barack Obama,” Christie said.

This isn’t a shock, as the two men are both Northeastern moderates who have defied party orthodoxy.

But to the extent that Christie is seen as a natural charismatic leader and a tough-talking budget guru — and Romney’s campaign is largely centered on jobs and the economy — the Romney camp is surely pleased. And Romney, beaming as he stood behind Christie, did nothing to hide it.

“Mitt Romney is the man we need to lead America and we need him now,” Christie added.

Christie also took pains to defend Romney on his greatest vulnerability: his healthcare reform law in Massachusetts.

It’s “completely intellectually dishonest” to compare what Romney did to the federal health law, Christie argued. “Mitt Romney did not raise one tax in doing what he did in Massachusetts to improve the healthcare system.”

He even went so far as to say “I’m proud of him [Romney] for doing what he thinks right” and demanded that people not “compare the two.”

New Jersey Governor Will Not Run in 2012

“You said, I think, you more likely would commit suicide than to run for president. Can we hold you to that, governor?” Piers Morgan asked Governor Chris Christie.

“Yes, you can,” Christie said.

Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0611/56996.html#ixzz1PNC2S0N6

 

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