Tag: sandy relief funds
Chris Christie’s Worst Offense? Proving Rand Paul Right

Chris Christie’s Worst Offense? Proving Rand Paul Right

Governor Chris Christie (R-NJ) no longer cares about making sense.

He hit the absurdist stage of what seems to be his Nixonian demise on Friday evening, after a letter from the lawyer for former associate David Wildstein said the governor knew about the lane closures on the George Washington Bridge as they were happening became public.

Christie’s office issued a statement that said the letter confirmed what the governor had previously said — though he clearly had insisted that he wasn’t aware of the “traffic study” until “after the whole thing was over.” The governor then attended Howard Stern’s birthday party, where he was cheered, and a Super Bowl ceremony in Times Square, where he was booed.

Those public appearances were followed by an email to Politico in which Christie’s office went after David Wildstein, noting “risible juvenilia” — including the former blogger being “publicly accused by his high-school social studies teacher of deceptive behavior.” It went on to describe Christie’s long-time associate as a “contentious” “political animal” who “frightened people.”

You may wonder, then, why the governor hired Wildstein to be his “eyes, ears” inside the Port Authority, as one of the linked articles in the email notes — except that being a “contentious” “political animal” who “frightened people” is kind of how Chris Christie became a frontrunner for the Republican nomination.

Remember: Wildstein is a guy Christie referred to as “a tireless advocate for New Jersey’s interests at the Port Authority” — less than seven weeks ago.

Christie must crush his former associate now because his political future depends on maintaining the stance that he had “no involvement, knowledge or understanding of the real motives behind David Wildstein’s scheme to close the lanes on the George Washington Bridge,” at least until emails damning his staff were released on January 10. Obviously the governor assumes his ex-pal may testify otherwise.

But the bridge scandal also cracked a veil of fear that seems to have cloaked an effort by the governor’s office to use aid awarded by Congress for Superstorm Sandy relief as a political piggy bank to help his re-election.

Accusations by Mayor Dawn Zimmer (D-Hoboken) found relief for her city, which was reportedly 80 percent underwater during the storm, held hostage because she resisted developments favored by the governor’s office seem substantiated by new emails. Meanwhile in New Brunswick, a town that suffered little damage but did have a Democratic mayor who endorsed Christie, funds went to build an apartment tower.

“Furthermore, relief funds have been extremely hard to account for because Christie vetoed a bill that would have created a single website to track Sandy funding and contract information,” wrote Brian Murphy, a former intimate of all the key players in the Bridgegate scandal.

Great need went unmet as the relief effort literally became a commercial for the governor’s re-election. This is the scandal that should concern us most.

Why?

Last summer, Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) attacked Christie as the “the king of bacon talking about bacon.” He accused the governor of having a “gimme, gimme, gimme” attitude when it came to fighting for Sandy relief. Christie’s office rightly pointed out that New Jersey, unlike Kentucky, is a donor state that contributes more to the federal government than it takes in.

Now, half a year later, Paul seems to have a point. New Jersey needed the aid, but the governor’s “gimme” attitude should not have been rewarded. Chris Christie shouldn’t have been trusted with Sandy funds any more than George W. Bush should have been trusted with a budget surplus.

The case against government spending is always easy to make when it’s “them” getting the money, which is why politicians have a sacred duty to make sure disaster relief go to those most in need.

With the demise of Christie appearing inevitable, Rand Paul is the only 2016 GOP frontrunner with enough political talent to expand the party. He prides himself on appealing to the center on issues like government surveillance and the drug war while veering further to the right than Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) on gutting government help for families and the social safety net. And the junior senator from Kentucky is further to the right than Chris Christie — who has continually defunded Planned Parenthood — when it comes a woman’s right to choose, even in cases of rape of incest.

Rand Paul — like his father Ron, from whom he inherited his political brand and presidential campaign-in-waiting — believes in getting rid of FEMA and letting local governments handle disaster relief, because that worked so well with Katrina.

The Pauls’ solutions always send things back to the local level, which is a clever way to say you want to cut them. The senator recently said unemployment insurance does a “disservice” to those who have been out of work for months. Clearly he feels the same way about people who’ve suffered a disaster or have survived until retirement.

Libertarians believe that people will inevitably exploit their government checks, but unfettered businesses will bring great fairness to the land. They believe this even though we have proof that corporations feed on the most vulnerable by saddling them with fees and loans until the entire economic system is on the verge of collapse.

Christie may be guilty of selfishly manipulating government funds in private. But we know he did this in public when he killed a rail tunnel to New York City that had been planned for years in just a few weeks. This created more traffic for his constituents while keeping land values low, but it freed up $1.8 billion for the Port Authority to use on projects more politically convenient to the governor.   

He did it again when he wasted millions on an unnecessary special election just to avoid being on the same ballot as now-Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ), another move Rand Paul criticized.

Chris Christie risked his political career by using his office to help him win higher office. And he may pay the cost for that. But he also risked the faith in government, which provides the crucial help that no other institution can or will provide when it’s most needed. This provides cynics with proof that government should not be trusted.

And for that, we all pay.

Photo: Gage Skidmore via Flickr

WATCH: Christie Delivers Second Inaugural Address, Leaves Out Scandals

WATCH: Christie Delivers Second Inaugural Address, Leaves Out Scandals

On Tuesday, New Jersey governor Chris Christie delivered his inaugural address amid the scandals plaguing his second term.

The event garnered national attention this year as people waited to see if Christie would address the investigations he is currently facing.

But unlike his recent State of the State address, in which he acknowledged the investigations, Christie opted to stick to to his prepared transcript and did not mention the Bridgegate scandal – the possibly politically motivated lane closures on the George Washington Bridge in September — nor the investigation into his use of Superstorm Sandy relief funds.

Instead, Christie more subtly acknowledged that with the “great honor” of serving New Jersey “comes solemn obligations – to make the hard decisions, to raise the uncomfortable topics, to require responsibility and accountability, to be willing to stand hard when principles are being violated and to be willing to compromise to find common ground with all of our people.”

The governor – whose popularity is declining nationwide according to the most recent USA Today/Pew Research Center poll – also took a swipe at Washington, first criticizing big government and then partisan politics, saying, “We cannot fall victim to the attitude of Washington, D.C. – the attitude that I am always right and you are always wrong.”

“The attitude that puts everyone into a box they are not permitted to leave. The attitude that puts political wins ahead of policy agreements,” Christie continued. “The belief that compromise is a dirty word.”

Seemingly encouraging bipartisanship, he added: “We have to be willing to play outside the red and blue boxes the media and pundits put us in; we have to be willing to reach out to others who look or speak differently than us; we have to be willing to personally reach out a helping hand to a neighbor suffering from drug addiction, depression, or the dignity-stripping loss of a job.”

This notion of bipartisanship has a lot to do with why Christie is viewed as a very likely candidate for the Republican nomination in 2016. The governor’s supposed ability to work with Democrats and appeal to Independents, however, may be threatened now that he is under investigation.

Still, Christie appeared confident, asserting, “We have survived the worst natural disaster in our state’s history and together to restore, renew, and rebuild the state we love. Each of these challenges have been met by a new, unified force in public life – a New Jersey setting the tone for an entire nation. A tough New Jersey. A resilient New Jersey. A proud New Jersey.”

You can watch Governor Christie’s entire inaugural address below.


AFP Photo/Jeff Zelevansky
Video:NJTVonline via YouTube

Poll: Christie’s Popularity Slips, Big Majority Doubts Governor Is Being Honest

Poll: Christie’s Popularity Slips, Big Majority Doubts Governor Is Being Honest

In a major warning sign to New Jersey Governor Chris Christie (R), a new USA Today/Pew Research Center poll shows the Republican’s popularity slipping – even outside the tri-state area.

The embattled governor is currently facing questions over his possible involvement in or knowledge of lane closures on the George Washington Bridge in September and his use – or misuse – ofSuperstorm Sandy relief funds during his 2013 re-election campaign.

The poll finds that although 38 percent of Americans say they have a favorable view of Christie – as opposed to the 40 percent who said the same a year ago – 34 percent now view him unfavorably. That’s double the number that said the same last year.

USA Today points out that the jump in people who view Christie unfavorably may be because “many more of those interviewed had heard of Christie” this year than last year. Back in 2013, 26 percent of respondents said they had not heard of Christie, but only 16 percent say the same today.

This might be bad news for the governor who was considered by many as the GOP’s best bet for 2016; whatever nationwide attention he has recently garnered has primarily been focused on the scandals plaguing his administration.

Another red flag for the presidential hopeful is the decline in his popularity among Democrats and Independents. Part of Christie’s appeal – and sometimes a subject of attack from the far right – is his perceived ability to work with Democrats. Independents – 47 percent of whom now hold an unfavorable opinion of the governor – are also important if Christie chooses to run as a moderate in 2016.

The poll also shows that 45 percent of Americans have “heard a lot” about the “Bridgegate” scandal, and another 28 percent say they know “a little” about it. Of those who know about the scandal, only 32 percent believe Christie’s claim that he played no role in and was unaware of the lane closures that caused major traffic jams in Fort Lee, New Jersey – where the mayor, Mark Sokolich (D), declined to endorse Christie for reelection.

Only 27 percent of Americans say they do not know anything about the bridge scandal.

For now Christie’s only hope seems to be a conclusion to the ongoing investigations – one that proves he did not prioritize politics over his duties as governor.

Photo: Bob Jagendorf via Flickr

New Jersey Official Denies Withholding Disaster Aid

New Jersey Official Denies Withholding Disaster Aid

New York (AFP) – Embattled New Jersey governor Chris Christie’s second-in-command Monday flatly denied allegations she and Christie threatened to withhold money for Hurricane Sandy relief as a political quid pro quo.

These latest allegations of political strong arm tactics add to the increasing scandal surrounding the governor, after aides were accused of manufacturing traffic jams as revenge against another mayor who refused to endorse the governor’s re-election bid.

Over the weekend, Hoboken mayor Dawn Zimmer, a Democrat, said Lieutenant Governor Kim Guadagno told her Christie could withhold relief money for her city unless she approved a redevelopment plan he supported.

“The lieutenant governor pulled me aside and said essentially, ‘you got to move forward with the Rockefeller project,'” Zimmer told CNN Sunday, referring to a planned 40-story office tower and commercial development in Hoboken.

But Guadagno said Zimmer’s recounting of their conversation was “not only false but it’s illogical.”

Speaking at a news conference related to a Martin Luther King Day event, Guadagno said the allegations do not stand up to “scrutiny, when all of the facts are examined” and flatly denied any relief funding was tied to approving a separate project.

“Standing in Union Beach as we are today, with some of the mayors whose towns were devastated by Sandy, and also being a Sandy victim myself, makes the mayor’s allegations particularly offensive to me. The suggestion that anyone would hold back Sandy relief funds for any reason is wholly and completely false,” she insisted.

A Christie spokesman, Colin Reed, issued a statement to various media outlets late Saturday denying Zimmer’s charges, accusing Zimmer of playing “partisan politics.”

The statement said $70 million in federal funds had already approved for Hoboken with more potentially to come.

Christie was credited with decisive leadership when Hurricane Sandy slammed into the East Coast in October 2012, hitting New York and New Jersey particularly hard.

He also had a reputation for being the kind of pragmatic Republican who could work across party lines, and could garner national support from Democrats, as he has in his majority blue state of New Jersey.

Christie was forced last week to admit his staff lied to him about their role in blocking commuter traffic onto a major bridge in an act of political retribution against the Democratic mayor of Fort Lee.

The scandal is being investigated by federal prosecutors.

After the “bridgegate” scandal came to light, Christie fired a top aide, Bridget Kelly, and was seeking to put the matter behind him when the new allegations surfaced.

The larger-than-life Republican seen as a frontrunner for his party’s 2016 presidential nomination, said he had been “embarrassed and humiliated” by the alleged dirty tricks, which, he said at a marathon press conference last week, he had no knowledge of.

In an interview published by Yahoo Monday, the governor suggested his presidential ambitions had not been squelched by the scandal, saying he felt “readier” to be president than when the same question was asked in 2011.

He said his experience since the “bridgegate” accusations first broke had been “awful.”

“I’m trying to get my arms around an awful situation,” he told Yahoo, “and understand it, and then address it, and then resolve it.”

The interview was conducted Friday, before the latest accusations came to light, including a separate allegation by Democratic Congressman Frank Pallone, who said he wants Christie investigated over claims he improperly used tax payers’ relief funds for personal political gain in the run-up to his 2013 re-election.

Polls show Christie with widespread support both in his state and across the nation, but some polls show him taking a hit in the wake of the bridgegate scandal.

AFP Photo/Jeff Zelevansky