PITMAN - Republican National Chairman Michael Steele came to South Jersey today to campaign with GOP gubernatorial nominee Christopher Christie, calling him a politician who "plays across the state unlike any other Republican in the last 10 or 12 years."
"I am honored to be here today to represent Republicans around the country who knows just how important this race is - not just to New Jersey, but to the nation, because it is a bellwether in so many ways for the future of our party and the future of our nation," he said.
Gloucester Republicans estimated that 175 people showed up to see Christie, the former U.S. Attorney and Steele, a former Maryland lieutenant governor and U.S. Senate candidate, in front of the office of the Main Street Financial Group in this small Gloucester County town. Afterwards, Christie, Steele and GOP State Chairman Jay Webber were off the Vineland for a meet and greet at a diner with the 1st Legislative District's Republican Assembly candidates.
The Pitman event had two distinct strains of campaign rhetoric. Christie held to his argument that the gubernatorial race hinges only on New Jersey issues, resisting pitting himself against a Democratic president whose in-state approvals remain high. National Republicans like Steele, however, see the race as - in Steele's own words - a "bellwether." There are only two gubernatorial races this year, and Republicans are hoping that victories here and in Virginia will cast them as a party on the mend.
Christie gave an abridged version of his usual stump speech, listing rankings that showed New Jersey with an unfriendly business climate and lamenting the loss of residents to neighboring states with lower tax rates. Steele, however, noted that President Obama was coming on Thursday to campaign for Corzine.
"Welcome, Mr. President. But I want to know, since you have such a great rush to get out of Iraq, what is your rush to get out of GM? What is your plan to help us get control back of our companies," he said. "And where is the Governor on this? Does the governor like this bailout nonsense? Oh, I think he does. Does he like that stimulus check? How much of the stimulus check have you seen to create jobs in New Jersey?"
After the event, a reporter asked Christie about whether the campaign was a bellwether for the national political climate, and if accepting national Republican support was an acknowledgement of htat.
"When you're going to be outspent by as much as I'm going to be outspent by, by a governor who follows no rules when it comes to campaign finance, I'll take help from people who want to help me," he said. " But that doesn't change the nature of what the campaign's going to be."
The national attention being paid to the race has led to questions about whether Christie will bring resigning Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin in to campaign for him. In fact, that speculation was touched off by a statement Steele made immediately after Palin's resignation.
Despite Christie's repeated statements that he will not invite Palin into New Jersey, Steele held to his original point, saying that "we'll be ready for [Palin] to come out and campaign across the country certainly next year, but even this year, in Virginia, New Jersey, wherever we need to be."
Christie, standing next to Steele, immediately shot the idea down.
"I've said that I don't think that's something that should be necessary here in New Jersey. From my perspective, I want to keep this focused on exactly what it needs to be focused on, which is Jon Corzine and his failed record over the last four years as governor," he said.
Garden State Equality fires new broadside at Dems Smarting over the state Senate's refusal to pass marriage equality and disillusioned at the moment with the Democratic Party majority, Garden State Equality’s 85-member Board of Directors unanimously decided against giving financial contributions to political parties and their affiliated committees. ...
“We will work harder and smarter to protect consumers, to preserve civil rights, to effectively regulate the alcoholic beverage industry, to ensure that the integrity of New Jersey’s casino gaming industry continues, to keep drives, passengers and pedestrians safe on our streets, to assist victims of crimes, and to remember always the importance of juvenile justice on issues affecting the state." -- Attorney General-designate Paula Dow, at her Senate confirmation hearing.
- PolitickerNJ.com, 02/08/10Press releases are submitted by PolitickerNJ users, not by staff. They do not represent the viewpoint of PolitickerNJ.com.
Wrong
The only people I could see helping Mr. Christie is Colin Powell,Ron Paul, Michael Smerconish, Christopher Buckley. Michael Steele, Newt Gingrich, Mitt Romney, Rudy Giuliani are all old news flip floppers and hypocrits. Mitt Romney is the biggest disappointment yet. What happened to the Governor Romney not the Presidential candidate Romney?
I supported Ron Paul in the primary. Not because I agreed with him on every issue, especially foreign policy. I voted for him because he was his own person. He proved he could think outside the box compared to the rest and he had a record that backed up his beliefs.
Christie is Right
He needs moderates, independents, and even some Democrats to vote for him, in order to win. IMHO, Palin puts off such voters.
NJ RACE
This race is about NJ, not Palin and that media circus. The Dems would want nothing more but talk about something else other then Corzine's record.
Taxes up
Jobs lost
People leaving
BTW, notice all the public ground breakings the last 3 weeks by Corzine? Free campaign media atention curtesy of the NJ tax payers. Where was he the last 3 years???
Michael Steele, GOPAC Chairman, at Christie Event
Michael Steele Chairman of the Republican National Committee visired South Jersey on July 19, 2009 to support Chris Christie's run for Governor of New Jersey To see this exclusive video of this event go to...www.newjerseyfordummies.com http://blip.tv/file/2357782