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Thursday, April 20, 2023
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Politics|Christie, in New Hampshire, Reconnects With 2016 Supporters

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/20/us/politics/chris-christie-trump-2024.html
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CHRISTIE, IN NEW HAMPSHIRE, RECONNECTS WITH 2016 SUPPORTERS

The former New Jersey governor is testing a campaign as Donald Trump’s most
vocal critic in the Republican field.

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Former Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey speaking in New Hampshire last month,
as he tested the waters for a presidential run.Credit...Brian Snyder/Reuters


By Trip Gabriel

April 20, 2023, 6:40 p.m. ET

ROCHESTER, N.H. — Don’t ask Chris Christie what “lane” there is for him in the
Republican primary. Don’t ask how someone polling at 1 percent, who is sharply
critical of Donald J. Trump, could possibly win the 2024 nomination when the
party base has no tolerance for attacks on the former president.

“I think there’s this fiction about lanes,” Mr. Christie said on Thursday in New
Hampshire, his second exploratory visit in a month. “There is one lane, OK?
There are not multiple lanes. At the front of that lane right now is Donald
Trump. If you want to win the Republican nomination for president, you have to
beat Donald Trump and get to the front of that lane.”

Mr. Christie, the former two-term governor of New Jersey and unsuccessful 2016
presidential candidate, was visiting the Republicans’ first primary state as
part of a trial period that he said would culminate by mid-May in a decision
about a 2024 run.

He spoke to a small group of reporters who came to observe him in a discussion
with a dozen people at a residential treatment program for drug-addicted
pregnant women. Addiction is an issue Mr. Christie has long been passionate
about, and he visited the same program, Hope on Haven Hill, eight years ago
while running for president. “I thought before Covid that this is the public
health crisis of our generation, and I’m even more convinced now the Covid has
passed that it is,” he told the group.



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Afterward, he portrayed the visit as an exercise in reconnecting with people who
had supported his 2016 campaign, which ended abruptly after his sixth-place
finish in the New Hampshire primary, despite intensive campaigning in the state.
He also met this week in Washington with former donors and campaign employees to
gauge their reactions to a new run.



It’s clear that Mr. Christie sees potential in being the most outspoken critic
of Mr. Trump, whom he has bashed over 2020 election lies as well as for
Republican defeats in the past three national elections.

But that tack may be a losing proposition. Republicans have been abandoning the
most prominent Trump alternative, Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, to rally around
the former president. A poll this week of likely Republican primary voters in
New Hampshire by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center showed Mr.
DeSantis falling to 22 percent, from 43 percent in a January survey by the same
pollster. Mr. Trump far outdistanced rivals, at 42 percent. Mr. Christie was at
1 percent.

“I don’t think that anybody is going to beat Donald Trump by sidling up to him,
playing footsie with him and pretending that you’re almost like him,” Mr.
Christie said. “I’m going to tell people the facts about his presidency and
about his conduct. If they decide they want that again, that’s up to them.”







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