I feel for New Jerseyâs Republican governor, Chris Christie.
He is trying to juggle competing roles: as a budding GOP superstar and as someone whoâs committed the cardinal sin in right-wing circles by saying nice things about Democratic President Obama near the end of a hotly contested presidential election campaign.
Christie is running for re-election as Garden State governor. Heâs apparently facing a challenge from the lunatic fringe of his party because he had high praise for the president in the wake of the federal response to Superstorm Sandy, which pummeled the Jersey Shore right before the election.
Obama went to Jersey, toured the devastation, comforted heartbroken residents and declared that the White House was operating on what he called âthe 15-minute rule.â White House aides are to respond within 15 minutes of any call from the affected area âand weâre going to find a way to say âyes,ââ Obama said.
That was music to Christieâs ears. And he said so ⊠many times.
Thatâs what reportedly has angered some within his party.
But whatâs the problem? Christie was concerned first with his constituents. He reached out for federal assistance and POTUS himself answered the call. Both men were doing their jobs â not as partisans but as responsible elected officials charged with caring for those who depend on government to help them in times of distress.
Should the governor win re-election next year â and a big part of me hopes he does â heâll be positioned to run for president in 2016, if thatâs his desire. But the tea party cabal within his party has demonstrated an annoying talent for running competent Republicans out of office (see Sen. Dick Lugar of Indiana and former Sen. Bob Bennett of Utah, to cite just two prominent examples).
Watch your back, governor.