I've always been on the fence about New Jersey Governor
Chris Christie. That he’s Republican
obviously rubs me the wrong way, but it never bothered me that he shot from the
hip in answering dumb or insulting questions.
I don’t mind people not suffering fools gracefully.
And I appreciate that he seems to be a pragmatist. He worked with the Anti-Christ, I mean, the
Democratic President, in order to obtain aid for his storm-stricken state, and
then had the audacity to thank him for his help and appear appreciative. That took courage, in this age of
hyper-partisanship, but he thought it was the right (and obvious) thing to
do. He’s been at odds with the rest of
the Republicans ever since. In my book,
that means he’s been doing something
right.
But as far as I’m concerned, this latest controversy changes
all of that. If you haven’t heard,
emails have surfaced that show that his top-level staff
approved shutting down three of four lanes on a bridge leading out of Fort
Lee, NJ. It was an action meant to
punish the Democratic Mayor of Fort Lee, who had refused to back Christie’s
re-election, and as follows, the voters who backed the Mayor.
The resulting traffic jam tied up the bridge for hours and
delayed emergency service crews as well.
It was a total four-alarm clusterfuck. When the Mayor called in to pursue a
solution to the tie-up, he was intentionally ignored, and then mocked through
emails.
The email trail shows that this absolutely happened as is
being reported. There is no backing
down or spinning it. There are too many
emails, and they don’t lie.
This activity confirms worst our fears about politicians;
that We the People are nothing but faceless blobs to be manipulated in pursuit
of consolidating power and punishing rivals.
It’s telling that no one cared about the thousands of people being
clock-blocked and delayed. It was more
important to send a message to the Mayor of Fort Lee. It makes you long for the days when they just sent a dead fish wrapped
in newspaper.
Christie apologized on Thursday, and fired the staffers involved,
but his apologies ring false. A staff
operates under the culture of the office.
If they knew the Governor would be shocked and appalled by their
actions, they wouldn't take those actions.
If the purveying sentiment were that we never stoop to political
payback, there wouldn't be any. Being
shocked and appalled after the
information leaked is not the same.
Even if the idea was
originated by the Chief of Staff, and the Governor truly didn't know what was
going on, you still have to blame the
Governor. It’s His Guy, and His Guy
knows what the Governor would want done.
In fact, it would be his job to ensure it stays away from the Governor. If
he thought his boss truly didn't want his opponent screwed with, he wouldn't
have done it. It wouldn't be in his
personal or professional interest to do something contrary to his boss’s
wishes.
The office culture is set from the top down. If the boss is a choirboy, you’re going to
have a staff of people who act like he does, because they risk their job if
they don’t. If the boss is down with
ratfucking his enemies, they won’t think twice about doing the same.
Therefore, this scandal is 100% Chris Christie’s fault and
he should bear the brunt of the political (or legal) consequences.
Perhaps the Mayor of Fort Lee should tie up the line in the
State House cafeteria.
8 comments:
Excellent assessment, Bluz. And why the marathon press conference? Methinks the Gov doth protest too much.
Will his waiting long for lunch constitute a medical emergency?
You nailed it. I think too that Rachel Maddow's theory that the retaliation was directed at the State Senator who represents Fort Lee in response to her position on one of Christie's judicial nominees has a lot of plausibility. I always thought Christie bordered on being a bully. I've seen a clip of his tirade against a teacher at one of his town meetings that I thought reflected that he needs to learn how to calibrate his emotions better. I would not want such a hothead manning the nuclear missile button. His unwillingness to take responsibility for his staff's actions while more than willingly throwing them under the bus also helps solidify for me that he has fatal character flaws for a career in higher political office. I think he should think about resigning. When asked about that possibility instead of offering a thoughtful reflective answer he had a knee jerk response that implied that it was a silly question. Again, another flaw that I cannot forgive.
I think he definitely overdid the apology, but you have to remember, he's trying out an entirely new strategy. Republicans NEVER apologize and NEVER admit anything is wrong. It's like studying a new language... reading about it only goes so far; speaking it is a whole other story.
I think since he began considering running for President, he's made a conscious effort to tone down the confrontational aspect of his personality. But it's still in there. This isn't a guy I'd want running high-level negotiations.
Thank you for summing this up. Because my facebook feed has been filled with this thing and I didn't read about it or know what the hell it was about.
How childish. And he wants to be our fearless leader? Boy. That'll be a fun fight.
He's just gross looking, too.
He needs to get his ass into your spin class. At worst, it will upgrade the quality of the company he keeps.
He ordered it. No question in my mind. The aid is taking the fall for it, probably with the promise of a high level position once he's in the O Office, but for sure, it came from the top. It's disgusting.
That could very well be. But either way, it certainly didn’t happen in a vacuum. And it certainly lets everyone know how low this “Man of the People” regards “The People.”
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