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United States News Title: The Success of Chris Christie Enter New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who in nine months in office has shown himself to be a shrewd and effective dealmaker and a real alternative to the populist, uncompromising Tea Party movement. Unlike other Republican governors, Christie accepted stimulus funding and refused to sue the federal government over the passage of President Barack Obamas health care plan. In the short term, Democrats ought to be glad weve got Christie and not someone worse. And Republicans should take a leaf out of his book: Christie is a case study in how to effectively govern a thoroughly Democratic state as a Republican governor in a national political atmosphere unfriendly to moderate conservatives. The key to Christies success in New Jersey, which Obama won by more than 10 percentage points in 2008, is the mandate voters gave him last fall to slash the states ballooning budget. This year, Trenton faced a $10 billion budget shortfall. The size of New Jersey government is absurd: According to The Economist, state spending grew by 50 percent from 2002 to 2008. Raising taxes to close the gap was entirely out of the question: The Tax Foundation reported this year that New Jersey has the highest property taxes in the country. Cutting state spending was the correct way and the only way to balance the budget. And though it undeniably comes at a cost, Christies decision to take on New Jerseys powerful public sector and teachers unions was admirable. Even by liberal standards, the states unions are disproportionately powerful. Vince Giordano, executive director of the New Jersey Education Association, receives an annual salary of $300,000, almost twice as much as Christies $175,000 annual salary as governor. Most impressive was the bipartisan deal Christie reached with Democratic state lawmakers limiting local property tax increases. The deal caps property tax growth at 2 percent per year while still providing exemptions for employees health insurance and pension costs, debt payments, emergency response and rising school enrollment. It also views increases over a period of three years rather than one, so that if communities hike rates by less than 2 percent in a given year, they can exceed the limit the next, allowing for increased spending during tough economic times. Its unclear, though, how long Christies success will last. His tenure in office hasnt been stumble-free: Last month, New Jersey badly bungled its application for federal Race to the Top education funding, losing out on $400 million it couldve been allocated if state bureaucrats had remembered to include a basic statistic in their presentation to Department of Education officials. In July, he vetoed a funding bill for state family planning clinics that provide healthcare to uninsured women, despite an assurance in the bill that taxpayers money wouldnt be used to perform abortions. State Democratic lawmakers have promised a fight. And his take-no-prisoners style could easily backfire, particularly if he tries to take on more unassailable ground like the planned Hudson River commuter rail tunnel, which Democrats promise will ease the regions famous congestion and create 6,000 construction jobs. Chris Christie is hardly a Democrat. In any other economic climate, New Jerseyans would consider him an extreme Republican. Yet hes made the tough decisions necessary to put New Jersey back on the path to fiscal solvency and has worked with a stubbornly Democratic legislature to find commonsense solutions to incredibly controversial problems. Republicans, take note. That said, there remains one budding scandal that might threaten to sink his governorship: This summer, MTV renewed Jersey Shore for a third season.
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#1. To: no gnu taxes (#0)
Obama's approval ratings in NJ are higher than Christie's www.examiner.com/independ...ll-obama-up-christie-down And then there's this - NJ lost out on hundreds of millions of dollars in education grant money because it made an error on filling out its form. He's doing a great job.
Obama's first all-by-his-lonesome budget, btw, calls for a $1.17 trillion deficit.
Obama a 43% disapproval rating. Christie a 38% disapproval rating. And it's a blue blue blue State
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