THE GOP PREPARES A TROJAN HORSE BIG ENOUTH FOR CHRIS CHRISTIE
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has been Wall Street’s anointed son
for the presidency. He is backed by the most ruthless and corrupt
figures in New Jersey politics, including the New Jersey
multimillionaire and hard-line Democratic boss George Norcross III.
Among his other supporters are many hedge fund managers and corporate
executives and some of the nation’s most retrograde billionaires,
including the Koch brothers. The brewing scandal over the closing of traffic lanes on
the George Washington Bridge apparently in retaliation for the Fort Lee
mayor’s refusal to support the governor’s 2013 re-election is a window
into how federal agencies and the security and surveillance apparatus
would be routinely employed in a Christie presidency to punish anyone
who challenged this tiny cabal’s grip on power.
Christie is the caricature of a Third World despot. He has a vicious
temper, a propensity to bully and belittle those weaker than himself, an
insatiable thirst for revenge against real or perceived enemies, and
little respect for the law and, as recent events have made clear, for
the truth. He is gripped by a bottomless hedonism that includes a demand
for private jets, huge entourages, exclusive hotels and lavish meals.
Wall Street and the security and surveillance apparatus want a real son
of a bitch in power, someone with the moral compass of Al Capone, in
order to ruthlessly silence and crush those of us who are working to
overthrow the corporate state. They have had enough of what they
perceive to be Barack Obama’s softness. Christie fits the profile and he
is drooling for the opportunity.
Activists, Democratic and Republican rivals for power, liberals,
reformers and environmentalists will, if Christie becomes president, see
the vast forces of the security state surge into overdrive to stymie
and reverse reform, gut our tepid financial and environmental
regulations, further enrich the corporate elite who are pillaging the
country, and savagely shut down all dissent. The corporate state’s
repression, now on the brink of totalitarianism, would with the help of
Christie, his corporate backers and his tea party loyalists become a
full-blown corporate fascism.
Wall Street was unable to mask Mitt Romney’s cloying sense of
entitlement and elitism, along with his Mr. Rogers blandness. But Wall
Street sees in the profane, union-busting New Jersey governor the
perfect Trojan horse for unfettered corporate power. Christie, eyeing a
bid for the presidency in the 2016 election, has been promised massive
financial backing by the Koch brothers; hedge fund titans such as
Stanley Druckenmiller, Kenneth C. Griffin, Daniel S. Loeb, Paul E.
Singer, Paul Tudor Jones II and David Tepper; financiers such as Charles
Schwab and Stephen A. Schwarzman; real estate magnate Mort Zuckerman;
former New York Stock Exchange Chairman Richard Grasso; former AIG head
Maurice “Hank” Greenberg; former Morgan Stanley CEO John J. Mack; former
GE Chairman Jack Welch; and Home Depot founder Kenneth Langone. David
Koch has called Christie “a true political hero” and said he is
“inspired by this man.” Rupert Murdoch, whose ethics seem to align with
Christie’s, is similarly besotted with the governor.
Christie is pitched to the public, as was George W. Bush, as a
regular guy, someone who speaks bluntly and candidly, someone you would
want to have a beer with. But this is public relations crap. He is and
has long been a hatchet man for corporate firms and big banks. He began
his career as a corporate lobbyist in Trenton, N.J., working for clients
such as the Securities Industry Association. He has done their bidding
ever since. His wife, Mary Pat Christie, is a bond trader who has worked
at JPMorgan Chase, Fleet Securities and Cantor Fitzgerald and is
currently a managing director at Angelo Gordon, an investment firm in
New York.
If Christie implodes politically, Wall Street will no doubt find
another candidate to be its lackey. The system of corporate power, not
the individual at the helm, is fundamentally the problem for democracy.
But this does not mean we should not fear the excesses that surely would
occur under a Christie presidency. Christie and those who want him to
occupy the Oval Office have little regard for the impediments of law and
do not know the meaning of the word “restraint.”
The quality of most of the reporting on Christie has been
pathetic. The numerous portraits of the “regular-guy” governor are
rewritten versions of the fatuous press releases provided by the
governor’s public relations team. New Jersey desperately needs a version
of the late columnist Mike Royko, whose unauthorized biography of
Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley, “Boss,” laid bare the Mafia-like inner
workings of the Daley political juggernaut. The Christie forces, which
have made an unholy alliance with the state’s corrupt Democratic Party
bosses to create an unassailable gang of corporate rulers, are as brutal
and colorful as anything Royko chronicled in Chicago. The Democratic
machine, led by Norcross, allied itself with the Republican Christie to
crush the Democratic candidate for governor, Barbara Buono, who lost
last November’s election by roughly 22 percentage points.
Mark Halperin and John Heilemann in their book “Double Down: Game
Change 2012” give us perhaps the best glimpse of Christie, who flirted
with running for the Republican nomination during the last presidential
race and was considered as a running mate for Romney. The authors devote
a chapter to Christie called “Big Boy,” a nickname George W. Bush
bestowed on the corpulent governor. When Romney met with Christie at the
governor’s mansion in Princeton to obtain his endorsement, Christie not
only demurred but warned Romney he better not approach any major donors
in his state. “If you jump the gun and start raising money here, you
can certainly kiss my support good-bye,” Christie told Romney, according
to the book. The authors describe the conversation as “something out of
‘The Sopranos.’ ”
The Romney campaign, which reluctantly agreed to Christie’s incessant
demands for private jets, ungainly entourages and expensive hotel rooms
in return for campaign appearances by the governor in behalf of the GOP
nominee, decided against selecting him as running mate because, as the
authors write, Romney’s vetters were “stunned by the garish
controversies lurking in the shadows of his record.”
A 2010 U.S. Department of Justice inspector general’s investigation
of Christie’s spending patterns in the federal job he held before he
became governor, the book notes, called Christie “the U.S. attorney who
most often exceeded the government [travel expense] rate without
adequate justification” and someone who offered “insufficient,
inaccurate, or no justification” for stays at exclusive hotels such as
the Four Seasons. In addition, the inspector general’s report raised
questions among Romney’s vetters about “Christie’s relationship with a
top female deputy who accompanied him on many trips,” the book said.
“There was the fact that Christie worked as a lobbyist on behalf of the Securities Industry Association at a time when Bernie Madoff was
a senior SIA official—and sought an exemption from New Jersey’s
Consumer Fraud Act,” Halperin and Heilemann wrote. “There [also] was
Christie’s decision to steer hefty government contracts to donors and
political allies such as former attorney general John Ashcroft, which
sparked a congressional hearing. There was a defamation lawsuit brought
against Christie, arising out of his successful 1994 run to oust an
incumbent in a local Garden State race. Then there was Todd Christie
[the governor’s brother], who in 2008 agreed to a settlement of civil
charges by the Securities and Exchange Commission in which he
acknowledged making ‘hundreds of trades in which customers had been
systematically overcharged.’ (Todd also oversaw a family foundation
whose activities and purpose raised eyebrows among the vetters.) And all
of that was on top of a litany of glaring matters that sparked concern
on [the Romney] team: Christie’s other lobbying clients; his investments
overseas; the YouTube clips that helped make him a star but might call
into doubt his presidential temperament; and the status of his health.”
Christie’s large public entourage always includes a videographer who
captures the governor’s frequent public humiliation of those—public
school teachers are his favorite targets for ridicule—who have the
audacity to question his judgment. These exchanges are immediately
edited and uploaded to YouTube. There are now more than 600.
State politicians who do not kowtow before Christie receive acidic
notes and emails. A former acting New Jersey governor, Richard J. Codey,
after defying Christie abruptly lost his police escort. A state senator
who angered the governor was denied a promised judgeship. A Rutgers
professor and political scientist who declined to endorse Republican
redistricting plans abruptly lost state funding for his program at the
university.
Christie’s warped pathology, as is evidenced in this 2010 YouTube video in
which he belittles a public school teacher, is a source of pride for
the governor and has made him a darling of the right-wingers who target
those who teach the vast majority of American schoolchildren.
In another incident, Christie angrily shouts to
a man who had questioned his attacks on public school teachers: “You’re
a real big shot. You’re a real big shot shooting your mouth off.” The
man replies, “Nah, just take care of the teachers.” Christie, pushing
his bulk before him and surrounded by his security detail, strides
toward the man, who slowly backs away. “Keep walking away,” Christie
says menacingly. “Really good. Keep walking.” The brief clip is a
disturbing window into the governor’s vindictiveness, one that is
augmented by access to power.
The visceral need by Christie to ridicule and threaten anyone who
does not bow before him, his dark lust for revenge, his greed, gluttony
and hedonism, his need to surround himself with large, fawning
entourages and his obsequiousness to corporate power are characteristics
our corporate titans embrace and understand. They see in Christie
versions of themselves. They know he will enthusiastically do their
dirty work. They trust him to be a real bastard. If Christie and the
billionaires behind him take the presidency and begin to manipulate
government agencies and pull the levers of our Stasi-like security and surveillance apparatus, any pretense of democracy will be gone.
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