Chris Christie is back in New Jersey and badly wounded. He just failed to convince the legislature to relax ethics laws to allow him to profit from writing a book. Gonorrhea and chlamydia are more popular than he is in the Garden State, and the series of public humiliations he’s endured from the Trump camp since the election have been enough to make the Cleveland Browns blush.
At one time, he was in charge of the Trump transition team, but that plum position was yanked and his loyalists were largely purged from the lists. It was a predictable end if you knew that Christie had gone out of his way to humiliate the father of Trump’s son-in-law when he prosecuted him in 2005. The experience was traumatic enough for Jared Kushner, who was then working in the Manhattan District Attorney’s office, that he gave up his aspirations to become a prosecutor himself.
“My dad’s arrest made me realize I didn’t want to be a prosecutor anymore,” he said. “The law is so nuanced. If you’re convicting murderers, it’s one thing. It’s often fairly clear. When you get into things like white-collar crime, there are often a lot of nuances. Seeing my father’s situation, I felt what happened was obviously unjust in terms of the way they pursued him. I just never wanted to be on the other side of that and cause pain to the families I was doing that to, whether right or wrong.’’
When Christie announced he was running for president, the elder Kushners held a fundraiser at their Long Branch, New Jersey home for Donald Trump. When Christie’s campaign fizzled in New Hampshire, there wasn’t any good reason for Trump to turn down his endorsement and use him as a prop and gofer, but revenge was inevitable, and best served cold.
Trump is on the record in numerous places, including his books, talking about the importance of screwing your enemies harder than they ever screwed you. It’s a core belief for him. That made it easy to predict that Christie would eventually get dumped in the most painful and public way possible.
Yet, Christie is still in deep denial about what has happened to him, and why.
Mr. Christie still believes he has a political future nationally. He wants to write a book and his friends have been telling people in New Jersey that the governor expects Mr. Trump to eventually come around to him. According to their scenario, the White House management team of Jared Kushner, Stephen K. Bannon and Reince Priebus will be a disaster and Mr. Christie will be tapped as the skilled manager, like David Gergen, the former aide to Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan who swooped in to steady Bill Clinton’s administration after a raucous first year.
It could very well be that Trump’s first team is a disaster and that he’ll be looking to bring in some savior to rescue his presidency, but his son-in-law is not going to get dumped for the guy who put his father in prison and held a press conference to make it as brutal as he could make it.
“It is incredibly humiliating for a man of Mr. Kushner’s power and prestige to say in an open court, to say three times, guilty as charged,” Christie said during a news conference at the time.
I would not be shocked in the least to see Attorney General Jeff Sessions overseeing the prosecution of Christie for Bridgegate or some other transgression. I definitely see it as more likely than Christie ever getting invited into Trump’s inner circle or to become his chief of staff.
If you don’t believe me, just watch this video of Trump explaining his philosophy of revenge:
Here’s the relevant part:
“One of the things you should do in terms of success: If somebody hits you, you’ve got to hit ’em back five times harder than they ever thought possible. You’ve got to get even. Get even. And the reason, the reason you do, is so important…The reason you do, you have to do it, because if they do that to you, you have to leave a telltale sign that they just can’t take advantage of you. It’s not so much for the person, which does make you feel good, to be honest with you, I’ve done it many times. But other people watch and you know they say, ‘Well, let’s leave Trump alone,’ or ‘Let’s leave this one,’ or ‘Doris, let’s leave her alone. They fight too hard.’ I say it, and it’s so important. You have to, you have to hit back. You have to hit back.”
There’s just no way that Trump would fail to hit Christie back for going after his in-laws, and Christie still doesn’t get it.
This is why Hillary should not believe any so-called assurance that the trump administration won’t prosecute her. Of course they will, because he hates her.
Do we know that Trump authentically hates Hillary? When and why did that develop? They were chummy enough for some time. What changed?
It’s like the worst mean-girls movie script ever. He invited the Clintons to his wedding, and subsequently donated $100K to the Foundation, and then when Chelsea Clinton got married he wasn’t invited to the wedding. His desperate attempts to crash the party have been well described.
He feels deeply, incredibly betrayed. He paid top dollar for that friendship and it apparently meant nothing to them!
Good copy because it feeds into the “Trump is thin-skinned” narrative. Sounds like bs to me for a couple of reasons. 1) Were the Clintons, including Chelsea and Marc, invited to Ivanka’s wedding that reportedly had a larger guest list than Chelsea’s. (Marc and Jared had some sort of friendly relationship before either of them married. They do have much in common with each other.) Trump wasn’t the only big name/big bucks guy that didn’t make the guest list cut. 2) The rift, if it exists, came later than 2010. Trump was recorded praising Hillary through the end of 2012.
Trump was also on record as being against the electoral college. I’m gonna go out on a limb and suggest that his new found fondness for one, and antipathy towards the other are related to the same, recently concluded event.
Chelsea did go to Ivanka’s wedding, for what it’s worth.
Didn’t bother looking that far into the purported weddings’ flap. Too little is known and too much is unknown to conclude anything. Other than the wedding invites and attendance didn’t seem to interfere in the relationships between the two couples. Likely irrevocably severed by the 2016 election.
A revenge-crazed Trump will not prosecute Hillary, because having made the threat, its like a Trump card; he’ll pull it out and use it to threaten her whenever she challenges him, or when his followers start to realize he’s playing them and he needs to distract them again.
I think he may well feel he punished her enough just by defeating her. When he started talking about not prosecuting, saying she’d already suffered a lot etc., I thought it could mean he’s satisfied by her humiliation.
He does love to get hem chanting “Lock her up!” though, doesn’t he?
Christie seems pretty sure he will not face any prosecution for Bridgegate, I guess…
Christie’s now so delusional about so many things he could easily be deluded about this. The next governor of NJ, no matter who it turns out to be, is going to be somebody who hates him, for one thing.
I bumped into a bizarre little sidelight to this story that seems to have escaped everybody’s notice, and don’t know exactly what to do with it: it’s about David Wildstein, Christie’s old high school friend (except according to Christie, who has denied him thrice as they say) and the man he installed as his personal thug at the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, now awaiting sentencing for his part in the Bridgegate affair.
As you probably read, Wildstein began his ratfucking career in 2000 as a blogger, under the pseudonym Wally Edge, at a website called NJ Politicker, where he retailed PR nuggets for Christie among other things. What I didn’t know is that NJ Politicker was bankrolled by another of his closest friends, Jared Kushner, the youthful real estate magnate interested in becoming a celebrity publisher (he ended up buying the formerly stylish weekly New York Observer, which I believe is now mostly destroyed by the family Trumpery).
There’s no reason for me to doubt what everybody says about Kushner being out to avenge his father and destroy Christie’s life. The fact that Kushner can take some responsibility for creating Christie’s political career at the same time, through Charles Kushner’s conviction (2005) to Christie’s election (2010, when Wildstein stopped blogging) makes it sound even more like something out of The Godfather. These are incredibly cold people.
I think voters at large have caught on to this about our elites: These are incredibly cold people.
I’m curious to see what GOPers Trump goes after. Will he go after Jeb!, for instance, or is being in the WH good enough. BTW, this is also why the GOP isn’t going to do anything to Trump like start impeachment proceedings or worry about the Emoluments clause or anything. Because Trump will bury them if they try. His flunkies, like Bannon and Kushner, will ratfuck them so hard they won’t know what hit them.
I WISH he would set fire to Cruz…
My guess is that Cruz would be high on the list of Republicans that Trump loathes.
I’d actually love to see them try if it wouldn’t end up so shitty for us all in the long run.
Sometimes birds of a feather are much too strange bedfellows.
This is much more complicated than a Jared-Charles Kushner feud with Christie. Haaretz, Meet the Kushners: The Feuding Real Estate Dynasty That Links Donald Trump and Chris Christie
The Trump-Christie-Kushners inter-relationships also predate the dating/marriage of Ivanka to Jared.
Maybe he should talk to Scott Brown about running for office in another state.