Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Will Bridge Scandal Jam Gov. Christie's Road Show?

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie was in New Hampshire Wednesday, technically, on 2014 election business. But he was also there to make an impression for 2016. It seems every time you turn around in the early primary states you're bumping into another potential — let's say likely — candidate for president. Count Gov. Christie in the pack.

All of this as he's been dealing with fallout from the so-called "Bridgegate" scandal involving massive traffic jams created by politically-motivated lane closures on New Jersey's George Washington Bridge.

In Salem, N.H., volunteers called registered voters to remind them about the coming midterm as they waited for Gov. Christie. There were about 100 people, not a big crowd. Most were GOP activists and volunteers, some are simply voters who've come to see the guest of honor.

Advertisement

Gov. Christie thanked the crowd for supporting "our ticket" in the state. "I've been here three times now since July and I'll be here a lot more between now and Nov. because it's such an important state," he said.

Christie was here in his role as head of the Republican Governors Association. But in Salem, he was with Scott Brown, the former Massachusetts Senator who's moved to New Hampshire to try to unseat incumbent Democrat Jean Shaheen. Christie highlighted Brown's previous time in the U.S. Senate: "This is somebody who has seen it and is actually willing to go back there. That is a fighter everybody. That is somebody who is willing to fight for New Hampshire."

But as road shows go, it was remarkably low key. Christie spoke for just two minutes, 40 seconds. There was no big rallying cry or crescendo, and he kept the focus away from himself. The point is, he was there. And his appearance still made the front page – it was the top headline in the states big daily paper, the Union Leader in Manchester.

Christie spent much more time working the room, posing for pictures. One person stepped in and reminded him that they'd met once before. He called him "the next president of the United States."

Another attendee promises he'll be in touch when Christie does decide to run. And so it goes before the Governor heads out the back door.

Advertisement

Fifty-year-old business owner Jim Destafano, a Republican, watched from the back of the crowd. "I like that he's blunt and to the point. I've seen him make progress in a very difficult state where he wasn't in the majority, so that's encouraging," he says.

But here's Christie's problem. Without me asking about it, Destefano raises the issue of those famous lane closures at the George Washington Bridge. "If I was on that bridge in the traffic jam, I'd probably feel differently though. I took that as an abuse of government for political purposes, which is much the same as I see happening in Washington," he says.

The issue has hurt Christie in polling. In early, early polls last year he was ahead of the pack in New Hampshire. A CNN poll out this week puts him in 4th place.

But one longtime state Republican at yesterday's event said he wants to see what that issue looks like in a year's time. It's New Hampshire, he said, and it'll all get a full airing.

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.