Showing posts with label Christie's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christie's. Show all posts

Friday, April 4, 2014

U.S. Attorney convenes grand jury in probe of Chris Christie"s involvement in Bridgegate

Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey speaking at an event hosted by The McCain Institute in Phoenix, Arizona.
Uh-oh is right


Things are heating up, in a big way:

The U.S. Attorney in New Jersey has convened a grand jury to investigate the involvement of Governor Chris Christie’s office in the George Washington Bridge scandal, ABC News has learned. [...]

The convening of the grand jury is evidence that the U.S. Attorney’s investigation has progressed beyond an inquiry and moved to the criminal phase.


The grand jury, which will meet for up to the next 18 months, has the power to indict, subpoena and interview witnesses without their attorney’s present.


This marks for the first time confirmation that what started out as a preliminary inquiry into the governor’s office has now become a criminal investigation into the activities that led to gridlock traffic across the bridge from Manhattan in Fort Lee.



Today, grand jurors heard testimony from Christie press secretary Mike Drewniak, a key figure in the Bridgegate scandal—though Drewniak, through his attorney, insists he’s not a target of this newly heightened investigation. As Jeff Smith has pointed out, the biggest threat Christie faces is not political (despite what the Joe Scarboroughs of the world might think) but legal. And that legal threat just became a whole lot more serious.



Daily Kos



U.S. Attorney convenes grand jury in probe of Chris Christie"s involvement in Bridgegate

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

From RealClearPolitics: Another Obamacare Delay; GOP Demographics; Christie"s Fundraising Record


Good morning. It’s Tuesday, February 11, the birthdays of inventor Thomas Edison, former governors Jeb Bush and Sarah Palin, Sen. Tammy Baldwin, actor Burt Reynolds, singer Sheryl Crow, and professional surfer Kelly Slater.


An 11-time world champion, Slater blew the judges’ minds—they gave him a perfect 10—for his artistry in the pipeline at a pro tour event in Hawaii last week. Today he turns 42. Happy birthday, dude.


When George Washington was a boy in Virginia, he would have celebrated February 11, 1731, as his birthday. But in 1752 Great Britain and its colonies switched from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar, which made the future general one year and 11 days “younger”—as Washington’s birthday is now demarked as February 22, 1732.


Tonight, Barack and Michelle Obama host a state dinner in honor of Francois Hollande, the president of France. Yesterday, Obama took his counterpart on a trip to Monticello, the estate of France’s former ambassador and good friend Thomas Jefferson. The president showed Hollande a sweeping view of the Virginia countryside from a Monticello terrace normally barred to tourists. “That’s the good thing as a president,” Obama quipped. “I can do whatever I want.”


Monday was perhaps not the right day to offer that witticism, as White House officials were simultaneously confirming that the administration had unilaterally executed yet another delay in implementing key components of the Affordable Care Act. But in the morning note this week we are concentrating on other historical events, namely, interesting mileposts in the relationship between France and the United States this week.


In that spirit, we note that 60 years ago today, President Eisenhower convened a top-secret meeting of the White House National Security Council. The subject: how the U.S. could assist the French in their quest to hold onto its colonial empire in Vietnam.


I’ll have more on that ominous meeting in a moment, after first pointing you to our front page, where we aggregate stories and columns spanning the political spectrum. We also offer a complement of original material from RCP’s staff and contributors:


* * *


GOP Irked by New Delay of Obamacare Mandate. Republicans expressed outrage Monday after the administration again extended deadlines for employers to comply with the law. Alexis Simendinger has the story


Do Demographics Really Work Against the GOP? Sean Trende takes issue with a fellow analyst’s commentary that Republicans need to heed demographic trends and “reach groups that have not traditionally been supportive” of the party. 


Nonbeliever PAC Gets Into the Midterm Game. Jose Gonzalez reports on a new political action committee dedicated to supporting humanist ideals and candidates opposed to religious influence on government policy.


Christie-Led RGA Sets Fundraising Record. Adam O’Neal has the numbers


Clay Aiken Running for Congress as Defense Hawk. The onetime “American Idol” celeb surprised many observers by announcing his candidacy. But as Adam reports, the openly gay political novice had another surprise in store in his first campaign video. 


Poll: Coloradans Say Pot Law Hurts State’s Image. Adam has the details here too. 


10 Surprising Facts About the Sochi Games. RealClearSports reprises this info-graphic


Was Mantle Was Better Than Mays? Also in RCS, Sheldon Hirsch lays out his case.


 * * *


More than eight years after the end of World War II, the situation was deteriorating rapidly for the French forces in Indochina. France had requested—and had been given—American military assistance in the form of 200 U.S. airmen, various warplanes, and some replacement parts and mechanics.


 It wasn’t proving nearly enough, and at the White House, Dwight D. Eisenhower convened a top-secret war council that included three cabinet officials, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and top presidential advisers.


“The President commented on the extraordinary confusion in the reports which reached him from the area of Indochina,” according to the now-declassified notes of the meeting taken by the NSC staff. “There were almost as many judgments as there were authors of messages. There were, nevertheless, only two critical factors in the situation. The first was to win over the Vietnamese population; the other to instill some spirit into the French.”


Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., Eisenhower’s recently appointed U.S. ambassador to the U.N., who had had a great deal of experience dealing with the French, said “that if you get behind them and push hard enough they will do what is required.”


Eisenhower responded to this sentiment indirectly, according to the minutes of the meeting, and in two ways. First, he said he’d concluded that it was probably time for a change of ambassadors in Vietnam, which is ironic, because John F. Kennedy would later give that thankless job to Lodge.


Ike also subtly reminded his advisers that he himself had some experience with the French—and with war—by offering a prescient thought:


“The President commented that the mood of discouragement came from the evident lack of a spiritual force among the French and the Vietnamese. This was a commodity which it was excessively difficult for one nation to supply to another.”


Carl M. Cannon
Washington Bureau Chief
RealClearPolitics
Twitter: @CarlCannon
We update throughout the day at www.realclearpolitics.com.




RealClearPolitics – Articles



From RealClearPolitics: Another Obamacare Delay; GOP Demographics; Christie"s Fundraising Record

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Artur Davis: Christie’s Other Big Problem

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Artur Davis: Christie’s Other Big Problem

Monday, January 27, 2014

Joint N.J. legislative committee probing Christie"s "Bridgegate"

(Reuters) – New Jersey state legislators voted on Monday to merge parallel investigations into the George Washington Bridge traffic scandal ensnaring Republican Governor Chris Christie.


Reuters: Top News



Joint N.J. legislative committee probing Christie"s "Bridgegate"

Thursday, January 9, 2014

News Analysis: Christie’s Apology, Done His Way

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http://nyti.ms/1d5hHW7

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He was, he said, heartbroken. Embarrassed. Sad. Disappointed. Humiliated.


By the end of an extraordinary and exhaustive 107-minute news conference, Chris Christie had transformed himself from a belligerent chief executive, famed for ridiculing his detractors, into a deeply wronged father figure, shaking his head, whispering his words and verging on tears.


The bravado had vanished. The certitude was gone.


In its place was an entirely new vocabulary of self-doubt and a once unthinkable spectacle: Mr. Christie acknowledging a “crisis in confidence,” sleepless nights, second-guessing and nonstop soul-searching.


Political apologies generally follow a robotic sequence. The public figure caught doing wrong offers a terse, often grudging, sometimes distant and always uncomfortable expression of remorse.


Related Coverage



  • Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey, appearing contrite, held a nearly two-hour news conference in Trenton on Thursday.

    ‘Very Sad’ Christie Extends Apology in Bridge ScandalJAN. 9, 2014




  • Gov. Chris Christie leaving Borough Hall, in Fort Lee, N.J., on Thursday afternoon, after meeting for about 40 minutes with the borough’s mayor, Mark Sokolich.

    Christie Brings His Remorse to an Inconvenienced BoroughJAN. 9, 2014




But Mr. Christie is not every other politician. He said “sorry” the Christie way: excessively, vaingloriously, in large, vivid and personal terms. At times, he divulged oddly intimate details and reactions — the 8 a.m. home workout session after which he discovered the “heartbreaking” news of his aide’s misconduct, and his late-night chats with his wife about the episode.


Play Video




Video|1:48:00

Richard Perry/The New York Times



Christie’s News Conference


Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey said he took no part in the lane closings at the George Washington Bridge, but acknowledged the involvement of some of his close aides.


He seemed to want to talk the scandal away, droning on for so long at the State House that reporters started repeating their inquiries, even asking for his response to a news story that had popped up as he was talking.


“What was on display,” said Mike Murphy, a longtime Republican consultant who has advised former Gov. Mitt Romney, “were all the strengths of Chris Christie and all of the weaknesses.”


“He just does not come in small doses,” Mr. Murphy said.


Mr. Christie may have fielded every query tossed his way on Thursday (more than 90), but there remained scores of unanswered questions about his involvement in the imbroglio, which his forceful performance did little to satisfy.


Even as they marveled at his stamina, Republican leaders privately worried that Mr. Christie was cementing a reputation for the most unwelcome quality in the world of political professionals: unpredictability.


There were moments when the straight-talking governor seemed to slip into self-denial. Despite the absence of any concrete evidence, he suggested that perhaps there really had been a traffic study in progress when an aide in his office, working with a Christie appointee, closed lanes and paralyzed traffic in Fort Lee, N.J.


Mostly, he kept apologizing. Twenty times, in all. To the people of New Jersey. To the mayor of Fort Lee. To members of the State Legislature. Even to the news media. He kept finding new ways to flagellate himself, ticking off his “mistakes,” owning up to his “failure” and repeatedly declaring, “I was wrong.”


He seemed to lean on the lectern more than usual, holding himself steady and repeatedly fidgeting with his suit jacket.


His normally voluble and prosecutorial manner, the very attribute that has catapulted him onto the national political stage, was replaced by a newly contemplative and somber tone.


But this version of Chris Christie — the chastened, penitent public official — was hard to keep up, and he occasionally lapsed into a familiar pique.


When out-of-town reporters began to shout questions at him, disrupting his system of calling on journalists, the governor shot them a chilly stare. “Guys,” he said, “we don’t work that way.”


And his temper flared when he denounced, in harsh and scolding terms, the senior staff member who sent the email proposing “some traffic problems in Fort Lee” and who, he said, later misled him about her role.


“I am stunned by the abject stupidity that was shown here,” Mr. Christie said, making clear that he could no longer stand to be in the same room with the now-fired aide, Bridget Anne Kelly. “She was not given the opportunity to explain to me why she lied because it was so obvious that she had,” he said.


That candor won him praise from unexpected quarters. David Axelrod, President Obama’s longtime adviser, said that, at least during his televised appearance, Mr. Christie “came across as candid, regretful and accountable.”


The all but unending news conference seemed to offer Mr. Christie a cathartic public therapy session that was at once confessional and clinically detailed.


He expounded, professorially, on the nature of truth and the difficulty of detecting deceit.


“If you ask for something and someone deceives you and tells you it doesn’t exist, what’s the follow-up?” he asked. “Were you involved in any way? No. Any knowledge? No. Well, after that, what do you do?”


And he sought to clear up what he said were (at least to him) mystifying misimpressions about his temperament, mocking the idea that he becomes a “lunatic when he’s mad about something.”


“It is the rare moment,” he said, “when I raise my voice.”


Near the end of his question-and-answer session, a governor ever in touch with his emotional side acknowledged that he was still grappling with his own layered reactions to the controversy.


“I don’t know what the stages of grief are in exact order,” he said, “but I know anger gets there at some point. I’m sure I’ll have that, too.”


More on nytimes.com




NYT > International Home



News Analysis: Christie’s Apology, Done His Way

Saturday, November 16, 2013

NJ Christie"s Political Move Disappoints Mentor


New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie seldom makes a political miscalculation.


But when the likely 2016 presidential candidate tried to dump Tom Kean Jr. as state Senate Republican leader, he suffered a rare defeat — and alienated his political mentor, the popular former Gov. Tom Kean Sr.


The elder Kean, who is 78, tells The Associated Press Christie’s maneuver surprised and disappointed him.


The question of the governor’s loyalty has come up before.


His 2012 Republican National Convention speech was panned as self-serving. Christie’s allegiance to Mitt Romney was questioned again when the governor embraced President Obama days before the election.


Obama’s win — and Romney’s loss — gives a Republican like Christie an open shot at the party’s presidential nomination in 2016.


© Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




Newsmax – Politics



NJ Christie"s Political Move Disappoints Mentor

Thursday, November 14, 2013

VIDEO: Warhol Painting Sells For More Than $100 Million









Andy Warhol’s painting “Silver Car Crash” sold for $105 million beating his highest previous sale by more than $30 million.













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VIDEO: Warhol Painting Sells For More Than $100 Million