Chris Christie's Book of Hubris - by the NYT Editorial Board
After a disastrous showing in the Republican presidential primaries and getting booted from the Trump transition team, Gov. Chris Christie returned home last month to the comfort of his power base in Trenton, only to find old statehouse allies brandishing pitchforks and torches, not the legislative favors he had hoped for.
On Dec. 20, lawmakers rejected a measure that would have relaxed state ethics law so that Mr. Christie, who has served for seven years, could profit from a book deal during his last year in office. They also denied salary increases for Mr. Christies cabinet members and other officials that would have cost about $10 million a year. And they rejected Mr. Christies revenge bill, which would have ended the governments obligation to place paid legal notices in local newspapers, including those that had bedeviled the governor during the Bridgegate scandal.
The defeat certainly provides fresh material for an honest memoir, but Mr. Christie, suffering the lowest popularity ratings of his career, is not likely to tell all. Too bad, because its a spellbinding tale of political hubris Mr. Christie cynically shifting roles from tough-talking rival of Donald Trump to fawning acolyte after Mr. Christies own candidacy failed. The governor soon was described in news accounts as Mr. Trumps traveling manservant, and was caught in TV moments with a facial expression somewhere between ennui and adoration as he stood silently awaiting his future at Mr. Trumps side.
A gripping chapter would be Mr. Christies account of how he suddenly fell from grace as chief of Mr. Trumps transition, a post with enormous patronage power that evaporated without even a tweet from Mr. Trump about his being just another loser. (Allies of Mr. Christie say he holds out hope that Mr. Trump will turn back to him with a job when the governance gets tough.)
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http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/31/opinion/sunday/chris-christies-book-of-hubris.html?emc=edit_th_20170101&nl=todaysheadlines&nlid=57435284&_r=0
Dustlawyer
(10,495 posts)That alone would qualify him for the Trump administration which I predict will break the Ronald Reagan administration's record for officials going to prison. They have to investigate first and we know the Republicans will do all they can to protect the crooks from prosecution.
Hortensis
(58,785 posts)He's a natural for that crowd, and I still suspect he'll end up with something there if not in prison. After all, as long as Trump's in power new vacancies will always be opening up.