Chris Christie sinking in New Jersey: Trouble for 2016?
N.J. Gov. Chris Christie is increasingly unpopular in his home state, a new poll shows. That could take away a key selling point for the presidency, as it did for Mitt Romney.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie does an interview while campaigning with Republican gubernatorial candidate Walt Havenstein at a VFW hall in Lancaster, N.H., Friday.
Cheryl Senter/AP
Washington
Gov. Chris Christie is now polling at his lowest favorability rating to date as governor of New Jersey. Just 42 percent of the state鈥檚 adults view him positively and him unfavorably, according to the latest Rutgers-Eagleton poll. His favorability rating has declined by 7 percentage points during the past two months.
The (sort of) good news for Governor Christie is that his job approval rating is still above water, with 49 percent approving and 46 percent disapproving. But even there, the numbers are trending in the wrong direction. His job approval is down 3 percentage points during the past two months; disapproval is up 5 points.
If Christie runs for president in 2016 鈥 and he鈥檚 showing all the signs 鈥 do these numbers bode ill for him?聽
Let鈥檚 do a comparison with Mitt Romney, the Republican presidential nominee in 2012 and former governor of Massachusetts 鈥 a Democratic state, like New Jersey. By the time Mr. Romney left office in 2007, he was deeply unpopular in Massachusetts. That clearly didn鈥檛 prevent him from getting the nomination in 2012, but did it hurt his chances against President Obama?
In a way, it might have. Romney to swing voters yearning for a more functional Washington: that he was a bridge builder in Massachusetts, able to work across the aisle.
If Christie鈥檚 numbers continue to head south, he could face the same bind.
鈥淚鈥檓 not sure that national voters particularly care about how a [presidential] candidate might be doing in his home state,鈥 says David Redlawsk, director of the Eagleton Center for Public Interest Polling at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J. 鈥淏ut where it matters is that we鈥檙e seeing a dramatic partisan gap in opinion about Christie. One of his selling points has been that he can reach across [partisan] lines.鈥
The Eagleton Center鈥檚 latest poll shows a 53-point gap in how Republicans feel about Christie versus how Democrats feel.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 probably about as large as we鈥檝e seen in his entire time in office,鈥 says Professor Redlawsk. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the more important point, in the national context.鈥
Christie is also losing independents at a growing rate, a trend that threatens his image as a leader with broad support, Redlawsk adds.
So what about Bridge-gate, the scandal that broke last year over the multiday traffic jam near the George Washington Bridge as an act of alleged political retribution? Several top Christie aides were implicated (and fired), though Christie himself has so far escaped direct blame.
Christie was reelected last November in a landslide, but his ratings took a big hit after the Bridge-gate scandal broke.聽He recovered a bit for a while, but now that looks like a temporary blip, Redlawsk says.
The Eagleton-Rutgers poll shows voters鈥 top concern is taxes (24 percent) and the economy and jobs (21 percent). Bridge-gate enters the mix in issue No. 3聽鈥 corruption and abuse of power 鈥 at 16 percent. No. 4 is education, at 12 percent.
Christie has lost ground with New Jersey voters in his handling of the state budget, now 37 percent approval, down 6 points from January 2014. On the state鈥檚 pension crisis, he鈥檚 holding steady at 24 percent approval, unchanged from August, the first time the question was asked.
One bright spot is Christie鈥檚 handling of hurricane Sandy, which hit right before the 2012 election. His approval on Sandy recovery has jumped to 60 percent, up from 54 percent last February.
鈥淯ltimately, it remains a little bit early to be thinking that responses here in Jersey ahead of the midterm are going to define what happens in the Republican primary,鈥 says Redlawsk. 鈥淏ut it certainly should provide some cause for concern for Christie supporters.鈥