The Very Best of Chris Christie

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Chris Christie Orders NJ National Guard Leader to Lose Weight


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Mm

Gov. Chris Christie is asking someone else to lose weight -- the leader of the New Jersey's National Guard.
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The 2016 presidential candidate, who has struggled with his own weight problems for years, has given Air Force Brig. Gen. Michael L. Cunniff 90 days to meet the U.S. military's fitness requirements and slim down after learning he was reprimanded by the Pentagon last year for his excessive weight and for missing physical-fitness tests.

As commander and chief of the New Jersey National Guard, Christie is in charge of 8,400 soldiers and airmen.

Christie spokesperson Kevin Roberts said the governor was informed of the issue last week and is urging the general to come into compliance with all military requirements.

"The Governor has expressed directly to the General that his failure to meet that standard or to provide notification of his formal reprimand is both unacceptable and disappointing," Roberts said in a statement. "The Governor has directed General Cunniff to meet his obligations in the next 90 days."

Christie’s order comes after his staff told The Washington Post that the governor was unaware the general was not meeting Air Force fitness standards.

In a written statement from the National Guard, Cunniff admits struggling with his weight in his adult life and for not meeting his fitness requirements in recent years.

“Many people struggle with weight control -- I am not immune from this. Just as I afford every opportunity to each Soldier and Airmen to meet these standards, so will I,” Cunniff said. “I take this matter seriously and am taking the necessary steps to remedy this issue by being involved in a rigorous physical fitness training program and have sought the assistance of a nutritionist."
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where is a picture of the military dude....??


He must be a fuckin truckload of lard, if

christie is demanding he lose weight...



to many sad fuckin simps in leadership positions..

and too many leaders are in powerless positions
and thats just the way they want it..



GIFS are fuckin hilarious tho..

he had he nerve to turn his fat ass around,

I bet there was an eclipse that day...
 
These are the same people up next to run the country. :smh:

Sent from my SM-N900T using Tapatalk
 


Chris Christie's blank stare during Donald Trump's victory speech sets off Twitter users
BYNICOLE HENSLEY
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Tuesday, March 1, 2016, 10:31 PM

Trump wins big on 'Super Tuesday'
AFP
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The ghost of Chris Christie’s failed presidential run appeared to be frozen on stage alongside Super Tuesday victor Donald Trump.

The New Jersey governor introduced the Republican front-runner Tuesday night after Trump snagged Alabama, Georgia, Massachusetts, Tennessee and Virginia, before stepping aside — and into the spotlight — with a thousand-yard stare.

His blank face at the Mar-A-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Fla., was likened to Eli Manning's emotionless stare as his brother, Peyton Manning, led the Colorado Broncos to a Super Bowl win.

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ANDREW HARNIK/AP
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks on Super Tuesday primary election night at the White and Gold Ballroom at The Mar-A-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Florida.
In a surprise move Friday, Christie endorsed Trump’s run to the White House after dropping out of the race. He placed sixth in New Hampshire and returned to New Jersey to regroup.

“He’s shown himself to be tough, strong and bold. He’s shown himself a fighter, a leader who speaks plainly to the American people,” said Christie, in a half-hearted speech mocked by the peanut gallery on Twitter as forced.

He refused to leave Trump's side during the candidate's lengthy speech, similar to Trump's unwaveringendurance during Sarah Palin's stump speech. Christie even stuck around for a round of questions from reporters.

Read some of the best tweets:


 
The backlash against Chris Christie
By Nicole Gaouette, CNN


Thu March 3, 2016




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How Chris Christie's hostage face stole the show"

Washington (CNN) -- Chris Christie is paying a big price for backing Donald Trump.

In the days since the New Jersey governor shocked the political world with his endorsement, six New Jersey newspapers have called for him to resign, his backers have roundly criticized him and his poll numbers have plummeted.

As Trump swept through Super Tuesday primaries, taking seven states and boasting that he will unify a Republican Party upended by his candidacy, Christie was drawing ridicule for his decision to support the real estate developer-turned-political force.

Even before his positioning behind Trump during his victory speech spawned the hashtag #FreeChrisChristie, his endorsement spawned a slew of irate hometown newspaper editorials that ran Tuesday.​

"We're fed up with his opportunism, we're fed up with his hypocrisy," wrote six Gannett-owned newspapers, including the Asbury Park Press, the Cherry Hill Courier-Post and the Morristown Daily Record, in a joint editorial asking for Christie to quit or be recalled.​


"We're disgusted with his endorsement of Donald Trump after he spent months on the campaign trail trashing him, calling him unqualified by temperament and experience to be president," they wrote.

Christie's endorsement was supposed to return him to the national spotlight after he ended his presidential campaign much earlier than he had hoped. But it's instead turned into another embarrassment for a politician who was once a leading Republican at home and across the country.

A Washington Post opinion writer said that Christie, once beloved as a straight-talker who got things done, had ruined his reputation. The New Hampshire Union-Leader declared that they'd been wrong to endorse him for the GOP presidential nomination. "Rather than standing up to the bully, Christie bent on his knee," the New Hampshire-based paper wrote.

And a poll conducted last week showed Christie's support among voters has slid from a lackluster 33% to a limp 27%.

Christie pulled out of the presidential race on February 10 after a poor showing in the New Hampshire primary. But after stepping out of the political ring, Christie endorsed Trump on February 26, declaring him the candidate most likely to beat Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton.

Major political organizers and donors have chastised Christie, with his own national finance co-chair, Hewlett-Packard CEO Meg Whitman, summing it up as "an astonishing display of political opportunism."

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, a fellow Republican, told ABC on Sunday that "none of us understand why he did this."

Former Republican New Jersey Gov. Christine Todd Whitman told The Newark Star-Ledger that she was "ashamed" Christie would endorse someone who has "employed the kind of hate-mongering and racism that Trump has."

Christie hasn't done himself any favors, trying to shut down reporters on Monday who wanted to ask questions about Trump's hesitation in disavowing an endorsement from white supremacist leader David Duke.

"No, I won't permit you to" ask questions about that, Christie said.

Perhaps the most brutal excoriation has come online.

News media and viewers alike took note of Christie's slack-jawed quizzical look as he stood behind Trump during the candidate's Super Tuesday speech in Florida.

An MSNBC tweet said, "caption this: What was on Chris Christie's mind during Trump's #SuperTuesday speech?"

"The Daily Show" provided one answer, showing a series of screengrabs of Christie's odd expression with subtitles. "What have I done?" one reads. "Dear God. What have I DONE?"

Michigan Republican Rep. Justin Amash tweeted his answer: "it's staged to look like a hostage situation." Soon enough, the hashtag #FreeChrisChristie was zinging through cyberspace.


SOURCE: http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/02/politics/chris-christie-donald-trump-backlash/index.html
 
Chris Christie tries to explain his 'Trump hostage' moment on Tonight Show
BYCHRISTOPHER BRENNAN
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Saturday, April 2, 2016, 4:51 AM

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New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie attempted to explain the moment he became the presidential election cycle’s most popular meme by taking to "The Tonight Show."

Jimmy Fallon asked the governor to relive what has become one of the defining nights of the life, his time spent looking like a hostage while standing behind Donald Trump during his Super Tuesday victory speech.

Social media users seized on the moment, mocking the recent Trump endorser with the hashtag #FreeChrisChristie.

CHRISTIE DEFENDS OUT-OF-STATE CAMPAIGNING FOR DONALD TRUMP

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NBC
Gov. Chris Christie's appearance on "The Tonight Show" saw him greeted by a cardboard cutout of one of his most memorable moments, when he appeared to be a hostage behind Donald Trump.
On Friday night Fallon trotted out a cardboard cutout slightly smaller than the real Christie and set it up behind him as he asked him to tell what was going through his mind as he stared off into the void.

“This is what you would look like if you were standing behind Jay Leno during his monologue,” Christie said. “If you’re used to talking, it’s awkward not to talk.”

Fallon brought out his own cutout for the segment as well, saying that the governor must be distracted by the background bystander.





VIEW GALLERYDonald Trump's celebrity supporters

EDITORIAL:CHRIS CHRISTIE, FORMERLY KNOWN AS GOVERNOR

The interview also saw Christie defend both hismethod of eating M&Msat an NCAA basketball game and his endorsement of Trump.

Christie doubled down on his support for Trump by saying the businessman is better than his conservative rivals Sen. Ted Cruz and Gov. John Kasich.

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ANDREW HARNIK/AP
Christie doubled down on his endorsement of Trump, though said that he couldn't imagine being picked as his vice president.
Despite being one of the Donald’s most prominent surrogates, the governor shied away from a question about whether he would be on his ticket.

“I have a hard time believing that anyone would ask me to be vice president,” he said, pointing to the miniature version of himself.

“When you’re vice president, that’s basically what you do, right?

Follow on Twitter@CKozalBrennan.

cbrennan@nydailynews.com
 
Yall didnt know yo boy freddygoodbud could read minds...Im so good I could read that shit over a gotdam tube video... to prove my abilities..

let me take a peep into

what that big ass side of beef head
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was was thinking.. This is some real shit Im doing....


"damn them eight cheeseburgers from the cafe sure was delicious, I wonder what kind of cheese that was... couldnt have been american...

it had a sharp taste... maybe chedder but it was kind of spicy...

maybe it was that pepper jack..

I shouldve ordered four more for the road...

Trump sure smells funny......

I think I feel a fart coming on..."
 
Chris Christie ‘turned over his political testicles,’ Ted Cruz manager says, dismissing governor’s attack on senator


NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Thursday, July 21, 2016, 11:17 AM
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Governor Chris Christie ripped into Ted Cruz Wednesday night.
(ROBYN BECK/AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

61 PHOTOSVIEW GALLERY
New York Daily News front pages on the presidential election

The quip,first reported by Buzzfeed News, came a day after Christie ripped into Cruz for his Wednesday night RNC speech — an address in which the one-time 2016 refused to endorse Trump.

Ted Cruz refuses to say if he’s voting for Donald Trump

“I think it was awful. And quite frankly, I think it was something selfish,” Christie told CNNafter Cruz was booed off stage. “I think you saw at the end of the speech that the crowd was waiting for him to do the right thing and realized that he wasn't going to do it.”

Christie insisted that Cruz and the rest of the Republican presidential wannabes signed a “loyalty pledge” at the beginning of the primary season, binding them into supporting the eventual nominee.

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Ted Cruz refused to endorse Donald Trump in his Wednesday night RNC speech.
(ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES)
“It's his job to keep his word,” Christie barked.

On Thursday,Cruz doubled down on his decision to not endorse. He told a room of Texas delegates that he would not vote for Hillary Clinton but said he refuses to be a “servile puppy” to Trump, who once viciously attacked his father and wife. He signed the pledge before Trump went after his family, he insisted.

Ted Cruz booed at RNC after refusing to endorse Donald Trump

The Texas senator said Trump knew well in advance that he wasn’t going to get an endorsement: Cruz submitted a draft of his speech to the billionaire days before the convention.

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Cruz said Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump knew about the speech days in advance.
(JOE RAEDLE)
Roe repeated that assertion on the radio show.

"Mr. Trump made a call two days ago to Ted and wished him luck at the convention and on his speech, asking him for an endorsement and Ted directly declined," Roe said. "And Mr. Trump heard that."
 
Chris Christie Is Over
Trump’s greatest gift to the GOP may be the distraction he’s provided from other party meltdowns.

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Even though 2016 appears to be the year of painful, public disqualification from higher office, you may be forgiven for not noticing the extraordinary implosion of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie. After all, the Trump surrogate and White House Transition chair has benefitted from his early endorsement of the Republican presidential nominee in unusual fashion: Christie’s power in the Grand Ole Party has decreased, rather than increased. The likelihood of a plum position in the Trump administration—Attorney General, perhaps, since Christie was spurned as the Republican running mate—is decidedly dim, what with the presently apocalyptic predictions about November 8.

Instead, Trump’s gift to Christie has been shadow: the top Republican’s national meltdown has obscured that of the one-time rising Republican star and sitting New Jersey governor. But make no mistake—Christie’s is a fall of epic proportions, precipitated by an unfathomably petty revenge plot. The contrast of the two, the top-heavy-ness of the fallout compared to the insignificance of the initial transgression, would be comic, were it not so tragic. Remember that in November of 2012, Governor Christie had a 72 percent approval rating. Today, it stands at 21 percent.

While most of America has been busy digesting a nearly-daily intake of sexual assault allegations, paranoid screeds about a rigged election, and a wildly vituperative back and forth between party elders and their Republican leader, Governor Christie’s political career has been quietly, steadily unraveling.

There are some who will point to the governor’s early and eager embrace of Trump as the beginning of his political demise (others may point to his wife’s obvious disdain for the man for whom her husband was putting his reputation on the line), but the ongoing trial of Christie aides Bridget Kelly and Bill Baroni for their roles in the Bridgegate scandal has revealed a culture of craven and unusually vindictive acts (even for New Jersey pols). The testimonies are * (former Deputy Chief of Staff Kelly and former Port Authority official and one-time Christie henchman, David Wildstein) have now testified under oath that Christie knew of the lane closures—ones that would strand thousands of motorists on the George Washington Bridge—in advance. Prosecutors have maintained that the lanes were closed by Kelly and Baroni as retribution against the mayor of Fort Lee, Mark Sokolich, who refused to endorse Christie during the governor’s reelection campaign, and whose residents were most affected by the obscene traffic delays, (the defense teams have maintained their clients’ innocence against nine charges of corruption and fraud).

On Friday, Kelly testified that she reviewed the plan with Christie on August 12, 2013—nearly a month before the lanes were closed for an alleged “traffic study.” This directly contradicts what Christie has maintained all along, most famously in his 108 minute-long press conference on January 9 of 2014, immediately following the Bridgegate allegations—saying he had no knowledge of the lane closures:

“I had no knowledge or involvement in this issue, in its planning or it execution,” said Christie, “and I am stunned by the abject stupidity that was shown here.”

The fact that three of his consiglieres have testified exactly otherwise is very bad for Christie, but it’s perhaps the stuff the governor did afterwards that is unprecedented.

Three days into the traffic mayhem, Kelly says that she and the governor discussed the lane closures at a 9/11 memorial service. By then, Mayor Sokolich was frantically trying to get the lanes reopened, telephoning Christie aide Bill Baroni to communicate his furor. Christie and his team, apparently, found this funny:

“Mr. Wildstein testified that Mr. Baroni delighted in [Mayor Sokolich’s] frustration, so much so that his mocking of Mr. Sokolich’s “it’s maddening” became an inside joke. And Mr. Baroni, he said, bragged to the governor about the scheme at a September 11th memorial service, telling him that there were enormous traffic jams in Fort Lee and that Mr. Sokolich’s calls were not being returned.”

Baroni, by the way, never called Mayor Sokolich back. In his testimony, he couldn’t explain why:

“I have asked myself that question a thousand times,” Mr. Baroni said, sitting on the stand and shaking his head. “I think of it first thing in the morning, the last thing at night.”

There are, ahem, probably a few reasons that the Christie aide did not feel like placating his boss’s chosen adversary. For Baroni, this is certainly abominable behavior, but for the sitting governor of New Jersey to relish in the pain directed at citizens of New Jersey, while attending an event to commemorate the deaths of (among others) citizens of New Jersey on 9/11 is not just illustrative of a robust mean streak: it suggests moral hazard.

If anyone out there doesn’t remember why Christie failed so miserably in his quest for president, this episode is a useful refresher: Christie is a bully.
Perhaps unbelievably—or, actually, completely believably—Christie allegedly remained incensed when the Port Authority finally succeeded in opening the traffic lanes back up. By Friday, September 13, Patrick Foye, Executive Director of the Port Authority (an appointee of Governor Andrew Cuomo), had succeeded in reversing the lane closures when he was “beseeched” by Christie aide Baroni, to “reclose the lanes.”

Foye reminded Baroni that because of the delays caused by the lane closures “someone could have died,” but Baroni pressed on, urging Foye to close the lanes once again.

“He said the issue was important to Trenton,” Mr. Foye testified. “I took that to be the governor’s office.”

According to Foye, Baroni was undeterred—and tried once more to get the traffic snarled.

When Foye refused, Baroni menaced, “Trenton will call Albany.”

If there was any doubt that Baroni was acting on behalf of governor Christie, on Monday, Bridget Kelly testified she heard governor Christie say on a conference call that he had told Governor Cuomo “to tell Pat Foye to fuck off.”

To be clear: men, women and children had been stranded on the busiest bridge in the world for five days, at the start of the school year, the week of 9/11 commemorations and the celebration of Yom Kippur—inflicting unknown hardship on countless families and offices and businesses. And yet for Governor Christie, this anguish, we are to believe, wasn’t enough. He wanted the lanes closed again and had no use for anyone who thought otherwise. If anyone out there doesn’t remember why Christie failed so miserably in his quest for president, this episode is a useful refresher: Christie is a bully.

On this particular count, the trial has been devastating for the governor. Bridget Kelly may be the one on trial, but she has mounted an emotional defense predicated on Christie being a tyrant. Kelly alleges that she was terrified of the governor: of retribution for not following his orders, of scheduling the wrong meeting, of being shut out of his inner circle. On the stand, she recounted an episode where Christie threw a water bottle at her, as punishment for a tedious request:

Kelly said she was discussing the program for a press conference related to a fire in the Jersey Shore town of Seaside Heights when Christie exploded at her three years ago.

“He had a water bottle in his hand and he said, ‘What the f--k do you think I am? A f-----g game show host,” Kelly said, her voice cracking.

The governor then hurled the bottle at her, Kelly testified.

“I moved out of the way and it hit my arm,” the sobbing mother of four added.

“You're afraid of the governor?” defense lawyer Michael Critchley asked her.

“Yes, yes,” she replied.

“Sobbing mother of four” plus “thrown water bottle” is light years away from the Chris Christie that America thought it knew, way back in 2012 when he was the blue state Republican who rolled up his sleeves and hugged a Democratic president in the wake of a devastating hurricane. Back then, Christie was a straight talker with a heart of gold: screaming curse words at a single mother of four and throwing objects at her was not part of the profile. Now it is.

Christie chronicler and WNYC reporter Matt Katz has been covering the trial in New Jersey, and I asked him whether he thought Kelly’s defense was convincing.* Was it believable that Christie, behind the scenes, might have been so tyrannical? Katz didn’t hesitate in his response:

“It’s highly credible, as far as I’m concerned,” he said. “In his first term, there were literally zero unauthorized leaks to the media of any consequence. There were staffers who would stand behind Republican legislators to make sure they voted the right way! Christie had absolute control. It was the most impressive thing about his governance, actually—how he had the establishment petrified.”

Then again, Katz added, “Some people adored him. He led with a hug and a shiv.”

Either way, Christie’s second term is proving to be quite different than his first one: that blustery charm is nowhere to be seen, and the public has instead been left with stories of brutish cruelty, of power run amok—as Christie himself has slunk quietly to stage right, willfully camouflaged by Trump’s shadow.

To that end, much ink has been spilled on Trump and his hijacking of the establishment, his broad disavowal of facts—a disregard for the norms of democracy that seems to be unprecedented. As it turns out, you can judge a candidate by the company he keeps. And for Chris Christie and Donald Trump, this appears to be doubly true.
 
  • STASI: Donald Trump played Rudy Giuliani and Chris Christie, and they deserve it

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Chris Christie literally stood by Trump's side on the campaign trail.
(ANDREW HARNIK/AP)
Thank you Bloomberg for destroying NYC with ugly mall stores

But then everything changed. As I also told you, son-in-law Jared Kushner and by extension, Trump’s daughter Ivanka,would never have allowed Christie — the guy who put Jared’s father in jail — to play a big role in Trump’s administration. That would be like Shelly Silver inviting Preet Bharara to join Weitz and Luxenberg once he gets sprung.


17 PHOTOSVIEW GALLERY
Donald Trump's road to the White House as President-elect

Then, Christie’s top aidesadmitted on the stand that he knew about the George Washington Bridge closures, and theywere convicted. Oops.

And if you believe Donald hadn’t counted on this before using Christie, knowing he’d be able toss him to the curb without looking disloyal, well, have I got a bridge to sell you.

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New Jersey Governor Chris Christie has no reason to scratch his head about being tossed aside by Donald Trump.
(KATHERINE TAYLOR/EPA)
Admittedly, Donald did scare the hell out of me when he brought Rudy-the-loony onboard. But early on, it became as clear as unfracked water what Donald’s game plan seemed to be.

Donald Trump offers Jeff Sessions Attorney General spot

Desperate-to-return-to-his-glory-days-Rudy was willing to act like Dr. Strangelove on meth. He was willing to hand deliver whatever Trump wanted out there.


18 PHOTOSVIEW GALLERY
Newspaper headlines from around the world react to Donald Trump's presidential win

Rudy said things that even shameless Donald was ashamed to say aloud. Like? Likecalling Trump a genius for losing $916 million big ones. When they go low, he went lower.

Who, besides failed “crime busting” prosecutor Rudy (he never got a conviction of John Gotti, nor of the Wall Streeters he dragged out in cuffs, or the ones he arrested despite sending in 50 federal marshals) would be willing to lay himself that low?

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Rudy Giuliani (l.) and Chris Christie may be among the election's biggest losers.
(MIKE SEGAR/REUTERS)
Oh, right, that would be the guy who’d pimped himself out to so many foreign countries that doing the same for a possible future President would be like getting the golden ticket on “American Idol.” Maybe nobody told him it was cancelled.

Giuliani top State Dept. pick; Trump ditches reporter pool again

Oops.

Then suddenly, mysteriously, stories about Rudy’s entangling foreign alliances started leaking again, such as the one about how he took big bucks from the exiled Iranian party, Mujahedin e-Khalq, to give a speech in D.C., which called upon the state department to take the group off the terrorist list. What bad luck!

And then, as Politico pointed out, Trump’s potential secretary of state took money from Qatar, Venezuela and Iranian exiles. Oops.

Without warning, more candidates with applications for secretary of state started showing up at Donald’s door than Americans with citizenship requests at the Canadian embassy. Oops.

Donald Trump starts assembling cabinet, with Chris Christie out

Rudy might still resurrect, but withMitt Romney and Nikki Haley, among others being recruited, the President-elect seems to be, er, holding Trump. Again.
 
Chris Christie claims he turned down offers for several positions in Trump’s cabinet
BY Adam Edelman
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Sunday, December 11, 2016, 4:03 PM
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New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie claims that, contrary to popular belief, he hasn’t been getting completely snubbed by President-elect Trump.
(Carolyn Kaster/AP)

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who was passed over as a candidate to be Donald Trump's vice president, demoted as his transition chair and whose preference to be the next Republican National Committee chair was rebuffed by the mogul, claims to have turned down several offers to serve in the President-elect's cabinet, according to a report Sunday.

Christie, who after ending his own presidential bid in February became a loyal Trump surrogate and adviser before falling out of Trump's inner-circle after he won the election, claims he turned down offers to be the President-elect's secretary of homeland security and secretary of veterans affairs, NJ.com reported.

Sources told the publication that he also turned down an offer to be the ambassador to Italy.

Before the election, Christie had been thought of as a contender to be Trump's attorney general, but he was never offered the post, NJ.com reported.

Donald Trump starts assembling cabinet, with Chris Christie out

Christie had also been known to be a finalist to be Trump's No. 2 but was passed over for Mike Pence.

Christie's failure to land a role in Trump's administration marks a stunning fall from grace for the governor, who as recently as October seemed to be enjoying a strong relationship with the mogul and was chairing his transition effort.

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Christie said he turned down offers to be the President-elect's secretary of homeland security and secretary of veterans affairs.
(Mel Evans/AP)
But a week after Trump's win, Christie, still plagued by the Bridgegate scandal, was demoted within the team and replaced with Pence.

The move was thought to be a result of the fractious relationship between Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner and Christie, who as a U.S. attorney in 2005 jailed Kushner's father, real estate mogul Charles Kushner, for tax evasion and election fraud. The younger Kushner has denied playing any role in having Christie demoted.

Chris Christie will not be next RNC chairman

Then, last week, Christie signaled that he was interested in succeeding Reince Priebus as the Republican National Committee chairman, but was snubbed, once again, for the role.

As President, Trump would have had no formal role in naming the GOP's next boss — the chairman is elected to a two-year term by voting members of the Republican National Committee — but could have helped to build support for a preferred candidate.

Christie, meanwhile, has said he plans to finish out his second gubernatorial term, ending in January 2018, and will be an "informal adviser" to Trump.
 
Chris Christie cradles nachos during faceoff with Cubs fan
By David K. Li

July 30, 2017 | 6:08pm | Updated


New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie got in the face of a Chicago Cubs fan in Milwaukee on Sunday — all while keeping an iron grip on his bowl of nachos.

Christie was walking down the aisle, snack in hand, when he was razzed by a Cubs fan, according to footage tweeted by WISN.

He got into a brief stare-off with the fan, faces about a foot apart, before Christie sarcastically told him: “You’re a big shot!”

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Chris Christie booed mercilessly after catching foul ball at Mets game


The Cubs fan nonchalantly replied: “I appreciate that.”

The confrontation happened seconds before Victor Caratini, a rookie backup for the Cubs, blasted a seventh-inning, tie-breaking homer. The Cubs won, 4-2.

This was the second time in less than two weeks the remarkably unpopular governor has caused a ballpark stir.

He caught a foul ball at a Cardinals-Mets game at Citi Field on July 18 and eagle-eyed Amazins fans immediately identified him — and unleashed a chorus of boos.

Christie is in Milwaukee this weekend visiting his son, who works for the Brewers.

And this wasn’t the first snack-in-hand brouhaha that Christie’s had, caught on tape.

Back in 2012, the governor — while enjoying an ice cream cone on a Seaside Heights boardwalk — shouted a passerby, who made an unkind remark about his education policy.

“You’re a real big shot,” Christie yelled, not losing a drop of ice cream. “You’re a real big shot shooting your mouth off.”
 
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Though we might miss laughing at his antics, we will NOT miss Chris Christie as New Jersey's DISASTROUS governor! MSNBC's supercut of his worst moments is a HYSTERICAL send off...
 
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