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Tag: chris christie

  • 12/3: Face The Nation

    12/3: Face The Nation

    12/3: Face The Nation – CBS News


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    This week on “Face the Nation,” House Intelligence Committee chair Rep. Mike Turner tells “Face the Nation” that the U.S. is assisting Israel in finding Hamas leadership and identifying the “gaps” in intelligence ahead of the Oct. 7 attack. Plus, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie on the Republican party and the 2024 race.

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  • “Anybody trying to predict” 2024 GOP race is “just shooting in the dark,” Chris Christie says

    “Anybody trying to predict” 2024 GOP race is “just shooting in the dark,” Chris Christie says

    “Anybody trying to predict” 2024 GOP race is “just shooting in the dark,” Chris Christie says – CBS News


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    Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who is seeking the 2024 Republican nomination for president, tells “Face the Nation” that although polls show former President Donald Trump with a lead in the race for the 2024 Republican nomination, “anybody trying to predict this is just shooting in the dark.”

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  • Chris Christie to visit Israel to meet with families of hostages held by Hamas

    Chris Christie to visit Israel to meet with families of hostages held by Hamas

    Merrimack, New Hampshire — Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie will visit Israel this weekend, where he plans to meet with the family members of abducted civilians, Israeli Defense soldiers and government officials.

    At a town hall on Thursday, he said, “Tomorrow night, I’m leaving to go to Israel because I want to see it for myself.” 

    Christie will be the first Republican presidential hopeful to visit Israel since the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks. He said, “I don’t think you can try and be president of the United States and be afraid to go and see what’s happening on the ground.” Adding, “If you really want to lead, you need to go over and show the people of Israel that one person running for president of the United States cares enough to get on an airplane.”

    The trip was first reported by CNN.

    Christie told reporters that late last week the Israeli foreign ministry had contacted him. “They said they appreciated the things I was saying and the stance I was taking,” he said.

    Shortly after Hamas’s surprise attack on Israel in early October, Christie tweeted,  “We must do whatever it takes to support the State of Israel in its time of grave danger, and we must end the scourge of Iran-backed terrorism.”

    He has defended Israel, telling Fox News two days after Hamas’ assault, “The Israelis have an absolute right to defend themselves and to fair it out and eliminate those people in Hamas who perpetrated this horrible attack.”

    Christie is also a proponent of providing aid to both Israel and Ukraine and has made itcentral  to his campaign. In August, Christie visited Ukraine and met with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

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  • GOP Candidates Got Away With Fake Claims About Abortion At Their Debate (Again)

    GOP Candidates Got Away With Fake Claims About Abortion At Their Debate (Again)

    A day after Democrats and abortion rights advocates chalked up a string of electoral victories around the country, GOP presidential candidates on Wednesday night appeared to have learned nothing from their party’s losses.

    During the third Republican primary debate, moderator Kristen Welker of NBC News asked the five presidential hopefuls how they see their party’s path forward on the issue of abortion, given that they keep losing elections over their attacks on women’s reproductive rights. Most doubled down on their opposition to abortion, and then made nonsensical claims about Democrats advocating for no restrictions on abortion in any scenario.

    The moderators did nothing to call them out for it, either.

    “Let’s just be clear,” said Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. “The Democrats have taken a position they will not identify the point at which there should be any protection, all the way up until birth. That is wrong and we cannot stand for that.”

    “I am 100% pro-life … I would certainly, as president of the United States, have a 15-week national limit,” said Sen. Tim Scott (S.C.). “I would not allow California, Illinois or New York to have abortion up until the day of birth.”

    Scott went on to say he thinks “it’s unethical and immoral to allow for abortions up until the day of birth,” which, to be clear, is not something that anybody is calling for, anywhere.

    “We have the opportunity to stop that reckless behavior,” Scott vowed.

    Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), a GOP presidential contender, said he thinks “it’s unethical and immoral to allow for abortions up until the day of birth.” Nobody is calling for doing this, anywhere.

    Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie briefly laid out why he thinks abortion rights should be decided on a state-by-state basis. But then he, too, waded into the made-up claim about Democrats wanting people to be able to have abortions while delivering babies at full term.

    “In my home state of New Jersey, it goes up to nine months that you can get an abortion,” Christie said. “I find that morally reprehensible. But that is what the people in my state voted for.”

    Wednesday night’s debate is not the first time the GOP candidates have spread misinformation about abortion. Many of the same claims, including that people were getting abortions up until birth, were on full display during the first Republican debate in August.

    And it’s still not true. While some Democrats have supported allowing abortion later in pregnancy to protect the life and health of the pregnant person, it is not true that Democrats support abortions of healthy pregnancies up until the moment of birth ― or that they are happening at all.

    The reality is that abortions later in pregnancy are extremely rare. Fewer than 1% of abortions even happen at 21 weeks or later, and after 26 weeks, even fewer are carried out and they are generally for pregnant people facing emergency health situations. A fetus is usually able to survive outside the womb at around 24 weeks, which is considered the viability threshold.

    Abortion has been a sticky issue for Republicans, and more so than ever in the year since the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson overturned the national right to abortion. Since then, GOP-fueled abortion bans and attempts to restrict abortion have proved deeply unpopular with voters. Democrats have been campaigning heavily on a pro-choice agenda, promising to protect reproductive rights — a stance that has been credited with propelling them to victory in crucial races.

    Democrats racked up more electoral wins around the country on Tuesday night. In Ohio, voters approved a constitutional amendment ensuring access to abortion. In Virginia, Democrats took control of the state House and cemented their hold on the state Senate, delivering a huge setback to GOP Gov. Glenn Youngkin and his plans to push through a 15-week abortion ban. Meanwhile, voters in deep red Kentucky reelected a Democratic governor whose campaign centered on protecting abortion rights.

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, another GOP presidential contender, accused Democrats of refusing to "identify the point at which there should be any protection, all the way up until birth. That is wrong and we cannot stand for that.” This is not Democrats' position on abortion.
    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, another GOP presidential contender, accused Democrats of refusing to “identify the point at which there should be any protection, all the way up until birth. That is wrong and we cannot stand for that.” This is not Democrats’ position on abortion.

    GIORGIO VIERA via Getty Images

    Vivek Ramaswamy said Wednesday that he wanted to talk about abortion — as a man.

    “They say men have trouble speaking on this issue,” Ramaswamy said, without saying who has actually said that. “I don’t think we need to be that way.”

    He went on to talk about the accuracy of paternity tests, a story once told by Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, and then called for greater “sexual responsibility for men” because ultimately, he said, abortions aren’t about women’s rights.

    “It’s not men’s rights versus women’s rights,” Ramaswamy declared. “It’s about human rights.”

    Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, the only woman on the stage, was the only candidate who appeared to have learned something from her party’s string of electoral losses.

    In a noticeable change of tune from the first GOP debate, where she demanded that President Joe Biden reveal where he would draw the line on abortions, Haley said Wednesday that abortion is a personal issue for everyone. She said even though she’s pro-life, now that Roe v Wade has been overturned, it’s time to stop attacking women and find consensus.

    “Let’s make sure we encourage adoptions. Let’s make sure we make contraception accessible. Let’s make sure none of these state laws put women in jail or give her the death penalty for getting an abortion,” Haley said. “Let’s focus on how to save as many babies as we can and support as many moms as we can and stop the judgment. We don’t need to divide America over this issue anymore.”

    She drew some of the loudest applause of the night.

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  • ‘Melania’s Worst Nightmare’: Jimmy Kimmel Shares Truly Unnerving Trump Footage

    ‘Melania’s Worst Nightmare’: Jimmy Kimmel Shares Truly Unnerving Trump Footage

    “It’s a who’s who of who has no chance to beat Donald Trump,” Kimmel declared, referring to the five as “dopefuls” instead of hopefuls.

    “But it is ridiculous to have these debates without the frontrunner,” he noted. “You know things have gone sideways when you’re watching something and you think, ‘God, I wish Donald Trump was there.’”

    So Kimmel gave Trump his own debate ― one where he’s battling himself:

    “That’s like Melania’s worst nightmare come true,” Kimmel said.

    See more of Kimmel’s take on Trump ― including the former president’s latest legal developments in New York ― in his Wednesday night monologue:

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  • Trump’s Rivals Pass Up Their Chance

    Trump’s Rivals Pass Up Their Chance

    “We’ve become a party of losers,” the conservative businessman Vivek Ramaswamy declared during the opening minutes of tonight’s Republican primary debate in Florida. He bemoaned the GOP’s lackluster performance in Tuesday’s elections, and then he identified the Republican he held personally responsible for the party’s defeats. Was this the moment, a viewer might have wondered, that a top GOP presidential contender would finally take on Donald Trump, the absent frontrunner who hasn’t deigned to join his rivals on the debate stage?

    Of course not.

    Ramaswamy proceeded to blame not the GOP’s undisputed leader for the past seven years but Ronna McDaniel, the party functionary unknown to most Americans who chairs the Republican National Committee. After calling on McDaniel to resign, Ramaswamy then attacked one of the debate moderators, Kristen Welker of NBC News, before turning his ire on two of his onstage competitors, Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis.

    The moment was a fitting encapsulation of a debate that, like the first two Republican primary match-ups, all but ignored the candidate who wasn’t there. Five Republicans stood on the Miami stage tonight—Ramaswamy, Haley, DeSantis, Chris Christie, and Tim Scott—and none of them are likely to be elected president next year. The candidate of either party most likely to win the election is Trump, who held a rally a half hour away. His putative challengers barely uttered his name.

    NBC’s moderators tried to force the issue at the start. Lester Holt asked each of the candidates to explain why they should be president and Trump should not. Haley and DeSantis, who are now Trump’s closest competitors (a modest distinction), offered some mild criticism. The Florida governor chastised Trump for increasing the national debt and failing to get Mexico to pay for his Southern border wall. “I thought he was the right president at the right time. I don’t think he’s the right president now,” was the most that Haley, who was Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations, could muster. Only Christie, the former New Jersey governor who has become Trump’s fiercest GOP critic on the campaign trail, assailed the former president with any relish. “Anybody who’s going to be spending the next year-and-a-half of their life focusing on keeping themselves out of jail cannot lead this party or this country,” Christie said.

    And with that, Trump became an afterthought for the remainder of the debate. The evening featured plenty of substance, as the candidates offered mostly robust defenses of Israel in its war with Hamas, denounced rising anti-Semitism on college campuses, and disputed how much support the U.S. should give Ukraine. At the behest of moderator Hugh Hewitt, they spent several minutes discussing the optimal size of America’s naval fleet.

    The spiciest exchanges involved Ramaswamy and Haley, who made no effort to hide their disdain for one another. Ramaswamy drew boos from the audience after he criticized Haley’s hawkish foreign policy by calling her “Dick Cheney in three-inch heels.” Later he invoked her daughter’s use of TikTok to accuse her of hypocrisy on China’s ownership of the social-media platform. “Keep my daughter’s name out of your voice,” Haley shot back. “You’re just scum.” Ramaswamy and Haley also went after DeSantis, though in less personal terms.

    That Ramaswamy would target Haley was not a surprise. She came into the debate as the challenger of the moment, having displaced Ramaswamy, whose candidacy has lost momentum since his breakout performance in the first GOP primary debate in August. He can partly blame Haley for his slide: Her mocking retort—“Every time I hear you, I feel a little bit dumber”—was the highlight of the last everyone-but-Trump pile-up in September. The former South Carolina governor’s consistency across both debates has helped her overtake DeSantis for second place in New Hampshire and gain on him in Iowa. Haley also fared the best in a hypothetical general-election match-up with Biden in a batch of swing-state polls released this week by The New York Times and Siena College.

    As my colleague Elaine Godfrey reported this week, Haley is appealing to primary voters who are “yearning for a standard-issue Republican”—a tax-cutting, socially conservative foreign-policy hawk who won’t have to spend the next several months fighting felony charges in courtrooms up and down the Eastern Seaboard. Her performance tonight—as steady as during the first two debates—seems unlikely to hurt her standing. The problem for Haley, as for the other contenders on tonight’s stage, is that less than half of the GOP electorate wants a standard-issue Republican. Trump still has a tight grip on a majority of GOP voters, and his lead over Biden in recent polling undermines his rivals’ argument that his nomination could cost the party next year’s election.

    If nothing else, each of these Trump-less debates offers his opponents a free shot to make the case against him, a platform to criticize the frontrunner without facing an immediate rebuttal. For the third time in a row, Haley and her competitors mostly passed up their chance. If they’re angling to be Trump’s running mate or emergency replacement, perhaps they’ve advanced their cause. But if their goal is to dislodge Trump as the nominee, opportunities like tonight’s are slipping away.

    Russell Berman

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  • Biggest winners and losers from third Republican primary debate

    Biggest winners and losers from third Republican primary debate

    Republican 2024 presidential contenders faced high stakes in the third primary debate, but some candidates fared better than others Wednesday night in Miami, Florida.

    Candidates sparred over issues from federal spending, Ukraine and China in the showdown, which arrived roughly two months before the first votes of the election will be cast in the Iowa caucuses. Five candidates—former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley; Florida Governor Ron DeSantis; ex-New Jersey Governor Chris Christie; South Carolina Senator Tim Scott; and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy—verbally wrangled on the stage.

    The GOP race front-runner, however, was again a no-show. Former President Donald Trump, who continues to hold a substantial lead over his Republican rivals, skipped the debate, as he did the first two. He has pointed to his poll numbers as the reason for his snubbing of the debates. Trump’s absence left the other five qualifying candidates aiming to prove they deserve the GOP nomination.

    Here’s an overview of who won and who lost on the big stage.

    Republican presidential candidates on Wednesday attend the party’s third primary debate at the Knight Concert Hall at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts in Miami, Florida. Candidates sparred over issues from China to federal spending.
    MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

    Winner: Israel

    Israel emerged as a major victor during the debate. Candidates rallied behind the nation amid its war against Hamas, which on October 7 launched thousands of missiles into Israel from the Gaza Strip. Israel has since cut off food, water and electricity to Gaza, launching its own attacks, including a ground operation.

    Candidates all voiced support for Israel, saying they would tell Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu he has the right and responsibility to respond to the Hamas attack.

    “The last thing we need to do is to tell Israel what to do. The only thing we should be doing is supporting them in eliminating Hamas,” Haley said.

    Loser: Ukraine

    Ukraine, however, emerged as a loser. Candidates, as in past debates, voiced disagreement over whether the United States should provide aid for Ukraine as it defends itself against the invasion from Russia. More traditional conservatives, such as Haley, have called for continued support, but more MAGA-aligned candidates have called for more limits on aid.

    DeSantis said he would not send U.S. troops to Ukraine, while Scott said he disagreed with coupling aid to Israel and Ukraine, a move that Ukraine aid supporters hope would boost its chances of passing Congress.

    Ramaswamy took a stronger stance against Ukraine, calling President Volodymyr Zelensky, who is Jewish, “a Nazi.”

    “[Ukraine] has celebrated a Nazi in its ranks, the comedian in cargo pants, a man called Zelensky,” he said.

    Winner: Donald Trump

    Moderators opened the debate by directly asking Trump’s rivals why they would make a better president than him. Candidates continued lines of attacks from previous debates—questioning why he is skipping the debate, and knocking him over the national debt.

    But those attacks have not proven to be effective, as Trump withstood them following the second debate, after which his poll numbers continued to hold steady.

    Loser: Vivek Ramaswamy

    Ramaswamy sparked boos from the crowd over launching a personal attack against Haley. The former South Carolina governor has supported a ban on TikTok, a Chinese-owned app that has come under scrutiny for national security concerns. She criticized Ramaswamy for using the app to campaign, and he responded by saying that Haley’s daughter previously used the social media platform.

    The remark elicited loud boos from the crowd, and Haley responded by calling him “scum.”

    As with the other candidates, Ramaswamy was tough on border control, but moved beyond the pack by suggesting that America build a wall on the northern border with Canada as well the southern border. “We need to skate to where the puck is going,” Ramaswamy said, despite northern border encounters making up 5% of all Customs and Border Patrol encounters in September 2023.

    Winner: Nikki Haley

    Haley faced new attacks from DeSantis about her record on China, but largely turned his critiques back on him, raising concerns about his recent record on the matter.

    Haley earned praise following the first two debates from analyst, who have said her past performances suggest she may be able to win over more moderate and independent voters. She held steady during Wednesday’s debate, drawing a contrast from other candidates on Ukraine and abortion, an issue that again proved difficult for Republicans in Tuesday night’s elections, which saw Republican defeats in Virginia’s legislative races and Kentucky’s gubernatorial race.

    She also earned praise from social media users for her response to Ramaswamy’s attack on her daughter’s past use of TikTok, telling him, “Leave my daughter out of your voice.”

    Losers: Ron DeSantis, Tim Scott

    DeSantis and Scott entered the debate in different positions. DeSantis needed a breakout moment during the debate to prove he can go head-to-head against Trump, whose polling lead has only grown since the last debate. Scott, meanwhile needed a particularly strong performance after struggling in the polls.

    Neither had any major slip-ups and remained steady, but they also lacked a major moment as they hope to boost their polling numbers.

    Loser: TikTok

    Republican candidates were united on banning social media app TikTok due to concerns that the Chinese government could access the personal data of American users. But the conversation extended past privacy to point to TikTok’s impact on young minds. “This is China trying to further divide the United States of America,” Christie said.

    The idea of a TikTok ban resonates with many Americans. In a March 2023 study by the Pew Research Center showed supporters of a ban outnumber opponents of a ban by more than 2 to 1.

    Winner: Debate Moderators

    Holt, Welker and Hewitt faced a separate challenge—controlling the candidates. The second debate in October received backlash from viewers after allowing candidates to frequently disrupt each other.

    Tonight’s moderators, however, took a different approach. Holt told the audience to “restrain” themselves when they erupted into thunderous applause early on in the debate.

    “Let’s not go down this road,” he said.

    Welker, meanwhile, took attack from Ramaswamy, who argued she should not be moderating the debate over conservative personalities such as Elon Musk or Tucker Carlson. However, she declined to engage in the attack, drawing praise on social media.

    “Smart move by Lester and Kristen Welker not to take the bait and give Vivek the attention he wanted from his cheap stunt,” wrote journalist Matt Lewis.

    Winner: Social Security … for Current Seniors

    All of the candidates on stage were effusive in their support for Social Security entitlements and made clear that they didn’t want to impact any current recipients. “My mama and every other mama out there — I will protect your social security,” said Scott.

    On the subject of keeping the program solvent, most evaded specific answers on whether the entitlement age should be raised.

    Christie came out as a clear supporter of raising the retirement age “a few years” for Americans in their 30s and 40s, but doesn’t think new funding should come from tax increases. “We are already overtaxed in this country and we shouldn’t raise taxes,” he said.

    Scott firmly said no to a raise on the retirement age. DeSantis seemed to lean away from a change to retirement age, noted that life expectancy is currently declining, so tethering entitlement dates to life expectancy doesn’t make sense.

    Both Christie and Haley brought up limitations on benefits for the wealthy, with Christie specifically calling out Warren Buffett by name.

    Ramaswamy was vague on solutions, but vowed to keep benefits for current seniors intact. When pushed for answers on entitlement reform for future generations, he responded “It’ll take a CEO from the next generation to do it.”