Christie was just one of a half-dozen potential GOP contenders for the White House who addressed the Republican Jewish Coalition conference this weekend in Las Vegas, laying the groundwork for their potential bids as the party waits to see whether Trump attempts another run for the Oval Office in 2024.
“We can no longer talk about the past and the past elections — no matter where you stand on that issue, no matter where you stand, it is over,” Christie said. “Every minute that we spend talking about 2020 — while we’re wasting time doing that, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer are laying ruin to this country. We better focus on that and take our eyes off the rearview mirror and start looking through the windshield again.”
In a subsequent interview with CNN, Christie said that with the 2022 elections looming, it is time for Trump to decide whether he wants to be “a leader for tomorrow or a figure of yesterday.” He added that he believes Trump can be a “very positive force for Republican candidates” in 2022 if he will “begin talking about the future and tell the truth about the election and move on.” But he acknowledged that he had “not a clue” about whether Trump would heed that advice.
When asked how he would advise Republican candidates in tough races next year who will have to navigate around the former President as they continue to try to court the moderate and suburban voters he alienated, the former New Jersey governor said he will urge them to “be yourself and not be scared.” He said they should not “worry about what the former President is going to do or not do,” because they have no control over his behavior regardless.
Christie said he will wait to make his own decision about 2024 until after the 2022 midterms when he has a better sense of what the political climate will be. But unlike potential contenders like former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, who have said they will not run if Trump does, Christie said he would not stand aside if Trump vies for a second term.
“Absolutely not. My decision will never be based on anybody else’s candidacy,” Christie told CNN. “It will be based on whether I believe I have the talent, the skill and the ability to be able to win. And anybody who says that they’ll step aside for anybody else, I’d say to you, doesn’t belong being president. If you don’t believe in yourself enough to stand up to anyone, then you can’t possibly stand up for everyone.”
Potential White House contenders hopeful about GOP gains in 2022
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has not said how Trump’s plans might affect his own White House aspirations, railed against the Biden administration’s Covid-19 regulations, arguing that he would not allow Florida to become a “biomedical security state.”
“We have to stand right now against these Biden mandates,” DeSantis said Saturday. “He does not have the constitutional authority to do what he’s trying to do. And if he can get away with this, trust me, you ain’t seen nothing yet. They’re going to do more and more and more.”
“If they can violate your freedoms on this issue, they are going to violate your freedoms on other issues,” DeSantis added. “We, as a free people, should just say: ‘No.’ ‘No mandates.’ ‘No restrictions.’ We are going to take our freedom back and we have to do that right now,” the Florida governor said to applause.
At least 27 states are suing over the Occupational Safety and Health Administration rule laying out the vaccine mandates, which does allow employees to forgo the Covid-19 vaccine as long as they provide a verified negative test to their employer each week and wear a face mask in the workplace.
White House deputy press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said during Thursday’s press briefing that the administration believes that the vaccine rules will hold up to the court challenges that are being brought by Republican governors.
Both Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem also predicted that voters next year would revolt against what they view as government overreach when it comes to Covid-19 regulations. Noem, who touted the fact that her state did not “mandate anything,” told RJC attendees Friday night that the pandemic served as a chance to re-educate her state “about the importance of making sure you didn’t allow the government to make your decisions for you.”
“I saw the liberals and the left use fear to control people, and I also saw people roll over and just give up their freedoms,” Noem said. “Because the government said that they couldn’t go to work, they didn’t go to work. Because the government said that you couldn’t get together in large groups, they gave up their freedom of assembly. Because they told them that they couldn’t go to church, they gave up their freedom of religion.”
“What I said was I was going to trust my people and let them use personal responsibility,” she said.
Cruz, who received the most resounding cheers and standing ovation at the RJC gathering as a longtime ally and friend to the organization, predicted that 2022 could be a wave election if Republicans “stand and fight and engage on substance.” He argued that Trump had provided a model in that regard: “The man has a steel backbone and he doesn’t back down,” he said to applause.
The Texas senator said he was looking forward to a time in 2023 when he would bump into a man in overalls in the US Capitol “coming to change the sign on Nancy Pelosi’s office.”
“Nancy’s gonna get on her broom,” the Texas senator said to laughter as he referred to the House Speaker. “No, Okay… She’s going to get on her private jet, the USS Broom, and fly back to California.”
“Joe Biden and Kamala Harris — the rest of the clown car in Washington, is setting the stage for a victory in 2022, a bigger victory in 2024, and we are going to bring this country back,” Cruz said. “The men and women here are going to bring this country back — we are going to do it together, because America is worth fighting for.”
This story has been updated with additional developments Saturday.
More News
ABC News’ President, Kim Godwin, to Step Down
Opinion | Marjorie Taylor Greene Is Not as Powerful as She Thinks She Is
How to Know When a Good Dog Has Gone Bad