Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution

By Claude Sandroff

http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/03/chris_christies_new_jersey_rev.html

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New Jersey's Republican Governor Chris Christie may be the best thing to come out of the Garden State since The Sopranos ended its run. Christie has given the GOP faithful a reason not just to hope, but to exult. We conservatives are programmed to take deep breaths even after favorable election results, especially in the blue Northeastern states.

But in one of the most stunning two-month gubernatorial debuts in recent memory, Governor Christie has set a very high standard for state executives. When the state's leading newspaper, The Star-Ledger, can post a headline that reads, "Action Leaves Democrats Seething," you know the right person is in charge.

Reflecting a successful prosecutorial career, Christie began almost immediately to present his case against multi-generational Garden State profligacy. He spoke to the New Jersey legislature with unflinching simplicity a month after his swearing in: "New Jersey is in a state of financial crisis."

We shouldn't underestimate the importance of leaders who can recognize and state such simple truths, economic or otherwise. If such truths were so easily spoken, and the logical conclusions of over-indebtedness and over-taxation so easily drawn, we would have heard many similar fiscal crisis speeches from the likes of Arnold Schwarzenegger, David Paterson, and Barack Obama. But we have not. Instead, these three inept mediocrities are leading California, New York, and America toward the fiscal abyss.

Christie's speech is a gold mine of reasoned arguments defining fiscal conservatism and rationality. It should be required reading for every office-seeker, local or national. Its budget details are New Jersey's, but its broad general conclusions are universal. It is also a highly moral statement of fundamental principles, for Christie completely redefines the notion of economic fairness.

Fairness has been co-opted by socialists and other proponents of private property redistribution to justify nothing less than legalized theft. America's fairness czar, Barack Obama, is on the record as a true believer in sharing the wealth...for any uneven accumulation of wealth by individuals or nations is ipso facto proof of unfairness. Rich individuals must be brutally taxed so that income can be more justly distributed within a society. And internationally, wealthy nations, through global mechanisms -- carbon credits are the currently favored means -- must be forced to lift up poor ones.

How does Gov. Christie successfully condemn and destroy this pathologically evil liberal definition of fairness?
One state retiree, 49 years old, paid, over the course of his entire career, a total of $124,000 towards his retirement pension and health benefits. What will we pay him? $3.3 million in pension payments over his life, and nearly $500,000 for health care benefits -- a total of $3.8 million on a $120,000 investment. Is that fair?
And he continues.
A retired teacher paid $62,000 towards her pension and nothing -- yes, nothing -- for full family medical, dental, and vision coverage over her entire career. What will we pay her? $1.4 million in pension benefits and another $215,000 in health care benefit premiums over her lifetime. Is it "fair" for all of us and our children to have to pay for this excess?

Neither teacher unions nor public-sector workers will escape the wrath of Christie's logic or his morality. One month after his oratorical debut, Christie was prepared to put the flesh on his previously skeletal fiscal outline. He returned to fairness again:
[Is it] fair to have New Jersey taxpayers foot the bill for 100% of the health insurance costs of teachers and their families from the day they are hired until the day they die? Is it fair that teachers have a better, richer health plan than even state workers and pay absolutely nothing for it?

But no corner of the bloated bureaucracy is sacred. Christie pledges to reduce the staff levels of every department of state government; he has requested that $445 million be cut from municipal aid, especially to the most irresponsibly spendthrift cities; and he proposed a budget that would cut -- not merely reduce the level of expected increase, but actually cut -- spending. In implicit mocking reference to Obama, he stated that "t is a reduction of nearly 9% from the total amount the state spent last year. A 9% drop in one year in state spending -- now that is the change we deserve."

New Jersey is lucky to have Chris Christie, and so is America. Though hardly a charismatic figure, he has displayed a level of statesmanship more inspiring, insightful, visionary, and brave than almost any other figure in the country. America has seen with our current tyrannical and bankrupting president where vapid, narcissistic, charismatic leadership can lead. Perhaps now we're finally ready for merely competent leaders.

Claude can be reached at csandroff@gmail.com.
 

BCTTWR

EOG Dedicated
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Good stuff. Can't wait for Christie to campaign against the fraud Obama in 2012.
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Unbelievable that he is attacking schoolteachers, who probably make 30-40K a year to educate children, just because they get health benefits and a pension. 2938u4ji23

Maybe instead they should go after the Wall Street elites who gets tens or hundreds of millions (plus similar lifetime benefits) for playing with spreadsheets, destroying jobs and the economy, stealing millions from taxpayers/shareholders/employees, and running their companies into the ground.

If this is what all Republicans are like, I would rather have Obama and the other Democrats forever, despite their general inaction and very modest reform efforts. At least he did something with healthcare rather than continuing the exact same polices as Bush had.
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Unbelievable that he is attacking schoolteachers, who probably make 30-40K a year to educate children, just because they get health benefits and a pension.

Yeah well, it's time to defund every government-run school indoctrinating our children with left wing propaganda by implementing a voucher system.

Use the savings to pay off debt and increase the compensation/benefits for patriots who've earned it: the men and women serving in our armed forces.
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Yeah well, it's time to defund every government-run school indoctrinating our children with left wing propaganda by implementing a voucher system.

Use the savings to pay off debt and increase the compensation/benefits for patriots who've earned it: the men and women serving in our armed forces.

The government in this country is far from left-wing and hasn't been in a long time.

Regarding the compensation and benefits for the armed forces, I don't blame then for the failed war policies of the last 2 administrations. I agree that they are entited to fair compensation and health benefits, which are probably lacking at this time.
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

The government in this country is far from left-wing and hasn't been in a long time.

So kids aren't being indoctrinated by radical Marxists at taxpayer expense?

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:doh1
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

I don't even know how to respond to what you posted, other than to say it is one of the most ridiculous and off-topic posts I have seen. A family/neighborhood group having an Obama rally with the neighborhood kids (who seem quite happy doing it) has nothing to do with the US education system, whether there are liberal values imposed on schoolchildren, and whether teacher compensation/benefits are excessive.
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Friday, March 26, 2010

NJ's Gov. Christie targets spending 'addiction'

Beth DeFalco ASSOCIATED PRESS

TRENTON, N.J. | There's not a lot that's small about New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. The Republican is a big man with a big personality and a big problem - namely, closing a nearly $11 billion deficit in a state whose residents labor under the biggest property-tax burden in the country.

The former U.S. attorney got elected in November on a promise to make government smaller. And the straightforward - some would say in-your-face - way he is going about it is getting noticed.

Dubbed "Gov. Wrecking Ball" by one columnist, Mr. Christie has wasted no time trying to break lawmakers' "addiction to spending" and tearing down the political establishment that has pushed New Jersey's property taxes to an average of $7,300 per household.

Some say he has governed by fiat; he has signed 20 executive orders since taking office in January - eight on his first day alone. Among other things, the orders freeze regulations and subject unions to the same campaign restrictions as corporations. He has vetoed spending by various boards and barred state agencies from hiring lobbyists to influence state lawmakers.

He has also taken on the widespread abuses that have contributed to soaring pension costs. On Monday, he signed his first bills into law, making major pension changes that result in less generous benefits for all government workers.

Most contentious have been his attacks on teachers and public-sector unions, which are getting a 7 percent pay raise over two years but contribute little or nothing toward health care at a time when one in 10 New Jerseyans are out of work. This week, the governor called on all public school employees to agree to salary freezes for the coming year and to contribute to their health insurance.

Mr. Christie's budget proposal calls for laying off 1,300 public employees and looks to save $50 million by privatizing some state services.

"The leaders of the union who represent these teachers have used their political muscle to set up two classes of citizens in New Jersey: those who enjoy rich public benefits and those who pay for them," he said in his budget address last week.

This take-no-prisoners approach is getting national attention at a time when the Republican Party faces questions about its future.

"Is it wrong to love another man? Because I love Chris Christie," conservative talk-show host Rush Limbaugh said.

Jeff Henig, a professor of political science at Columbia University, suggested Mr. Christie may be taking advantage of the hard economic times to do what he wanted to do anyway -- reduce the size of government.

"All governors have to make cuts these days. Some portray this as a painful necessity, and others seem to do it with a certain element of enthusiasm, pleased to use the economic crunch as an opportunity to take steps they wanted to do all along," Mr. Henig said.

Mr. Christie makes no apologies for his straight-ahead approach.

"Here's the thing: People voted me to come here to act and to be decisive and to move this state in a different direction, and I'm doing it," he said.

So far, Mr. Christie has a good approval rating at 52 percent, but there have been snags and missed targets.

Two of his executive orders - including the campaign restrictions on unions - have been challenged. He might be back in court over the $1.3 billion in school funding that he is proposing to cut this year and next.

He could not fulfill a campaign promise to restore property tax rebates that were suspended. He vowed to lay off 20,000 public employees immediately, but so far that number is just 1,300. He said he didn't need legislative approval to make $2.2 billion in cuts to the current budget, then soon realized he did need lawmakers' endorsement.

The approachable Mr. Christie is as friendly as he is forceful, and has something his predecessor, Democrat Jon Corzine, a staggeringly rich man who made his fortune on Wall Street, never had: regular-guy appeal.

Unlike Mr. Corzine, who was stiff and awkward and seen as an outsider, Mr. Christie is all Jersey - born and raised. He struggles with his weight, he is a die-hard Mets fan, and he loves Bruce Springsteen. He tries to make it back home for dinner most nights.

Democratic state Sen. Loretta Weinberg, who ran for lieutenant governor on Mr. Corzine's unsuccessful ticket, called Mr. Christie's criticism of public workers immature. "To set up this 'we-and-they' is like a playground fight," she said.

But Bob Balerna of Willingboro, who owns a car dealership and some rental housing, said small-business owners are getting crushed by the economy, and Mr. Christie is doing something about it.

"Someone has to take a stand, and I'm behind him 100 percent," Mr. Balerna said. "Greatest thing I've ever done is to vote for him."
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

I don't even know how to respond to what you posted...

Neither do I. :doh1


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Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

NJ Gov. Christie Puts Lib Media in Their Place

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:finger004 :LMAO 91023i2ndw;l :whip: :houra
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Chris Christie vetoes legislative tax hike ? in two minutes

posted at 9:48 pm on May 21, 2010 by Allahpundit
<small>printer-friendly </small>


Question: How much of stuff like this is just Christie being Christie and how much of it is Christie knowing exactly, and I mean exactly, which buttons to push to get grassroots conservatives excited? Between insta-vetoing tax increases and tearing apart reporters, this guy seems to have a preternatural knack for gestures that will appeal to the righty base. Pretty soon he?ll be riding a horse and carrying a Winchester. He?s on the precipice of bona fide folk hero status.
It took about two minutes from the time Senate President Steve Sweeney certified the passage of the millionaires tax package for Gov. Chris Christie to veto the bills at his desk?

?What took you so long ?? asked Christie spokesman Michael Drewniak.

Christie sat at a wooden desk emblazoned with the seal of the state of New Jersey and swiftly signed vetoes.

?We?ll be back, governor,? said Sweeney.

?Alright, we?ll see,? said Christie.
The tax was a small hike on people who make in excess of $1 million annually. Initially the Democrats wanted the income threshold to be $400,000, but when Christie promised to veto that, they raised the threshold and dared him to block a tax on the really rich. Christie?s response:
?Let me be real clear on it,? he said. ?They can call it whatever they want to call it. They can package it however they want to package it. They can send it to me with a bow on it. They can send it to me in a nice box, gift-wrapped. They can throw it over the transom and leave it there and hope nobody smells it. No matter how they send it to me, it is going back. It is going back with a veto on it. We are not raising taxes in the state of New Jersey this year.?
The Journal, playing off his state roots, says he was ?Born to Veto.? WaPo lists him as currently the seventh-most influential Republican in the country, which, given how little he?s engaged thus far on national issues, is a testament to how he?s taken off among the base. Even Democratic stalwart Ed Rendell says he admires him. My only knock on him: His new-media operation stinks. There should have been a staffer standing by with a Flip video camera to capture Christie accepting the tax-hike bill and instantly cashiering it. I guarantee you that it would have gone viral, much as his dressing down of that reporter did. Get with the program, big man.
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Video: The obligatory ?Christie tells teacher to find a new job if she doesn?t like her pay? clip

Share639<script src="http://static.ak.fbcdn.net/connect.php/js/FB.Share" type="text/javascript"></script>
posted at 5:50 pm on May 26, 2010 by Allahpundit
<small>printer-friendly </small>


Via Cubachi. Yeah, we covered this last night, but (a) a daily allotment of ?common sense porn? does a body good and (b) this is so awesome that it might ? might ? replace Humpbot as the official Hot Air victory video. I?m not promising anything. I?m just sayin?.

You know what the best part of this is, aside from the teacher congratulating herself for doing it for the love after she just spent two minutes haranguing Christie about money? Apparently ? if it?s the same Rita Wilson ? she already makes in excess of $86,000. Perfect.
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brucefan

EOG Dedicated
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Video: The obligatory ?Christie tells teacher to find a new job if she doesn?t like her pay? clip

Share639<SCRIPT src="http://static.ak.fbcdn.net/connect.php/js/FB.Share" type=text/javascript></SCRIPT>
posted at 5:50 pm on May 26, 2010 by Allahpundit
<SMALL>printer-friendly </SMALL>

Via Cubachi. Yeah, we covered this last night, but (a) a daily allotment of ?common sense porn? does a body good and (b) this is so awesome that it might ? might ? replace Humpbot as the official Hot Air victory video. I?m not promising anything. I?m just sayin?.

You know what the best part of this is, aside from the teacher congratulating herself for doing it for the love after she just spent two minutes haranguing Christie about money? Apparently ? if it?s the same Rita Wilson ? she already makes in excess of $86,000. Perfect.







<EMBED src=http://www.youtube.com/v/aw0aBkt8CPA&hl=en_US&fs=1& width=425 height=344 type=application/x-shockwave-flash allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true">​


A politician with brass ones, love it :cheers
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Christie speaks in Washington DC, calling Newark schools 'absolutely disgraceful'<table style="border: 0px none; padding: 0px;"><tbody><tr><td>
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</td></tr></tbody></table>
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Governor Christie: Day of Reckoning

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Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Christie looks to privatize motor vehicle inspections, other services
Friday, July 9, 2010

Last updated: Saturday July 10, 2010, 3:02 PM
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BY CLAIRE HEININGER

State House Bureau

STATE HOUSE BUREAU
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New Jersey would close its centralized car inspection lanes and motorists would pay for their own emissions tests under a sweeping set of recommendations set to be released by the Christie administration today.

State parks, psychiatric hospitals and even turnpike toll booths could also be run by private operators, according to the 57-page report on privatization obtained by The Star-Ledger. Preschool classrooms would no longer be built at public expense, state employees would pay for parking and private vendors would dish out food, deliver health care and run education programs behind prison walls.

All told, the report says, New Jersey could save at least $210 million a year by delivering an array of services through private hands.

"The question has to be, ‘Why do you continue to operate in a manner that’s more costly and less effective?’ rather than, ‘Why change?’ " said Richard Zimmer, the former Republican congressman who chaired the task force.

It is unclear how many of the recommendations will be adopted by Governor Christie, who commissioned the report in March. Christie’s spokesman declined comment Thursday.

But the car inspection proposal is sure to stir up controversy in a state with a tortured history of privatizing emissions testing.

The report says that beginning next July, "New Jersey should withdraw entirely from direct participation in the vehicle inspection process." Before then, the state would develop a plan to certify service stations and other shops "to make the transition seamless for motorists and assure that private inspection fees will be transparent and reasonable."

The state would then sell the land where its facilities now operate.

The proposal would require breaking the state’s contract with Parsons Corp., which is two years into a five-year, $276 million deal to do emissions and mechanical inspections. The mechanical inspections were already phased out under the budget that went into effect July 1.

The state conducts more than 1.94 million initial inspections a year and pays for all of them. Drivers pay only if they fail the inspections and have to make repairs.

Zimmer pointed out that motorists are already paying for the system through their tax dollars.

Critics said Christie is returning to dangerous territory after Parsons’ early years of managing the inspection program were steeped in controversy. When the inspection network was opened in December 1999, it was plagued by computer malfunctions and frozen equipment that left drivers fuming in lines four hours long.

Hetty Rosenstein, New Jersey director of the Communications Workers of America state workers union, said the plans outlined in the report would create "bad service" and "less safety" while failing to save the state money.

But Zimmer stressed "stringent" controls will be put in place.

Despite past predictions that up to 2,000 public employees could lose their jobs to privatization, the report does not specify the number of layoffs to come. But its impact could be felt from parks — where private recreation firms would run concessions, operate facilities and perhaps collect a fee — to preschools.

The report says the state should end public funding to construct preschools and change rules to make it easier for private providers to run them.

David Sciarra, an attorney and advocate for children in the poorest districts where the state Supreme Court has mandated the preschool program, said the report is "misleading and erroneous" in claiming the private sector is being crowded out.

"If anything, the collaboration between districts and providers ... has grown stronger, and the private sector is an integral part of the program," he said. "They should go back to the drawing board on this one."

E-mail: cheininger@starledger.com
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Typical Republican tactics. He wants to take unionized government jobs that pay decent wages and benefits and turn them into private sector jobs. The private contractors would probably pay minimum wage and no benefits, and the decreased employee cost will be pocketed by the executives of the contracting companies. Not to mention the poor service and high welfare costs that will come from having such a large minimum wage workforce. Nobody will benefit from this except for a few executives, and the governor will get his kickback. 2938u4ji23
 
Re: Chris Christie's New Jersey Revolution (Smashing unions and liberalism in the Garden State)

Typical Republican tactics. He wants to take unionized government jobs that pay decent wages and benefits and turn them into private sector jobs. The private contractors would probably pay minimum wage and no benefits, and the decreased employee cost will be pocketed by the executives of the contracting companies. Not to mention the poor service and high welfare costs that will come from having such a large minimum wage workforce. Nobody will benefit from this except for a few executives, and the governor will get his kickback. 2938u4ji23

Taxpayers should not be subsidizing bloated wages and obscene pensions. 2938u4ji23
 
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