Friday, January 17, 2014

Gov. Chris Christie's Backroom Politics and Bullying Go Way Back—At Least to College

http://www.alternet.org/tea-party-and-right/gov-chris-christies-backroom-politics-and-bullying-go-way-back-least-college

Article Photo
 Embattled New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has a long history of political bullying, dating back at least to college, Talking Points Memo reports.
In the mid-1980s while attending the University of Delaware, Christie was accused of establishing a college political machine that rewarded those in his tight knit circle, while pushing others out of student government entirely, according to college newspaper archives. 
Students around the campus reacted to what they saw as quiet manipulation, one writing to the school paper about Christie’s “cronyism” and questioning the legitimacy of the future governor’s reign as president of the Delaware Undergraduate Student Congress. 
In 1983, Christie had run a successful election through his own line, The Campus Action Party, which also included his future wife, Mary Pat, running for the congress’s position of secretary on its slate. Christie’s Campus Action Party swept the election and nabbed all six available positions in student government in the process.
In April of 1984, Christie was about to graduate, yet his grip on power in the student government remained, ensuring that, despite his departure, his wife and his brother, Todd, would continue to sit in major leadership positions, with the former running unopposed.
this guy was aggressive then as now but this suggest that he nurtured those characteristics even before college, if reports are accurate he was too astute in political protocol to not have had some exposure.
In April of 1984, Christie was about to graduate, yet his grip on power in the student government remained, ensuring that, despite his departure, his wife and his brother, Todd, would continue to sit in major leadership positions, with the former running unopposed.
"People might have looked at the success that we accomplished in this year and felt that the ticket was too strong to beat," Mary Pat told the Review, the campus newspaper. 
Others thought more than just a reputable track record of accomplishments were the reason the two went unopposed. In a letter published in April of 1984, a self-described Student Congress member Richard Abbott suggested that Christie's democratic tactics left a lot to be desired, and his cronyism drove many away from student government as a whole. 
"Cronyism' in DUSC has caused frustration and disgust of many hard working members, and led to the resignation of five voting members by mid-year. WHY?" Abbott wrote according to Talking Points Memo. "Something is lacking in our student government. It is known as representative democracy."
Bullying by another name? the governor's political "talents" go way back.
would be a very interesting read to see where this power mad political education started, has to be some high school and grade school people he stepped on as well, somebody will step up or sell their "Chronicles of Christie" or "Born to be a Bully stories.