New York Post

Take lesson from Christie

- ISAAC SCHORR

AND then there were four — but really only two — viable challenger­s to Donald Trump for the Republican presidenti­al nomination. The only two candidates on stage at Wednesday night’s debate with a fighting chance of moving into the White House come 2025 are Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley.

Going into the evening, it seemed safe to assume that ex-New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Vivek Ramaswamy’s presences would only matter insofar as they added to or detracted from DeSantis and Haley’s performanc­es.

Haley was put on the defensive from the beginning, with both DeSantis and Ramaswamy pillorying her at just about every opportunit­y. Ramaswamy, in his usual, intolerabl­e way, spent his time trying to insult his way to relevance.

On his own terms, DeSantis had a few strong moments, providing particular­ly sharp answers on gender-transition treatments for minors and the fentanyl crisis.

Yet those moments were undermined by Christie, who rebuked him on multiple occasions for failing to answer questions directly.

And as for Christie, he enjoyed his finest hour. Indeed, he justified the very existence of his campaign — which had until then seemed quixotic at best and vain at worst — with his performanc­e on Wednesday.

After being ignored for nearly the first 20 minutes of the debate, Christie rightly observed that the other candidates were avoiding bringing up Trump to the detriment of themselves and the voters.

“The truth needs to be told,” said Christie. “He is unfit to be president and there is no bigger issue.” The hard truths kept coming. Christie cornered DeSantis for failing to directly answer whether Trump was fit for office, derided Trump as an “angry bitter man” looking out for his own interests, and observed that he was the only one on stage who refused to make excuses for or a victim of the GOP front-runner.

Make no mistake; Christie still has as much chance of prevailing in this race as Trump has of ever recognizin­g he lost his last one.

Yet he served a noble purpose in stating the irrefutabl­e fact that it is imprudent of the party, and a danger to the country, to make Donald Trump the Republican nominee for president in 2024.

For all his manifest, manifold faults, Republican­s could learn a lot from Chris Christie. Most of all, his peers in the primary.

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