The Palm Beach Post

Beach photos shadow end of Christie era

Shutdown ends as outgoing governor signs state budget.

- By Michael Catalini Associated Press

TRENTON, N.J. — Gov. Chris Christie, by his own admission, entered lame-duck territory Tuesday, signing his final budget after a bruising three-day state government shutdown that included a viral photo of him lounging on a state beach that had been closed to the public because of a budget impasse.

Signing the $34.7 billion budget, the two-term Republican governor sounded an unapologet­ic tone over the aerial photos snapped by NJ.com that showed him at the state governor’s residence at Island Beach State Park.

The pictures sparked a global reaction: countless memes featuring a Photoshopp­ed cutout of Christie in a beach chair and headlines on internatio­nal news sites.

“If they had flown that plane over that beach and I was sitting next to a 25-yearold blonde in that beach chair next to me, that’s a story,” he said. “I wasn’t sitting next to a 25-year-old blonde. I was sitting next to my wife of 31 years.”

The photos are part of a bruising finale for the term-limited governor, who had been a regular on latenight TV and a Republican superstar after Superstorm Sandy hammered his state in 2012.

Christie’s job approval in New Jersey has sunk to 15 percent, tumbling after the conviction­s of three former aides in a scheme to deliberate­ly cause traffic jams at the George Washington Bridge as punishment of a mayor who failed to endorse Christie’s reelection as well as the governor’s failed presidenti­al run and his early backing for now-President Donald Trump.

He’s become such a political liability in New Jersey that his top deputy, Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno, running to succeed him, hammered him over the beach photos: “Beyond words,” she said.

People in New Jersey and beyond seized on what many saw as a let-them-eat-cake gesture by the state’s chief executive.

“Taxpayers can’t use the parks and other public sites they pay for,” said Mary Jackson, a Freehold resident, “but he and his family can hang out at a beach that no one else can use?”

Christie denied the beach photos played a role in how he negotiated with lawmakers and said it was “the pressure of a shutdown” that contribute­d to the budget resolution. He also has said he only worries about polls when he’s running for office — and he’s not.

But experts said they think the pictures all but did him in.

“The photos are likely the nails in Christie’s political coffin that drive his approval ratings into the single digits,” Montclair State University political science professor Brigid Harrison said.

The deal Christie struck late Monday with Democratic Senate President Steve Sweeney and Democratic Assembly Speaker Vincent Prieto calls for a $34.7 billion budget that includes more than $300 million in Democratic spending priorities and is part of an agreement to overhaul the state’s largest health insurer, Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield.

The budget stalemate centered on Christie’s desire for legislatio­n to overhaul Horizon, but the deal includes none of the initial use of Horizon’s surplus for opioid treatment that he set out to get.

 ?? MEL EVANS / AP ?? People stream onto the beach Tuesday at Island Beach State Park in Seaside Park, N.J., after a budget impasse between the Republican governor and Democratic lawmakers shut down the government.
MEL EVANS / AP People stream onto the beach Tuesday at Island Beach State Park in Seaside Park, N.J., after a budget impasse between the Republican governor and Democratic lawmakers shut down the government.
 ??  ?? New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s approval rating is at 15 percent.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s approval rating is at 15 percent.

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