Chicago Sun-Times

Is Chris Christie aiming to stop Trump in the GOP presidenti­al primary?

- S.E. CUPP @secupp

In 1965, William F. Buckley Jr. decided to avenge the loss of Barry Goldwater to Lyndon B. Johnson in the 1964 presidenti­al election by running for mayor of New York. His goal was to restore attention to conservati­sm as he understood it, and take votes from Republican John Lindsay, who he thought insufficie­ntly principled.

Some called it a vanity project. (He finished a distant third with 13.36%, with Lindsay winning and Democrat Abe Beame coming in a close second.)

He never expected to win. And in fact, when asked what he’d do if he did, he said, “Demand a recount.”

Though it got Buckley some national attention, it was hardly a successful project. If anything, his comparativ­ely progressiv­e campaign platform ended up helping Lindsay, and taking votes away from Beame.

I have to wonder if former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s reported entry into the race, expected next Tuesday according to an Axios scoop, is in some ways informed by the Buckley model — with goals that are loftier than winning.

How else to explain the decision by the most unpopular Republican contender in an already crowded field?

According to a brand-new Monmouth poll, Christie’s favorabili­ty is heavily underwater, with a 21% favorable rating and a 47% unfavorabl­e rating. I can’t imagine Tuesday’s headline at Insider NJ — “Christie Radiates Negative Vibes with GOP Vote” — is the kind of pre-coverage he was hoping for as he readied his announceme­nt.

But maybe winning isn’t the point for Christie, whose 2016 bid ended unceremoni­ously, with the governor dropping out in February after finishing 6th in the New Hampshire primary.

Maybe the point is to remind voters what conservati­sm sounds like. Maybe the point is to drag the Republican Party out of the culture wars and back to fiscal policies that appeal to moderates and independen­ts. Maybe the point, as his team says, is to wake up America’s “exhausted majority.”

And most importantl­y, maybe the point is to do what no Republican has successful­ly done before — stop Donald Trump.

It’s a heavy lift, but with many Republican­s secretly and not so secretly hoping for a deus ex machina event to knock the former president out of the race, Christie might just be a proverbial asteroid hurtling toward Trump.

His team seems to have hinted at this, telling Axios that he’s actively aiming to engage Trump and is happy to punch him in the nose.

I talked to a Republican strategist, Alice Stewart, who ran comms for Ted Cruz’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign, who also acknowledg­ed this possibilit­y: “Gov. Christie will bring an unfiltered, unapologet­ic voice to the race and take it directly to Trump. It’s too early to say what his chances are, but a steady drumbeat on Trump, along with Trump’s pending legal issues, will certainly keep him off message, and create space for other candidates to get to the inside lane.”

Indeed, Christie may be the perfect foil. It would, after all, take someone with nothing to lose to be most effective against Trump.

If any Republican is actually concerned with winning, they’ll be too afraid to lose MAGA voters by swinging too hard at him.

Case in point: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, his closest competitor, has had a light touch, often whiffing at Trump’s antics without naming him. The others — former Ambassador Nikki Haley, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and Vivek Ramaswamy — haven’t forcefully taken him on directly either.

Christie’s brash and loudmouthe­d, as we’ve all come to know. Despite eventually supporting Trump in 2016, he’s pulled no punches recently, calling Trump a “coward” and a “puppet of Putin,” slamming his reaction to the E. Jean Carroll sexual abuse verdict, warning voters off his 2024 reelection, and pledging never to support him again. It’s hard to walk back from that, and presumably Christie doesn’t plan to.

It’s not a fool-proof plan, of course. Remember 2016, when 16 other Republican candidates couldn’t figure out the secret sauce to take down the surging businessma­n/reality star, who ran as unconventi­onal a campaign as anyone had ever seen.

And in 2020, three Republican­s — former Massachuse­tts Gov. Bill Weld, former Illinois Rep. Joe Walsh and former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford — had protest bids, winning a paltry 3.5% of the primary vote — combined.

But Christie may be uniquely suited for the job this year, and if he plans, as I suspect, to take on an “enforcer” role in primaries — wherein roughing up Trump is more important than scoring actual goals or winning — he might just be able to do what those 19 other Republican candidates couldn’t: knock Trump out once and for all.

S.E. Cupp is the host of “S.E. Cupp Unfiltered” on CNN.

 ?? WADE VANDERVORT/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who is expected to announce his run for president soon, is shown here during the 2019 Concordia Annual Summit on Sept. 23, 2019, in New York City.
WADE VANDERVORT/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who is expected to announce his run for president soon, is shown here during the 2019 Concordia Annual Summit on Sept. 23, 2019, in New York City.
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