Miami Herald

Christie puts the gloves on

- MAUREEN DOWD

There’s

nothing more amusing than a bully forced to be on his best behavior.

Chris Christie may be cutting back on his butter, but it wouldn’t melt in his mouth at a town hall here Thursday.

For the first time since his revving ambition stalled in a traffic jam, he returned to the forum that helped vault him to the head of the pack.

The New Jersey governor, depicted in The New Republic as Tony Soprano in his underwear getting his paper from the driveway, toned down his tough-guy Jersey act.

The fist-pumping and fingerjabb­ing were gone at his 110th town hall. As were the swagger, flashes of temper and glossy self-promotiona­l videos. The chastened governor didn’t call anyone a “jerk,” an “idiot” or “stupid.” He even let one guy grab back the microphone that he had confiscate­d when the question went on too long.

Christie pitched his voice in a warm, helpful tone and, in an instamacy Instagram moment, took a knee to high-five a 3-year-old named Nicole Mariano who keened that Sandy broke her house.

He stayed dispassion­ate even on the most passionate topic. When a military veteran named Joe Williams urged him to destroy his Springstee­n CDs — given the Boss’ tart parody of Christie’s bridge woes with Jimmy Fallon — the governor smiled and said he had the rocker on his iPhone.

Noting that he had been to 132 Springstee­n concerts, he said rather wistfully, “Hey, listen, I don’t do drugs. I don’t drink. This is it for me, OK? It’s all I got. I still live in hope that someday, even as he gets older and older, he’s gonna wake up and go like, ‘Yeah, he’s all right. He’s a good guy. It’s all right. We can be friends.’ ”

The governor’s exit music was Springstee­n’s We Take Care of Our Own.

I tend to agree with Bill Maher that Christie is “350 pounds of toast,” and that he should have run for president in 2012 when he had “that new candidate smell” because “the longer you stay in the more likely some bad thing will stick to you.”

Many Republican­s on Capitol Hill, already fed up with Christie’s grandstand­ing on Sandy and his election-eve embrace of President Barack Obama, are casting about for a different presidenti­al contender. The newly constraine­d Christie is taking a pass on dinner at the White House on Sunday, the better to avoid another photo op with the president. Americans are so disgusted by political polarizati­on that the minute Christie hugged Obama, he seemed like a white knight. But in The New Republic, Alec MacGillis argues that the image of Christie as an independen­t bull in a china shop was never accurate. MacGillis’ reporting shows that Christie worked within the state’s political machinery at the same time as he was setting himself against it — that his strategy all along was to use his power as a corruption-busting prosecutor to bring down many Democratic officials, even as he cultivated bonds with the Democratic bosses left standing, with their influence enhanced.

As long as there’s no smoking traffic cone, there’s always the possibilit­y that Christie can muster enough of the old bonhomie and bombast to clamber back to a rarefied perch as a presidenti­al front-runner. His millionair­e pals are sticking to him for the moment, and he can keep his new position as chairman of the Republican Governors Associatio­n as long as he continues to rake in the dough for the group, no matter how low-key he gets.

To start his comeback, Christie chose a safely red pocket nestled on Sandy Hook Bay in this blue state.

And the Jersey residents obliged over the nearly two-hour session by not taking “the governor of New Jersey out for a walk,” as Christie calls being confrontat­ional. Questioner­s stayed mostly on Sandy recovery, tossing out some compliment­s, and never once directly mentioned the pesky matter of the vindictive lane closures and vivisectio­n of staff.

If you ignored Elizabeth Brady, a Rutgers student and intern for the Monmouth County Democrats, who was outside holding a sign that read “Bruce Springstee­n hates you!” and just surveyed the crowd lost in their own issues in the VFW hall, it reminded you of Iowa. And that felt like the point of the exercise, as all the national press swarmed in to see if Christie could escape the house falling on him and resume skipping down the yellow brick road to Iowa.

The governor was a beneficiar­y of America’s desperate hunger for genuine leadership. You can blame Obama for the Christie tulip craze. The president has been so wan, he confused people into thinking that bluster was clarity. In a climate with no leadership, the bully looks like a man. If you’ve only been drinking water, Red Bull tastes like whiskey.

Obama’s ethereal insipidity made Christie’s meaty pugilism attractive; Obama’s insistence on the cerebral made voters long for the visceral, even the gracelessl­y visceral.

George W. Bush was the Decider who engaged in thoughtles­s action. So America veered toward Obama, who engaged in thoughtful inaction. Then they careered toward Christie, another practition­er of thoughtles­s action.

When all you have is leading from behind, there’s a place in your heart for in-your-face.

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