There are three factors that may have worked against Chris Christie in the New Hampshire primary that led to his sixth place showing atat the polls in the New Hampshire primary.
After a disappointing loss in New Hampshire Tuesday, NJ Gov. Chris Christie said he will return to the Garden State Wednesday to wait for the final results of the primary election to be tallied before deciding on whether to continue seeking the 2016 GOP nomination for the presidential race.
In a major statement against the current political establishment, businessman Donald Trump and Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont have won the first primaries of the 2016 election season.
The hot button issues of Gov. Chris Christie's health and his infamous hug with President Obama came up during presidential campaign stops on Wednesday and Thursday.
With most of New Jersey now under a blizzard watch for this weekend, Gov. Chris Christie plans to remain on the campaign trail in New Hampshire, rather than making his way back to the Garden State as the storm approaches.
There are less than two weeks to go before the Feb. 1 Iowa caucuses and roughly three weeks away from the Feb. 9 New Hampshire primary, but while Gov. Chris Christie trails some other GOP hopefuls in both states, one political expert advised against counting him out.
It is now officially the year America will elect a new president. With the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary just weeks away, political experts weighed in on Gov. Chris Christie’s strategy in the lead-up. They said Christie's focus will be on the Granite State, which could be make or break for his presidential campaign.
Gov. Chris Christie trails GOP presidential front-runner Donald Trump by 15 percentage points in the New Hampshire Republican presidential primary, but that’s good enough for second place according to the latest WBUR/MassINC poll.