High-rollers pushing Christie towards nomination

Yet another figure has joined the growing list of the Republican Party’s great white hopes, reports NICHOLAS CONFESSORE

Yet another figure has joined the growing list of the Republican Party's great white hopes, reports NICHOLAS CONFESSORE

THEY ARE rich. They are unattached. They are looking for a little excitement.

Meet the Draft Christie committee, a small but influential group of Republican-leaning donors and activists, many based in New York, united by the desire to see governor Chris Christie of New Jersey run for president.

There is Kenneth G Langone, the billionaire Home Depot founder who is perhaps Mr Christie’s most fervent booster; Paul E Singer, the publicity-shy hedge fund magnate and Republican activist who is among the most-sought-after Republican donors in the country; and David H Koch, the industrialist, Tea Party benefactor and, according to Forbes, the richest man in New York.

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Charles R Schwab, the personal investment guru, is also among those who have shown interest in seeing a Christie presidential bid, according to published reports and people familiar with the discussions, as is the financier Stanley F Druckenmiller.

So are the hedge fund managers David Tepper and Daniel S Loeb, a one-time supporter of Barack Obama.

In recent months, Christie enthusiasts have lit up the phone lines between Manhattan and Trenton trying to persuade the governor to enter the Republican field amid growing concern about the current contenders.

Several dozen potential Christie backers attended a meeting in July convened by Mr Langone to introduce the governor to top-shelf Republican donors, many of them on the sidelines so far in the 2012 campaign. Others saw him in action in June, when Mr Christie quietly flew to Colorado to speak at a private retreat hosted by Mr Koch and his brother, Charles, another prominent Republican donor.

And while Mr Christie has so far resisted their entreaties, he is facing a renewed effort in recent days following stumbles by governor Rick Perry of Texas, whose debate performances and stances on social security, immigration and other issues have left many donors looking again for someone they think can take on Mr Obama next year.

“Christie understands what it is like to be a Republican in the northeast,” said Lynn Krogh, a Republican campaign consultant in New York, adding: “He’s practical. He’s not just a barnburner.”

Buzz about Mr Christie’s presidential prospects intensified in recent days after a previously unknown group, the Committee for Our Children’s Future, unveiled a $1.5 million television advertising campaign in New Jersey promoting his accomplishments.

“Runaway spending. Record debt. Gridlocked government. Washington is backwards,” the script reads.

“But Chris Christie, with bipartisan support, is taking New Jersey in another direction.”

The group was formed by Christie friends dating back to his undergraduate days at the University of Delaware.

A Republican affiliated with the group, who agreed to speak in detail about its origins in return for anonymity, said it was formed as a way to defend against labour union attacks in New Jersey.

And this week, Mr Christie will attend a series of fundraisers with national Republican donors in California and Missouri, where he will raise money for the New Jersey Republican Party.

“I was at a conference this week with a lot of high-powered people,” said Bradford M Freeman, who led California’s fundraising for George W Bush.

“People just said he was fantastic. Those that know him or have heard him speak are very enthusiastic. He’s articulate, he’s done a good job in New Jersey. He has good charisma.”

But for influential local Republicans – and more than a few wealthy Democrats – Mr Christie is the hometown prospect, a firebrand fiscal conservative whose 2009 defeat of governor Jon S Corzine, a Democrat, was among the first real rebukes to what they saw as Mr Obama’s fiscal profligacy and harsh attacks on Wall Street.

Many have ties to the Manhattan Institute, an incubator of the brand of urban conservatism – heavy on criticism of public employee unions and runaway state budgets – to which Mr Christie is the country’s most visible Republican heir. Mr Singer is its chairman; Mr Christie last year delivered a speech there titled The Christie Reform Agenda.

Other fans, like Mr Langone, have roots in the 2008 presidential campaign of Rudolph W Giuliani, the former New York mayor whose pugnacity and politics roughly mirror Mr Christie’s. And a large contingent hail from the world of high finance, at whose midtown Manhattan corner offices Mr Christie’s swagger and in-your-face style would not be out of place.

“I had Christie to our board meeting the April after he took office, and he knocked their socks off,” said Kathryn Wylde, president of the Partnership for New York City, a business group with a gold-plated roster of prominent Democratic and Republican moneymen.

“And ever since, there’s been nothing but enthusiasm for him. He’s considered smart, courageous, a straight talker, kind of an anti-politician.” – (New York Times)