A Day In The Life Of The Chris Christie Campaign As He Cruises To A Landslide Victory

Chris Christie
Chris Christie

Mykwain Gainey/ Chris Christie For Governor

Chris Christie hugs a supporter outside a campaign stop at the Somers Point, N.J., VFW on Saturday.

BRIDGEWATER, N.J. — Chris Christie knows he's going to be re-elected as New Jersey's governor on Tuesday.

At this point, on a crisp Saturday morning in northern New Jersey that serves as the starting point for Day 4 of a seven-day bus tour, he's trying to run up the score against Democrat Barbara Buono. He wants to win big. He wants a Republican legislature — or at least says he does. And he wants to send a message to America.

"The entire country is watching Tuesday night," Christie tells a crowd of about 75 to 100 supporters here who showed up at 9 a.m. to hear him speak. "And if we do our job, what they're going to see is not what's been a typical election in America the past few years, where everybody runs to their separate quarters. ...

"They're going to see folks from the cities, they're going to see folks from the suburbs, and folks from farms coming together to vote for the same person. They're going to see young people and senior citizens coming together to vote for the same person. They're going to see African-Americans and Hispanics voting for the same person as Caucasians in the suburbs. They're going to see us bring our state together like it's never been brought together before.

"And New Jersey is going to set the example for the direction the rest of the United States needs to take if we're going to make this country great again."

Stop 1

Bridgewater is the first stop of seven on the day for Christie. It's also the first of at least three during which he tells the story of Gladys, an 82-year-old African-American woman from Newark.

New Jersey is perhaps the only place in the country where a candidate running for its highest office can use the word "shit" in a stump speech. But Gladys embodies everything in a New Jerseyan that Chris Christie wants to promote.

She's 82, an African-American, and has lived in Newark her entire life — not exactly the type of voter who normally votes Republican. She didn't vote for him last time, but will this time. Why? Because of the way he has handled crisis — particularly the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy.

But what really gets the crowd going is the punchline Christie tells of the time he met Gladys four weeks ago at a senior wellness event in West Orange, N.J. Christie relays that Gladys told him that she has prayed for him every night since Sandy left New Jersey devastated.

And then Gladys saw him on television again, in September, in front of another disaster. A fire sparked by wiring damaged in Sandy engulfed the town of Seaside Park, destroying businesses and parts of the newly rebuilt boardwalk.