Everything you need to know about ranked-choice voting in one spot. Click to learn more!

Chris Christie presidential campaign, 2016/Labor and employment

From Ballotpedia
Revision as of 22:47, 2 October 2019 by Emily Aubert (contribs) (Text replacement - "The candidate positions on this page were current as of the 2016 election." to "This page was current as of the 2016 election.")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search



Chris-Christie-circle.png

Former presidential candidate
Chris Christie

Political offices:
Governor of New Jersey
(2010-2018)
U.S. Attorney for New Jersey
(2002-2008)

Christie on the issues:
TaxesBanking policyGovernment regulationsInternational tradeBudgetsAgricultural subsidiesFederal assistance programsForeign affairsFederalismNatural resourcesHealthcareImmigrationEducationAbortionGay rights

Republican Party Republican candidate:
Donald Trump
Ballotpedia's presidential election coverage
2028202420202016


This page was current as of the 2016 election.

  • About 30 protesters for the New Jersey Amalgamated Transit Union traveled to New Hampshire on February 8, 2016, to protest Chris Christie at one of his final campaign events in the state prior to the February 9, 2016, primary. They chanted, “Chris Christie, bad for New Jersey, bad for you.” Christie dismissed them as his “favorite Democrats.”[1]
  • In his annual State of the State address on January 12, 2016, Christie attacked state Democrats for pushing a constitutional amendment that would require the state to pay into the pension system for workers at current rates. Christie wants Democrats to cut benefits instead, The Wall Street Journal reported. Christie said the Democrats’ pension plan would cause the state to sacrifice spending on health care, education, children and other priorities to “pander to pensioners.” He added, “This is the road to ruin.”[2]
  • Christie signed legislation in 2011 designed to address pension reform. The reform increased the amount of state contributions to the pension system but called for concessions from the unions. Over the two following years, Christie cut the payments by nearly $2.5 billion, angering the unions and increasing the pension debt by billions of dollars.[3]
    • During his State of the State address in January 2015, Christie acknowledged the problems with New Jersey's pension system but did not offer specific details with regard to his plan to reform the issue.[4]

Recent news

This section links to a Google news search for the term Chris + Christie + Labor + Employment


See also

Footnotes