He must be giving up. I guess even with all his blubber he wasn't buoyant enough to keep the thing afloat if it rams an iceberg.
Bill Clinton's Creation barrels onward as republican voters favor entertainment over substance (read: insulting, mocking your opponents rather than run on any type of legitimate platform). I wonder who, if anyone, had nudged David Duke to come out and endorse Trump right before Super Tuesday and if that endorsement had any late minute effect.
One could say there is a difference between a deer in headlights stare and Chris Christie staring into the depths of hell.
http://www.nj.com/politics/index.ssf/2016/03/6_fed_up_nj_newspapers_call_on_christie_to_resign.html TRENTON — Outraged over Gov. Chris Christie's "arrogance" and "fed up" with him, six New Jersey newspapers Tuesday called on the governor to resign. The news outlets, all Gannett-owned papers, issued a joint editorial on the heels of Christie's surprise endorsement of Republican front-runner Donald Trump and his most recent snub of the state's press corps. The editorial suggested residents should initiate a recall effort if he refuses to step down. Christie on GOP loss: 'We're doing fine' Gov. Chris Christie told radio listeners Monday he's "doing fine" after ending his White House bid. "We're fed up with Gov. Chris Christie's arrogance," the papers wrote. "We're fed up with his opportunism. We're fed up with his hypocrisy." The newspapers that ran the editorial included the Asbury Park Press, the Courier Post of Cherry Hill and the Daily Record of Morristown. "We're fed up with his long neglect of the state to pursue his own selfish agenda. We're disgusted with his endorsement of Donald Trump after he spent months on the campaign trail trashing him, calling him unqualified by temperament and experience to be president," the editorial read. "And we're fed up with his continuing travel out of state on New Jersey's dime, stumping for Trump, after finally abandoning his own presidential campaign." The newspapers added: "For the good of the state, it's time for Christie to do his long-neglected constituents a favor and resign as governor. If he refuses, citizens should initiate a recall effort." The editorial also assailed Christie for holding a news conference at the Statehouse on Monday but limiting questions to only one topic. See how Gov. Christie keeps the press 'on topic'During a press conference to nominate David Bauman to the state Supreme Court, Christie repeatedly told the press that was the only thing he would talk about. This is how adamant about how he was about being on topic. (Source: Chris Christie Press) "Christie fails to acknowledge the role the Fourth Estate plays in a healthy democracy," the newspapers said. "Reporters have an obligation to ask questions on behalf of the public; government officials have an obligation to answer them." On Monday, Christie refused to answer any questions not related to the topic of his nomination of a state Supreme Court judge. He stressed he wouldn't answer any off-topic questions "because I don't want to." The governor told a reporter "permission denied" when he sought to ask about something unrelated to the nomination and a handful of reporters tried asking Christie unrelated questions, but he dismissed each one. On Monday, the publisher of New Hampshire's biggest newspaper and an influential voice in presidential politics for the early voting state said he was wrong to endorse Christie's presidential campaign. Joseph McQuaid, the publisher of the New Hampshire Union Leader, told his readers in an editorial the newspaper made a mistake by endorsing Christie in November. It's the second time a state's largest newspaper issued a mea culpa over a Christie endorsement. "Boy, we were wrong," McQuaid wrote.
Drumpf: building a wall and deporting illegals are really just opening bids, and subject to negotiation. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-campaign_us_56d677fbe4b03260bf789fd1