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NBC NEWS EXCLUSIVE: Chris Christie’s State of the State to Focus on Drug Epidemic

By Kelly O’Donnell (@KellyO)

Posted with permission by NBCNews

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie will forego the traditional formula of laying out his achievements and policy goals when he gives his final State of the State address Tuesday.

Instead, he plans to use the entire speech to put forth a plan to fight the nation’s drug epidemic, sources close to the governor told NBC News.

Christie’s approval rating is mired in the teens after the Bridgegate scandal, the investigation that led to the convictions of two allies who conspired to cause a traffic jam on the George Washington Bridge in 2013 to punish a Democratic mayor who didn’t endorse the governor for re-election.

The governor will use the speech before a joint session of the legislature in Trenton to make a bipartisan appeal to stop addiction from taking so many lives.

His “concrete plan” aims to expand treatment, boost employment for those in recovery, curb the supply of prescription painkillers and support law enforcement, the sources said.

Christie previously drew widespread attention to the nation’s drug problem when video of an impassioned speech during a campaign stop went viral early in his brief run for the Republican nomination for president.

During the campaign stop in November 2015, Christie told the story of a close friend who had defined success — “great career, plenty of money, beautiful loving wife, beautiful children, great house. He had everything.”

“He’s a drug addict, and he couldn’t get help, and he’s dead,” Christie said during the speech in his characteristic blunt style. “It can happen to anyone. And so we need to start treating people in this country, not jailing them.”

In his speech Tuesday at the capitol in Trenton, after a short summary of the required official business of the Garden State, Christie will implore New Jersey legislators to embrace a sense of urgency, sources said.

Death by overdose has increased dramatically in recent years in New Jersey, much of New England, and other parts of the country.

Sources familiar with the address said Christie’s plan will rely on his existing authorities, but also new law and federal assistance to go after the addiction crisis.

The governor will launch what the sources called “an aggressive public information campaign” to help addicts in crisis find care and navigate the bureaucracy that can be a barrier to treatment.

The Christie plan would expand the availability of treatment for low-income individuals, and the governor will urge state lawmakers to cut red tape for middle-class families trying to tap insurance coverage for addiction treatment.

While Christie took political blows for his early support of Donald Trump, which ended without reward from the president-elect, his new plan would look to the new Trump administration for additional support.

With diminished political capital, Christie plans to argue that taking on the dire costs of addiction goes beyond party and point-scoring politics.

It will be the “mission” for his final year in office, the sources said.

Posted: January 10th, 2017 | Author: | Filed under: Chris Christie, New Jersey | Tags: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

One Comment on “NBC NEWS EXCLUSIVE: Chris Christie’s State of the State to Focus on Drug Epidemic”

  1. Good idea, said at 12:30 pm on January 10th, 2017:

    as a former US attorney, in my opinion, he should have been focusing on getting to the bottom of the nearly unrestricted flow of strong, pure, often spiked heroin, which has grown into an epidemic, into this state. Being located in the unfortunate east coast ” drug corridor” between Philadelphia and New York, NJ needs to have taken a much harder stance against the suppliers and kingpins, rather than the small potatoes dealers and addicts they create here, every day. Then we, as taxpayers, always get to pay for all the ensuing costs of housing, feeding and medically caring for those who finally get jail, and for often slipshod programs for addicts that barely scratch the surface. I realize this governor has been too busy trying to move himself up, and it’s late, but the least we should expect from him in this last year, is for him to pay much more attention to this, and many other severe social problems, that continue to plague, and yes, break, this state.

    Many of us had high hopes for this governor, given the Corrine debacles before him, but, as is the case with far too many elected officials (at all levels, mind you, look at what is going to go on in two districts and freeholder board this year,) it became too much about him, his power and personal ambitions to move ” up and out,” and as usual, we the voiceless taxpayers, get shortchanged and left in the dust, and always stuck with the bills!

    Given this one’s personality, I would hope and pray that he steps up in the last 11 months of his term, and finds ways to actually improve something, if only to save his ” legacy, which, at this point, is sketchy at best, and sad and pathetic, at worst!