Chris Christie: The Inside Story of His Rise to Power
By Bob Ingle and Michael G. Symons
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About this ebook
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie has become a national Republican Party figure, famous for his blunt public statements, his willingness to confront powerful special interests, and his determination to change the ingrown, corrupt, backroom political culture of New Jersey. In just two years as governor, Christie has moved aggressively to reduce the state's ballooning deficit, rein in lucrative entitlements for teacher, police, fire, and public employee unions, cut out-of-control government spending, and create jobs by reducing counterproductive business regulations. But beneath Christie's combative public persona is an intensely loyal family man, whose deep roots in New Jersey shape his core values. Written by New York Times bestselling author Bob Ingle and fellow journalist Michael Symons, who have covered the governor's political career for more than a decade, Chris Christie offers the first inside portrait of this fascinating man.
Drawing on interviews with Christie himself, his wife, Mary Pat, his brother, Todd, his father, Bill, his uncle Joe, and many longtime supporters as well as political opponents, Ingle and Symons trace Christie's life. He grew up in New Jersey, surrounded by a big, roiling Italian-American family where his mother, Sondra, and grandmother Anne were powerful influences. Surprisingly, his political career nearly ended after a bruising loss in a local county campaign, but was revived when Christie was appointed United States Attorney for New Jersey. He soon became a feared prosecutor, and culminated an impressive string of successful cases with a multi-year investigation that resulted in the arrests of more than forty people, in one of the state's most notorious examples of political corruption. Despite calls to run for president, Christie reiterated his commitment to reforming New Jersey.
Chris Christie: The Inside Story of His Rise to Power goes behind the scenes to reveal his family life, his public life, and what the future might hold.
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Chris Christie - Bob Ingle
INTRODUCTION
There is a self-assuredness about Chris Christie that could give the impression he never failed at anything, that the world is at his command, nothing stands between him and his goals, that he grew up wealthy among people accustomed to having their way and buying whatever influence was needed.
That’s a long way from the truth.
Go back a couple of generations on his mother’s side of the family and you’ll find people coming to America from Italy on a ship, penniless, with nothing but their hopes and dreams and the promise of a new start from that big green copper woman who lifts her lamp by the golden door in New York Harbor. You know the one: Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.
Christie’s ancestors were willing to do whatever it took to keep themselves, and many times several relatives, fed and in shelter while looking for opportunities to give their children a better life.
They held on through disease, death, and divorce and became stronger for it, experiences that were shared with the kids in the Christie household by their mother’s mother, Anne, who they called Nani. She loved Franklin Roosevelt because he led the country during the Depression and war, and was outwardly bitter at her former husband for leaving her with three kids to raise alone.
Her first child, Sondra, later called Sandy by friends and family, would grow up to marry Bill Christie, starting a family with him that eventually grew to three kids, the five of them living in a one-bathroom house. Chris, the oldest, was polite and friendly and played baseball well, excelled in school, and served as a surrogate father to his siblings when their hardworking dad was not around. Sandy—strong-willed, opinionated, and self-disciplined—confided in Chris; they talked intimately and often, right up until her life ended with him at her side.
Theirs is a story of an extraordinarily close family taking care of one another and reaching for their goals, while keeping their feet planted on terra firma. They worked hard and placed value on education. In a day of blow-dried politicians who seem right out of central casting, so careful to be politically correct and talk much while saying little, in public and private there is no pretense from Chris Christie or his extended family. They’re like the people on your street who have personal triumphs and tragedies; they’re open about it. They laugh a lot.
Nani was old school, a strict disciplinarian. Sandy wanted her kids to be assertive, and firstborn Chris is just that. He also is ambitious and overreaching at times, looking for the next rung on the ladder, a maverick unafraid of offending the powers that be, which he did as a young politician and paid a price. When he was knocked down, he picked himself up and looked for new opportunities.
He has a knack for pointing out how ridiculous is so much of what we’ve come to accept as routine. He parlayed a reputation as a butt-kicking U.S. attorney into a campaign against one of the richest men in politics, and won. His time as governor brought him to the attention of millions across America who think the nation needs him in Washington. When Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government and The Washington Post jointly presented Christie a leadership award in December 2011, Post publisher Katharine Weymouth said, He is not, to put it bluntly, a conventional state leader. There is no denying his ability to get results.
That kind of admiration can cause some to lose their way. But not Christie, even when polls show him with high approval numbers in a state that leans Democratic. Such polls are gratifying, but he knows in politics things change fast and in order to maintain that kind of support he must keep producing the results the people want, not necessarily making people happy with his rhetoric or style. He takes nothing for granted.
People admit up front, ‘I don’t agree with a lot of what you’re doing. But man, I love the way you do it,’
Christie said in an interview. I think what people in the press corps—and by the press corps, I’d extend that out to kind of like the Trenton crowd, whether it’s the lobbyists or the insider types—they don’t get the way that we’re governing. It’s different. And I always said during the campaign it would be really different. On election night, when I said, ‘We’re going to turn Trenton upside down,’ and people said, ‘Well, he’s just really excited and being hyperbolic’—I thought about that line before I gave it, well before I gave it, that if I ever won, that’s exactly what I was going to say. Because that was exactly my intent, I felt like this place needed to be completely turned upside down stylistically. As a result of that, the fact that we have the popularity that we have right now is really gratifying, but I also know that if I feel like, ‘Okay, phew, good. I’m at 58 percent. I want to sit behind the desk and put my feet up and go
All right, I’m done,’ I’ll be at 45 percent in two months.
Christie and wife Mary Pat, who grew up as one of ten children, met in college, where he first struck her as some kind of student government geek. They have four children and strive to maintain a reasonably normal life, forgoing the stately governor’s mansion in Princeton to live in their nearly as stately Morris County home so their kids don’t have to change schools.
People frequently ask what the governor is like in private, away from reporters and cameras. He’s the same—articulate, smart, self-assured, and funny, a natural storyteller who loves to talk. He holds listeners spellbound—sometimes laughing hysterically, other times with a lump in their throats, as when he recalls the last conversation he had with his mom.
He’s demanding, he’s loyal, he’s combative, he’s entertaining, he’s mouthy—but never boring.
CHAPTER ONE
Nothing Left Unsaid
Chris Christie was in San Diego late in April 2004, some 2,800 miles from home attending a conference of federal prosecutors, when he got an urgent call from his brother, Todd. Their beloved mother, who was fighting an uphill struggle against cancer, was in St. Barnabas Medical Center, surrounded by family members. Sandy was one tough patient, having survived breast cancer a quarter-century earlier and a brain aneurism in 1996, but the dizziness and headaches she’d started enduring that winter turned out to be the result of two large tumors in the back of her head. Chemotherapy and radiation hadn’t worked. Now, Todd alerted his brother that things had taken a turn for the worse. Mom had only days to live. So Chris hopped a red-eye flight to New Jersey and went directly from Newark Airport to her bedside, where he found his mother fading in and out of a coma.
At one point she gained consciousness, recognized her oldest son, and began a conversation with him, as he later recalled:
What day is it?
she asked.
It’s Friday.
What time is it?
It’s ten o’clock in the morning.
What are you doing here?
I’m here to visit you.
Go to work.
Mom, I’d rather spend the day with you if you don’t mind.
Go to work. That’s where you belong.
What, are you worried that you’re not getting your taxpayer’s money’s worth today? I’ll make up the time, don’t worry about it. I’d rather stay here with you.
She grabbed her son’s hand. Christopher, go to work. It’s where you belong. There’s nothing left unsaid between us.
Christie frequently recalls that story in a style that leaves audiences hanging on every dramatic word and pause as a way of explaining what makes him tick—and his pull-no-punches attitude. My mother sent me to work because that’s the values she taught me,
he says. There was nothing left unsaid between us because she was Sicilian—so you know there was nothing left unsaid between us. If you’re wondering who I am and where I came from and why I’m doing this and why I understand New Jersey the way I do, it’s because of her, because she taught me don’t leave things unsaid. She taught me: Be yourself today, and then tomorrow you won’t have to worry about you got it right or wrong and who you told what version of the truth to. One thing for sure: I will always tell you exactly what I think and you never will have to wonder where I stand.
¹
* * *
Expressing opinions on matters large and small is rarely a hesitation for Christie, whose say-anything style would cost him his first job in politics, draw attention to a crusade in his second, and seize the national spotlight in his third.
But it’s not all flash: Sondra Grasso Christie, who died at age seventy-one just days after that bedside conversation, and her husband, Bill, infused in their children—Chris, Todd, and Dawn—a work ethic and sense of purpose from the time they were small. Sandy had no patience for complaints and no problem pushing her children socially and intellectually. She was very opinionated. She loved to argue. You had to learn how to argue or you got run over,
² Chris remembered.
Sandy’s independence and bluntness can be traced to her mother, Anne, who was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1909. Anne’s parents, Salvatore and Domenica Scavone, had emigrated from Sicily around the turn of the twentieth century. The family, including Anne’s widowed maternal grandmother, Annie, a brother and a sister, moved in the 1910s to Camden Street in Newark’s 6th Ward, where Anne’s father worked odd jobs as a laborer, eventually catching on at Port Newark and then with the city.
Friends and family called Anne’s mother Minnie. Her father was called, Yes, sir,
jokes Sandy’s brother, Joseph Grasso.
Grandma was this tiny, little, wonderful caring lady, and Grandpa was a real chauvinist. My grandma had to shine his shoes, iron his underwear, dump out his spittoon. When we had dinners, he’d sit there and have a jug of wine on the floor and pour it into the soup that she’d made,
recalled Joseph, known by friends, family, and colleagues as Joe. "Then afterwards, we had to put on a show, all the kids. We couldn’t talk though dinner. If Grandpa talked, you responded. You couldn’t talk to your siblings. You didn’t start a conversation with your sister. So he was a real tough cookie. Respectful as hell, but Grandma was his slave. Boy, he ruled the roost.
Grandma was the most loving, caring little person. She would come and sit on the bed with you at night, always had the rosary beads, would say prayers,
Joe said. My grandfather just put the fear of God in everybody. If you stepped out of line, you were going to get whacked, whether you were a kid or not. I don’t ever remember Grandpa showing a lot of love to anybody. He was just this staunch guy who sat in his chair—he was the king, and this is the way it was going to be.
By age twenty Anne was working as a clerk in the courthouse. She married Philip Grasso, who had arrived in Newark’s 14th Ward with his parents, Santo and Santa, from Italy shortly after his 1905 birth—born on the Atlantic Ocean on his family’s way to America, according to Bill Christie. It was a marriage arranged by Anne’s domineering father. Philip, the second of ten children, worked a series of factory jobs—as a hatter, as head of a fur shop—and as a laborer before meeting Anne, a small woman, maybe five feet tall, with tiny hands, and a disciplinarian with strong political opinions. Together they had three children, Sandy being the oldest—then got divorced in 1941, which was unusual in that generation.
Her mother’s divorce compelled Sandy to take on added responsibilities early, helping with her younger sister and brother. Anne’s mother moved in with the family after Salvatore died, but for the most part Anne was raising three children—the youngest, Joe, born a year before the divorce—on her own. She had a tough time in the job market as a divorced woman but did land a few jobs—at the War Department, then working for a friendly attorney, and as a customer service representative with the IRS, a position she would hold for twenty-five years until retirement. Anne was a voracious reader, though she hadn’t completed high school, and socked away $10 from every paycheck in an envelope in her drawer, enabling her eventually to sightsee her way on trips through Europe and go on cruises, and to spend time—much as her grandmother and mother had done years earlier—with her daughter Sandy’s children, who called her Nani. She was at the Christies’ house every weekend, allowing Sandy and son-in-law Bill to go out together each Saturday night, and often during the week. Chris and I just sat around and listened to her talk about what it was like growing up during the Depression,
Todd said. She was blunt about when my grandfather left her and her unhappiness with raising three kids on her own.
How unhappy? Her son’s given name was Philip but she refused to call him that because it was her former husband’s name, and instead referred to her youngest child by his middle name, Joseph. He used his middle and confirmation names on things such as his passport, rather than Philip. And when Joe named his second son Philip in 1987, at the suggestion of his wife, Victoria, who didn’t know the full backstory, Anne refused to use that name in conversation. She would call his house and ask, How’s the baby?
When her grandson outgrew the label, she dubbed him Handsome Harry
although his middle name is Thomas. Sandy, perhaps in solidarity with her mom, referred to her nephew little Philip as the brat.
All I heard was all these things about him—some of them well deserved, as I grew up to find out,
Joe said of his father. She had a very difficult time dealing with the way he treated her, and why they divorced. One time he tried to run her over. I probably saw him ten total years of my life. He’d come to visit, and he’d never come on time. She was very bitter.
Philip Grasso remarried, had no more children, and died of cancer in 1969. Anne never did remarry and died in 2001 at age ninety-two. She never remarried because she didn’t want to have another man bringing us up. And at the end of the day, it was pretty sad she spent sixty years alone,
Joe said.
Look, she was the strength behind all of us and Sandy picked up all of those traits. There weren’t any two ways about it. My mother was pretty calm and she wouldn’t take any crap from anybody.
Sandy and Joe bracketed a sister, Minette, who had a complicated family life. She married as a teenager and had three children, two daughters and a son, in a rocky union that ended in divorce.
Minette’s second husband, John, had a brother who made an unwelcome cameo in Chris Christie’s eventual political career—Tino Fiumara, a ranking member of the Genovese crime family. John really stepped up to the plate and became a real good person and gave up a lot,
said Joe. He was kind of bordered on being a wiseguy, because of his brother Tino. But Minette said to John: If we’re going to get married, you can’t do that. And he didn’t. He never had that life, but he was kind of on the edge with Tino.
Christie said he first learned about Fiumara’s line of work at age fifteen by reading the newspaper. It just told me that you make bad decisions in life and you wind up paying a price. Really, for most of my life, he spent his life in prison. That teaches you a lot.
³ In 1991, Christie, then twenty-nine, was asked by his uncle to visit Fiumara in a Texas prison while he was in the state for a football game. My best recollection is we updated each other on what was going on with the family,
Christie told a reporter when news bubbled up about that branch of the family tree.⁴
Joe said mobster Fiumara wasn’t around the family often. It was all blown out of proportion. I can tell you, I was going to visit Tino once, I had a customer in Kansas City and he was in Leavenworth at the time. And when the papers came that I had to sign to go through all this crap I said, ‘I’m not going to do it, because I don’t want it hampering my career.’ When I became a member of the New York Stock Exchange, I got investigated by the FBI, the whole megillah. So I didn’t go and visit Tino, and he understood. The story with Chris, they all blew it out of proportion. If he saw Tino ten times in his lifetime, that was a lot.
Christie said he had seen Fiumara at large parties in his aunt’s home as a youngster and ran into him once in a restaurant when Fiumara was out on parole. Fiumara was due to be released in 2002 but was indicted again by U.S. Attorney Christie’s office on charges of helping another criminal evade prosecution. Christie recused himself from the plea negotiations, which ended with Fiumara heading back to prison for eight months. Fiumara was released in 2005 and died in 2010. Minette had died of breast cancer in 1991; her husband, John, the governor’s uncle and Fiumara’s brother, died in 2011.
Joe Grasso is a retired investment professional who manages the governor’s blind trust from his home in California. He volunteers his time traveling to poverty-stricken nations for Rotaplast International. Founded by a friend, Dr. Angelo Capozzi, the organization helps treat children with cleft lip and palate anomaly who otherwise would not receive surgery. He has coached running for the Special Olympics for thirty-two years and worked for the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation. It’s his way of giving back to a great country that has been good to him and his family, he says.
Once the baby of the Grasso family, then its prince, and now its patriarch, Joe rose from painting cars and houses—You’re too smart to be a grease monkey,
his mother and grandmother used to tell him—to become partner in a major California-based financial firm, despite never having gone to college.
I probably had a very unusual relationship with my sisters and my mother, that most people don’t have. We talked all the time. Even when I moved here, I would call them once a week, or my mom twice a week,
Joe said. "They were very protective of me, and when I grew older, in my twenties, I was protective of them. I don’t ever remember us fighting and not talking afterwards. If we disagreed or argued, we never went on our merry way and didn’t talk at all. We’d always resolve it, whether we agreed or not. And we’d always talk. We always, I felt, showed a tremendous amount of respect for each other, as we did for mom.
We had a very happy family. We didn’t have a lot of material things, but we had more love than most,
Joe said.
* * *
Bill Christie, the governor’s father, was the third child of four in a family with roots in Germany, Ireland, and Scotland that had been in New Jersey—specifically in Newark, almost exclusively in the city’s 12th Ward—for generations, for one part of the family back to the future governor’s great-great-great-grandparents, who arrived around 1850.
Bill’s grandfather Hugh, a coppersmith, was an alcoholic, which compelled Bill’s dad, James, the oldest of what would eventually be seven children, to leave school in the sixth grade to support his family. In an era when Newark was an industrial force, Bill’s father later worked making camel hair belts that were woven on looms and used in manufacturing. He never took a day off. In those days there wasn’t welfare or if there was they didn’t get on it. Dad was a serious dude,
Bill recalled. Even so, he took time to read the newspaper every day and keep up with events.
Bill’s parents were Roosevelt Democrats. His mother, Caroline Carrie
Winter, was the first of four children born to John Winter and Caroline Carrie
Lott, both of whom were born in America. Like most people of that generation, John had moved from job to job—as a rigger’s helper, a tacker at a leatherworks, even a stint as a brewer at the Hensler Brewing Co., according to his 1918 draft card for World War I. Carrie Lott was the third of seven children born to Zerriak Lott and Walburga Ernst, who had arrived in the United States in 1880 from Baden, Germany. John’s parents, Charles and Christine, emigrated from Bavaria and were married in 1880.
The Christies lived in the Ironbound section of Newark dominated by Italian immigrants, which helped prompt Bill as a nine-year-old to adopt a baseball team from a Midwest state he’d never visited. With nearly every kid in his Ann Street School neighborhood a New York Yankees fan, driven largely by ethnic pride in their star Joe DiMaggio, as well as local interest in the club’s AAA minor league affiliate the Newark Bears, Bill—in a small act of rebellion—adopted the St. Louis Cardinals during the 1942 World Series.
I didn’t want to be a Yankee fan. I didn’t want to be like everybody else,
he said. So the Cardinals in ’42 beat the Yankees in five, and I said, ‘That’s my team.’
It’s a tie that remains strong today—though even in the aftermath of the Cards’ 2011 championship, he kids that being a Yankee fan might have been the better way to go.
* * *
Sandy and Bill had met in the late 1940s, when they attended rival high schools—she in Newark, he one town away in Hillside, where his family had moved when he was in the eighth grade. I was a cheerleader. She was a flag twirler,
Bill recalled. Our schools played against one other, so we got a little bit acquainted there. We didn’t go out at all, but we kind of looked at each other and said a few words.
Before they would connect, Bill went from high school to Breyers ice cream company to the Army. The Korean War was being fought, but Bill’s ability to type led him out of the infantry to a noncombat support job known in the service as a Remington Raider. I became a typist and part of three warrant officers who ran the place. So touch typing was a big plus, inadvertently,
Bill said. I got all my maturity in the Army. I think every guy ought to go to the Army. I met guys in there that let me know, and I drew from them, that I had to get a college education, for sure.
That was a lengthy process. Upon returning to civilian life, Bill attended night school on the G.I. Bill—first at Columbia University in New York because he wanted to be a broadcaster and the university had a relationship with NBC. On Wednesday nights, rather than go to Columbia, Bill would go to NBC. Still, the broadcasting dream eventually faded. I guess I wasn’t ambitious enough to be a broadcaster, because it would have meant sacrifice if you wanted to start. You always went out of town,
he said. Plus, the cost for classes had jumped—from $25 per credit his first semester, to $30 and then to $50. (These days, it’s more than $1,000.) The tuition benefits for Korean War veterans, $110 a month, weren’t as generous as the direct tuition payments made to colleges for World War II vets. So now it was costing me bucks,
Bill said.
Instead he followed a favorite uncle, one who had first impressed upon Bill the value of higher education, into accounting. He was the kind of guy that said to me, when I wasn’t going to school, pre-Army, ‘How much change do you have in your pocket?’ He was one of those guys that wanted to tell you that if you keep doing what you’re doing, your pockets aren’t going to be as full as if you go to school,
Bill said. So he was the one that inspired me to go to college, before I went to the Army. But I wasn’t really ready to go to college. When I went into the Army and came out, I was serious.
It wasn’t until more than a decade after they’d first met—after Sandy had been married to a nice guy but divorced—that Bill and Sandy were reintroduced by mutual friends. We later met at a dance,
Bill said. I used to play a lot of basketball. I was a pretty good basketball player, so I used to go to West Side High School, which is where she was, and I got to know guys over there. So we met at a dance and went out for a spell. And then I said, not only do I love this lady, but she’s going to be a great mom.
After a short courtship, Bill and Sandy were married in 1961, in their late twenties, and found a place to live in Newark. Money was tight, Bill said. We didn’t have two nickels to rub together. We actually took out a loan to buy furniture and that sort of thing.
Bill rode the bus to his job at Breyers ice cream during the day—first calling stores to encourage them to stock the company’s ice cream, as in the Breyers calling
advertising jingle of that day, then as a sign-shop supervisor. At night he would attend classes at Rutgers University in pursuit of an accounting degree. Sandy had been working at the Kearfott Co., a defense equipment manufacturer, when she and Bill met for the second time, then worked at Remington, the company that made the typewriters Bill had used in the Army—where she made a contact that got Bill’s career started on the right foot.
She was in the office, being the gal who handled a bunch of salespeople. So Remington Rand in those days sold their equipment to Peat Marwick. And now I’m going for accounting. And Sandy said to me, ‘Gee, you know I know Wendell’—and again, she made friends easy—so she and Wendell had this fun relationship, so she said, ‘How’d you like to interview with Peat Marwick?’ And that’s how I got into public accounting,
he said. Still more than a year shy of getting his degree, Bill was put on the staff in 1961 doing proofreading and other tasks. I got to meet a lot of the other guys on the staff. So they let me get on the staff before I had my degree,
Bill said. "It worked out well. Actually, I took a decrease in pay to go to public accounting. But I thought it’s going to be a brighter