FORT WORTH,
Texas (AP) -- New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie backed Donald Trump
in the Republican race for president Friday, a powerhouse endorsement as
the billionaire tries to beat back assaults on his character from a
newly aggressive rival, Marco Rubio.
Christie
joined Trump at a Forth Worth news conference and praised him as "the
person who will go to Washington, D.C., and be able to absolutely turn
the place around."
Christie said Trump was hands-down the better choice than Rubio, a first-term senator who "didn't show up for work."
"We
don't need any more of these Washington, D.C. acts," said the governor,
who had needled Rubio for missing Senate votes back when the governor
was a candidate himself.
The shock endorsement
came after Rubio, in an abrupt shift cheered by anxious Republicans
nationwide, shattered months of relative peace with Trump in Thursday
night's GOP debate. It marked the beginning of a long-awaited takedown
effort on Trump heading into the weekend before Super Tuesday.
Rubio
continued the verbal assault on Friday, repeatedly calling Trump "a con
artist" in interviews designed to weaken Trump's tightening grasp on
the Republican nomination. And a new advertising campaign from Rubio
allies attacked Trump's business background and limited knowledge on
foreign policy.
"A con artist is about to take
over the Republican Party and the conservative movement," Rubio charged
on CBS' "This Morning." ''And we have to put a stop to it."
But
as he has so many times during the campaign, Trump found a way to turn
the attention back to himself just hours later, with the Christie
endorsement. "I just said wow, that is really great," Trump said of the
governor's support.
Trump has won three
consecutive primary contests and leads polls in most of the 11 states
participating in Tuesday's mega-round of voting. Christie's endorsement
is a blow to Trump's Republican competitors, not least Rubio, who had
been courting the tough-talking New Jersey governor since he dropped his
own presidential candidacy earlier in the month.
"Desperate
people do desperate things," Christie said of Rubio's attacks while
standing at Trump's side. "The idea that Marco Rubio can get inside
Donald Trump's head is an interesting proposition."
Rubio's
strategic shift comes as the GOP presidential candidates barreled into
the final sprint to Super Tuesday. This, after a name-calling,
insult-trading, finger-pointing debate Thursday night at which Rubio and
Ted Cruz engaged in a tag-team attack against the GOP front-runner.
Trump's rivals concede that it might take an extraordinary "brokered" national Republican convention in July to stop him.
"Point
is, there's still a pathway to beating him," said Liz Mair, a
Republican strategist leading an anti-Trump group. "As of Wednesday, I
wasn't convinced there really was."
On the
Democratic side, Hillary Clinton claimed new headway on the eve of a
South Carolina Democratic primary that she's expected to win handily.
"I
think it does take me a little bit longer to get into the rhythm of
campaigning," she said on MSNBC's "Morning Joe." ''We hit our stride in
Nevada. Our message of breaking all barriers is really beginning to take
hold. I really felt we were on an upward trajectory."
Even
if the Republican-backed Trump attacks don't work in the short-term,
Clinton suggested he'd be vulnerable as the GOP nominee in the fall.
"When
it moves to the general election, I think you're going to see a real
seriousness," she said, "with people turning and saying, 'What do we
know about this man?'"
There was little sign that Trump's stock was falling at the Fort Worth rally where supporters gathered.
Many
Trump supporters said they hadn't seen the Houston debate that shook
him up. Those who had stood by their candidate and criticized the way
his rivals teamed up on him.
"They come
prepared to attack Trump at all costs," said Arlene Smart, 58, of
Liberty, Texas. "I'm sick of lying in Washington. Trump is the man.
That's all there is to it."
"I think most people see it as Washington's crooked attacks," she added.
As
Trump's rivals stepped up their criticism, a pro-Rubio super PAC
announced plans to start running Trump attack ads in key states on
Friday.
One ad charges that Trump "knows
nothing about foreign policy." Another targets his business background,
highlights the businessman's use of "sleazy bankruptcy laws to avoid
paying workers" and calls him out for saying he loves "the poorly
educated" - Trump's clumsy way of expressing compassion for the poor.
From
Houston, the GOP candidates spread out in the hunt for Super Tuesday
votes, with Cruz headed for Tennessee and Virginia on Friday. Both Trump
and Rubio are signaling they're unwilling to cede Texas, the crown
jewel of Tuesday's voting, to Cruz, the home-state senator.
Each scheduled campaign events in Texas before going to Oklahoma City.
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