New Jersey governor Chris Christie on Tuesday announced his bid for the 2016 US presidential race, jumping into the race along side 13 other Republican candidates.
Christie made the announcement at Livingston High School, his alma mater, in New Jersey. His campaign team disclosed his bid via email earlier on Tuesday, Xinhua reported.
As the 14th Republican candidate in the race to the White House, Christie began his remarks at the Livingston High School in very personal style, referring at length to his family and to his upbringing in the city.
"Everything started here for me: The confidence, the education, the friends, the family and the love that I've always felt for and from this community," he said.
Christie, a tough-talking former federal prosecutor whose reputation for political bullying was reinforced by a George Washington Bridge lane-closing scandal that surfaced last year, has served as New Jersey governor since January 2010, winning the election twice in a state where Democrats greatly outnumber Republicans.
Analysts said the George Washington Bridge lane closure scandal is an obvious obstacle in his way for presidential campaign. However, some experts believe that his skills as a retail politician and his debating ability could turn things around.