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Republican Christie wins New Jersey governor's race; economy, taxes, corruption were keys

 - New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine talks to reporters after voting at the Elks Club in Hoboken, N.J., Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2009. The governor is running for a second term against Republican candidate Chris Christie and Independent candidate Chris Daggett. (THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Rich Schultz)

New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine talks to reporters after voting at the Elks Club in Hoboken, N.J., Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2009. The governor is running for a second term against Republican candidate Chris Christie and Independent candidate Chris Daggett. (THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Rich Schultz)

Published on November 3rd, 2009
Published on November 3rd, 2009
Topics :
New Jersey , TRENTON, N.J. , U.S.

TRENTON, N.J. - Republican Chris Christie has defeated Democratic Gov. Jon Corzine in New Jersey.

With 71 per cent of precincts reporting Tuesday night, Christie had 50 per cent of the vote to Corzine's 44 per cent. Christie, a 47-year-old former federal prosecutor, became the first member of his party in a dozen years to win a statewide contest in heavily Democratic New Jersey.

The Republican victory deals a blow to President Barack Obama as he readies for next year's midterm elections. Obama campaigned heavily for Corzine.

Christie accepted public financing in the race against the wealthy incumbent and was outspent by more than $12 million.

He ran on a platform of smaller government and criticized Corzine for what he called poor economic stewardship. State unemployment was nearly 10 per cent in October and property taxes are the highest in the U.S.

© Canadian Press