TRENTON, N.J. — New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who bills himself as a say-what-I-think straight-talker, has been unusually silent recently on some hot-button national issues.

While other top Republicans have been quick to weigh in, Christie has side-stepped questions on the Hobby Lobby Supreme Court ruling, immigration reform and Israel. Some suggest he’s being careful – and letting others in the prospective Republican field for the 2016 presidential nomination get into early brawls.

New Jersey’s Republican governor has repeatedly declined to offer his opinion on the Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby decision, which will allow some companies to opt out of paying for employees’ contraception under President Obama’s health care overhaul.

Asked the day after the decision whether the court decided correctly, Christie shrugged, “Who knows?”

“Why would I give an opinion on whether they’re right or wrong?” he said during an appearance on CNBC. “In the end of the day, they did what they did.”

A week later, Christie was again pressed, this time on the decision’s local impact.

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“It’s just not something I’m all that concerned about,” he told reporters.

It’s not the only fiery issue the blunt-talking Christie has skirted in recent weeks, even as other high-profile Republicans mulling runs for the White House have eagerly weighed in. Rand Paul and Rick Perry brawled over foreign policy as the newly demure Christie toured Tennessee over the weekend, and Thursday he heads to politically important Iowa, as part of his duties heading the Republican Governors Association.

In Nashville, Christie gave strong but general, opinions on matters such as immigration and Washington gridlock. But asked for specifics, he offered equally terse refusals to elaborate.

On foreign policy, Christie said Obama should “be speaking firmly and forcefully on behalf of Israel” and condemning Hamas “in the strongest terms and with actions.” But asked whether those actions should include the military, Christie punted: “I’m not going to give opinions on that, I’m not the president.”

In June, Christie mocked a reporter in San Francisco for asking him to discuss his position on immigration after House Majority Leader Eric Cantor’s unexpected loss to a candidate who’d made the issue the focus of his campaign.

“I’m sure you’d love me to do that, and in fact, what I want to do in a flower warehouse, I want to give you a very complex answer behind a set of microphones on a contentious issue that’s driving a debate all across the country. No, thank you,” he replied.

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OUTSPOKEN AS EVER?

Mike DuHaime, Christie’s top political adviser, who also managed former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s presidential bid, said Christie has been “completely unafraid to take on tough, controversial issues.”

He pointed to Christie’s decisions to cut education funding his first year in office, delay pension contributions in this year’s budget and veto legislation that would have reduced gun magazine capacity, despite pleas from parents of the victims of the Sandy Hook school shooting.

“I would say it’s a mischaracterization to cherry pick a couple of times where he basically says, ‘Look, that’s not something I have to deal with. I haven’t thought about it, so I’m moving on,”‘ he said.

While Christie’s camp insists he’s as outspoken as ever, some observers see the dodges as part of a larger strategy by the governor to avoid weighing in on divisive national issues, especially with key constituencies like women and Latinos, as he mulls how to position himself in the Republican primary field.

As failed candidates from blue states like Giuliani and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney quickly learned, if he runs, Christie will have to balance courting voters who lean far to the right of those he’s used to while remaining competitive in the general election.

“To a great extent, he’s avoiding addressing things he doesn’t think he has to in the context of, we presume at the moment, him gearing up to run for president,” said David Redlawsk, director of the Rutgers Eagleton Center for Public Interest Polling.


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