Chris Christie: San Bernardino Proves He Was Right to Warn Against Women and Children Refugees

Christie says San Bernardino proves he was right to warn against refugees.

“What Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama propose is cotton candy. ... It has no relationship to anything that will help to make the body of the country safer or better,” the Republican presidential candidate said in a radio interview with Hugh Hewitt on Friday. “Just like eating cotton candy, nothing good for the body, just makes you feel good for a couple of minutes.”

President Obama had previously mocked Christie’s blanket opposition to all Syrian refugees to say that the Republican presidential candidates must be “scared of widows and orphans.” But on Friday, Christie returned fire.

"I wonder if the president is going to stand up and call me a tough guy today and insult me again,” he told Hewitt. “You know, the fact is I know a little bit about this stuff and the President of the United States should open his ears more and open his mouth less.”

Christie, who served as a federal prosecutor in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, has been emphasizing his national security background as a key selling point on the campaign trail in the wake of the attack in Paris and now San Bernardino. And as he watched the reporting on the attack unfold in California this week, Christie said, it only took him a matter of hours to conclude that it was terrorism.

“I have a lot of experience in prosecuting terrorism cases,” Christie said at the forum in Fort Dodge. “After about an hour and half of watching news coverage on TV, I turned to wife and said this is terrorist attack.”