“He wants to put out a whole bunch of negative ads? Go ahead. I 
hope that he will acknowledge at some point that I couldn’t care less," 
Christie added.
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
Christie continued going after 
Rubio, saying he has "never been in a tough race in his life" and 
attacking the Florida senator over his efforts on immigration in the 
Senate in 2013.
The pushback comes after the super PAC supporting Rubio began airing a pair of blistering attack ads targeting Christie over high taxes, low job growth, Common Core education standards and "scandals."
The
 ads are playing in New Hampshire, where Christie and Rubio are among 
several candidates vying for positioning before its first-in-the-nation 
primaries on Feb. 9. 
Christie has gained some 
momentum recently in polls in the Granite State, where former Florida 
Gov. Jeb Bush and Ohio Gov. John Kasich are also battling behind Donald 
Trump.
Referencing the super PAC ads, Rubio 
later told reporters at a campaign stop in Iowa that "there's nothing in
 them that's inaccurate," according to the Post.
“I
 guess the point is something I would say too, and that is that this 
country cannot afford a president that’s not going to reverse the 
direction Barack Obama’s taken our country. We can’t have another 
president that supports Common Core or gun control or expanding 
Obamacare," Rubio said.
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