Embattled New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie fought to revive his presidential aspirations in northern New England on Wednesday, declaring he would not be silenced by scandal while campaigning alongside one of the nation's most endangered Republican governors.

Christie said he shared Maine Gov. Paul LePage's leadership style, despite regular criticism from Democrats and Republicans alike who accuse the tough-talking governors of being bullies.

"The one thing they can't say about LePage and I is that we sound like everybody else - we don't, because we tell the truth. We say what we think. We're very direct," Christie said while facing out-of-state reporters for the first time since an alleged political retribution scandal erupted in New Jersey. "They're not going to silence me, and they're certainly not going to silence Gov. LePage. We'll be who we are."

Gov. Chris Christie, left, and Maine Gov. Paul LePage speak to reporters in Portland, Maine. Christie is visiting Maine to help one of the Republican Party’s most endangered incumbent governors win reelection. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
Gov. Chris Christie, left, and Maine Gov. Paul LePage speak to reporters in Portland, Maine. Christie is visiting Maine to help one of the Republican Party’s most endangered incumbent governors win reelection. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Despite the show of confidence, both Republican governors have struggled through a series of largely self-inflicted controversies that jeopardize their political futures. The stakes are highest for the New Jersey governor as he eyes a 2016 presidential campaign.

Federal prosecutors launched a criminal investigation after internal documents revealed that senior members of Christie's team intentionally clogged traffic near the George Washington Bridge, apparently to punish a political adversary last fall. Christie has insisted he had no prior knowledge of the incident and fired the aides involved.

LePage, meanwhile, is facing a daunting re-election challenge. Since winning in 2010 with just over 38 percent of the vote, LePage has vetoed the most bills of any Maine governor. He's withheld millions of dollars in voter-approved bonds until the Legislature passed bills he wanted and briefly barred his commissioners from testifying before lawmakers.

Democrats seized on Christie's appearance with LePage as part of an ongoing push to tarnish the prospective presidential candidate's image.

"They seem to be two governors in America who have perfected the tirade, which usually leaves their constituents embarrassed for their words and actions," Vermont Gov. Peter Shumlin, chairman of the Democratic Governors Association, said before the visit.

Christie was trying to move forward with his official duties as chairman of the Republican Governor's Association on Wednesday, headlining fundraisers to benefit LePage and the Maine GOP. He has made similar trips across the country in recent months, avoiding public appearances and reporters until Wednesday.

Christie largely sidestepped questions about the bridge scandal, focusing instead on his dedication to Republican governors across the country eager to benefit from his fundraising prowess.

"I'll answer questions directly and continue to work really hard for the candidates who ask me to come in and help them," Christie said. "We have no shortage of people asking."

LePage, meanwhile, is fighting for re-election after a first term marked by controversial statements that at times embarrassed his Republican colleagues.

He once used a sexual vulgarity to criticize a Democratic lawmaker, told the Portland branch of the NAACP to "kiss my butt" and compared the Internal Revenue Service to the Gestapo.

Political observers say LePage stands the best chance of winning if Democrat Mike Michaud and independent Eliot Cutler split the Democratic vote.

But LePage's campaign says that Democrats are trying to paint the governor as a "bully" to distract voters from his accomplishments that have helped Maine.

"When it comes to people like Chris Christie and myself, what we tell you is what we believe," LePage said Wednesday. "It's not what you want to hear, oftentimes. We understand that. But believe me, it's the truth."

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