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Elections

Monday, May 20, 2013

Sample Ballots Available Online for June Primaries

Residents may access online versions of the ballots before they are mailed.

Middlesex County Clerk Elaine M. Flynn has announced that sample ballots for the June 4 Primary Election are now available online at the County web site, http://co.middlesex.nj.us/countyclerk/sampleballots.asp. Sample ballots will be sent via post mail, but residents also can access the information online for informational purposes. Sample ballots are listed by town, and in some case by wards within the town. Most towns have only one sample ballot. However, some municipalities have multiple ballots based on specific local races for an elected position. The sample ballots are in a PDF format. Your computer must have a PDF reader to view the sample ballots. You can download a reader from the County site. “Our Elections Division already keeps…

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Black Voters in NJ Turn Out in Largest Percentage for 2012 Presidential Bid

NJ results part of a national trend charted in just-released report from U.S. Census Bureau.

A new report on voting in the 2012 presidential election found that blacks in New Jersey, like those across the nation, turned out in greater percentages than any other racial or ethnic group and the youngest voters, those age 18 through 24, turned out in the smallest numbers. The report by the U.S. Census Bureau released on Wednesday said that a greater percentage of eligible blacks voted than whites for the first time since officials began publishing voting statistics in 1996. Nationally, two in three eligible blacks voted in the presidential election, which was slightly higher than the 64.1 percent of non-Hispanic whites. In New Jersey, 68.5 percent of eligible African Americans voted, compared with 63.4 percent of whites. James Harris…

Tugwalla

10:02 am on Monday, May 20, 2013

Corey...by default this is a story based on race. However...why did the left accuse whites would did not vote for Obama as being racists...but not the blacks who voted for him?   more ›

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Democrats Decry Governor’s Veto of Early-Voting System

GOP lawmakers says proposal’s too expensive, not needed because people can cast absentee ballots.

Gov. Chris Christie on Thursday vetoed a bill that would have created a system for early voting in New Jersey, which Democrats saw as needed to expand voting opportunities but the governor deemed unnecessary. Inspired by the state’s chaotic 2012 presidential election held in the wake of Superstorm Sandy, the bill, S-2364and A-3553, would have permitted voters to cast ballots in person at designated polling locations as early as 15 days prior to an election. It was sponsored by and supported by only Democrats. All Republicans in both the Senate and Assembly opposed it, and given the composition of the Legislature, it is impossible to override a veto without GOP support. In his veto message, Christie said New Jersey voters have been able to …

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Can Dems Make Education Pivotal Issue in Governor's Race?

Even with backing of both teachers unions, Buono faces challenge to articulate how she differs from Christie.

It's taken a while, but Gov. Chris Christie’s aggressive school reform agenda -- and the Democrats’ counter to it -- could be emerging as a big issue in the 2013 gubernatorial election. Christie’s very public involvement in the public schools -- especially in some of the state’s most troubled districts -- has been one of the hallmarks of his education agenda for the past three-and-a-half years. To recap some of the governor's political -- and personal -- initiatives: appointing a reform-minded superintendent in Newark, and playing a large role in hammering out a new teachers contract there; opposing Abbott v. Burke school-equity decisions; pushing for private school vouchers; blocking the surrender of state control in both Newark and …

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DSXM

9:44 pm on Thursday, April 25, 2013

@Jake That would mean that parents would actually be okay with teachers disciplining kids, following up at home, and not blaming the teacher if their kid gets in trouble or is not succeeding in the classroom.   more ›

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Races Take Shape for Party Primaries in June

Many Senate and Assembly incumbents face competition in bids for slots on November ballot.

While the governor’s race tops the ballot, a number of legislative contests throughout the state, more of which target incumbent Democrats than Republicans, may prove at least as interesting to local voters. Monday was the deadline for partisan candidates to file petitions to get on the primary ballot in June. Both Republican Gov. Chris Christie and Sen. Barbara Buono (D-Middlesex), his expected Democratic challenger, have primary opponents. But so do five incumbent state senators -- four Democrats and one Republican – and seven Assembly members – four Democrats and three Republicans. There are at least some other challenges for open seats or for the right to challenge incumbents in November. The entire makeup of the election landscape is …

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Unemployment Emerging as Major Issue in Governor’s Race

NJ jobless rate higher than national average and neighboring states still a vulnerability for Christie.

With New Jersey’s governor’s race already in general-election mode, last week’s 0.2 percent dip in the state unemployment rate to 9.3 percent drew immediate partisan responses. Charles Steindel, Gov. Chris Christie’s chief economist, gushed that the “solid” month continued “the general, upward trend of growth and progress established under the Christie administration.” Meanwhile, Sen. Barbara Buono (D-Middlesex), Christie’s Democratic challenger, declared that “the fact that Gov. Christie’s administration calls this ‘another solid month,’ after losing 2,200 jobs in January, just shows how the governor is out of touch with reality." In actuality, the February drop continued a slow five-month improvement from a 35-year record-high …

MrDoughnut

7:10 pm on Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Charlotte Wickham, christened Georgiana, was the posthumous child of George Wickham, of the U.S. Navy, and Charlotte Carter, daughter of Williams Carter of Shirley Plantation in Virginia. Her mother died while she was a baby, so Charlotte was reared by her maternal grandfather at Shirley. George Wickham, her father, was the son of John Wickham and his second wife, Elizabeth Selden McClurg, of …   more ›

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

In Man-Bites-Dog Scenario, Christie Visits NJEA for Endorsement

Just by showing up for interview, governor demonstrates how his relationship with union has evolved.

The fact that Gov. Chris Christie didn’t win the New Jersey Education Association’s endorsement for governor this weekend wasn’t all that unexpected. The surprise was that he participated in the process at all. Four years after Christie sent a public letter rather than showing up for his pitch to the NJEA, the governor walked across West State St. in Trenton -- right on time for his 6:30 appointment. In what was described as a cordial back and forth, Christie spent 45 minutes in front of the 15 union leaders who make up the screening committee, responding to probing questions about everything from pensions to teacher evaluation. Ultimately, the union’s PAC picked the Democratic challenger, state Sen. Barbara Buono (D-Middlesex), by a …

b paterson

3:25 pm on Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Christie's for the affordable schools and a good education for our children, NJEA is for special interest, higher salaries and pensions for their members; and they back Buono. Shows the profound difference between the two candidates for governor.   more ›

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Poll Shows Chris Christie Has Huge Lead In Governor's Race

A Quinnipiac University poll released this week shows Chris Christie with a big lead over his Democratic challenger, state Sen. Barbara Buono.

Gov. Chris Christie is the best person to lead New Jersey over the next four years, according to voters polled in a survey released last week by Quinnipiac University. Christie, a Republican, leads his Democratic rival, state Sen. Barbara Buono (D-Middlesex), 62 percent to 25 percent in the state's 2013 gubernatorial race, according to the poll.  The governor's overall approval rating also remains high. Christie's 74 percent approval rating and 69 percent favorable rating tie his personal record highs from January, the Huffington Post reports, both numbers buoyed by public perception of the way he handled Hurricane Sandy's impact and its aftermath.  Christie appears to have strong support on the other side of the aisle, as well.  In the …

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Buono to Kick Off Gubernatorial Campaign in New Brunswick

Sen. Barbara Buono will hold a rally at New Brunswick High School on Saturday.

Sen. Barbara Buono has picked New Brunswick High School as the site to begin her campaign for state governor. At noon on Saturday, Feb. 2, Buono (D-Middlesex) will host "Rally for New Jersey's Future" at New Brunswick High School, 1000 Somerset St. Buono, a resident of Metuchen, has been a senator since 2002.  In the last few years, she has locally campaigned for domestic violence victims, introduced legislation to transform foreclosed homes into affordable housing, and to approve charter schools through local voting, and voted in favor of a bill that would legalize same-sex marriage in New Jersey. She is believed to be the Democratic candidate to face Gov. Chris Christie in this year's gubernatorial election after being endorsed by …

Tugwalla

6:29 pm on Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Did Buono ever return the nearly $14,000 in campaign contributions she directly received from her her Party Boss and disgraced Middlesex County Democratic Chairman, Joe Spicuzzo..... Just sayin....   more ›

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Get to Know the Candidates in Tuesday's School Board Elections

Today is the date of the first school board elections New Brunswick has seen in nearly 20 years. Polls are open from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.

On Tuesday, voters in New Brunswick will vote to fill two brand-new seats on the New Brunswick Board of Education in the first school board elections in New Brunswick in two decades. In preparation for the elections, Unity Square has distributed a nonpartisan questionnaire to the candidates for the purpose of the community to learn more about them. Below, find the questionnaires reprinted from Unity Square's official blog. Five candidates are running for two seats. One seat is a one-year term and the other is a two-year term. Candidates seeking the one-year term: Diana Fajardo, 54 Remsen Ave.: What motivates you to seek this office? As a parent of a child that attends one of our city schools, I am extremely motivated to become a member of …

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