Thoughts on choosing a candidate

It is shortly after midnight, Oct. 22, my 44th birthday, 16 days before the election and four days before we will endorse candidates for the Township Council race in South Brunswick and five days before we endorse in Cranbury for its Township Committee race. I won’t say who will get the nod, but I want to offer some thoughts on what goes into an endorsement and into the choice more generally of the candidates who will get my own vote on Nov. 7.

Over the years, I’ve heard a lot of people say things like “It’s the person, not the party” or tell me they look at a person’s qualifications (whatever that might mean). On some level, I guess, I agree. I have endorsed candidates from both major parties, as well as independents and members of third parties. Each decision is treated independently, with the particular circumstances and candidates factored in.

For instance, I’ll be voting for Bob Menendez for U.S. Senate — not because I find him a particularly compelling candidate, but because it is important that his party take control of the Senate to end conservative control of the Senate and because he has been opposed to the war since 2003.

I voted Nader in 1996 and 2000 because I was fed up with the major parties and because I felt that a Nader vote in a blue state like New Jersey was a safe bet — unlike Florida, where a vote for Nader was a vote taken from the Democrats in a borderline state that ended up officially going red.

I voted for Bill Baroni last time out because he is a reformer and independent and a voice that is needed in the state Assembly. I also voted for Mike Paquette, another Republican, in what was a difficult decision (I also like Linda Greenstein as a candidate and Assemblywoman).

At the local level, you have to take into account several things:

1. Vision and philosophy. What do the candidates believe and what are their longterm hopes for the community? How do the answers to those questions match the community’s values ad the values of the editorial page that I run?

2. Competence (as opposed to qualifications) and past record. Do the candidates seem to know the community? Do they know the issues? Have they done their homework? What have they done while in office (or on other boards and commissions)?

3. Circumstances. What is the composition of the governing body and are their any dissenting or contrary voices (these do not have to be from other parties, but generally are)? Would a particular outcome shift partisan control and would that affect policy for the good or ill (See Senate race comments above)?

All of this is tossed into the mix and shaken (not stirred) and an endorsement is made. Most times, we are satisfied with the decision, though occasionally we endorse with reservations.

So stay tuned until Thursday and Friday for our decisions.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

Tree down

Driving home, trying to meet PSE&G to fix a broken heater in anticipation of a cold weekend, found a tree down on Ridge Road, blocking traffic. The Rev. John Maltby, a member of the Monmouth Junction First Aid Squad, was out with the squad and the fire department securing the area. A tree had fallen in the parking lot of Theo’s Family Restaurant, taken down by the heavy winds and rain this afternoon, nblocking the road and apparently doing some minor damage to a nearby house.

Mother Nature was in a bad mood today I guess.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

A brief post-mortem

The Cardinals are a tough team, battle-tested, and cannot be ruled out in the battle with Detroit. The Tigers will be prohibitive favorites, given the way they ran through the American League playoffs, but the Cards went toe to toe with the NL’s best squad and ended up the last team standing.

I don’t like the Cardinals. I don’t like Tony LaRussa and I don’t like the Cardinals’ core players. But you can’t dismiss what they’ve done.

As a Mets fan, it would be easy to view the season as a failure, but the team won 97 games and came within a hit of the World Series, just two years after losing 91. That’s a 26-win shift that’s been accomplished through the shrewd roster-building of Omar Minaya. Yes, he had cash at his disposal, but he built a team. But now we have to move on and plug the team’s holes: A couple of starting pitchers (let’s get Barry Zito signed, bring back Glavine and move Heilmann into the rotation; then we can see if Oliver Perez’s immense talent can be harnessed, if John Maine can be a servicable starter, and let’s find another arm); a number-six hitter; platoon Lastings Milledge with Shawn Green. Then we go from there.

It was fun while it lasted.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick