Endorsements are piling up

Assemblywoman Linda Greenstein may be running out of time.

Another group has come out for Assemblyman Bill Baroni in his campaign to replace state Sen. Peter Inverso, who is retiring from his senate perch this year.

Baroni snatched several major labor endorsements from state public employee unions and laborers. Today, it won the endorsement of a South Brunswick union, according to Politics NJ.

PBA Local 1066, which represents police officers in South Brunswick, has endorsed Bill Baroni for State Senate. “We work hard at protecting our communities and Bill works hard at protecting our future from corruption and abuse”, said PBA Delegate James Ryan. “Bill has been one of New Jersey’s hardest working legislators and we have maintained an open dialogue since his election to the Assembly.”

Greenstein had an uphill climb to begin with against Baroni and as the endorsements mount that climb becomes even more steep.

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On a related note, some readers of the paper the last few weeks may have noticed that we have spent time covering the legislative races. That represents a change — one our readers seemed interested in. We will be covering the race this year by focusing on those issues that have a direct and indirect impact on Cranbury, Jamesburg, Monroe and South Brunswick.

And we plan to endorse.

The Dayton papers — the South Brunswick Post and The Cranbury Press — cover towns with a total population of about 80,000, meaning we represent about 40 percent of the district. Add the two Packet towns — Plainsboro and West Windsor — and we have a majority.

I’ll pass along more lateras we develop our coverage guidelines.

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CD spree — featuring Bruce Springsteen

My musical choices are spelled out for the next few months. Fountains of Wayne have a new disc out — today in fact — and Wilco’s new disc is due in May. And there is a new Arctic Monkeys‘ single available for download as of Sunday.

And then there is this, from Bruce Springsteen:

Columbia Records will release ‘Bruce Springsteen With The Sessions Band Live in Dublin’ June 5, a concert DVD, and separate two-CD set release. The two-CD set and DVD both feature 23 songs drawn from the band’s performances in Dublin, Ireland at The Point on November 17, 18 and 19, 2006. Songs include fan favorites from ‘The Seeger Sessions,’ radical interpretations from the Springsteen songbook and rare songs appearing for the first time on any Springsteen release.

Springsteen’s longtime manager Jon Landau said, “‘Live in Dublin’ charts the development of a band from an informal gathering in Bruce’s living room to an onstage powerhouse. It also documents the growth in Bruce’s vision of American music; it includes folk music, blues, Dixieland, country, swing, gospel, rock, down to and including his own writing. It’s all performed with Bruce’s classic energy and focus. I think it’s some of the finest music he’s ever made.”

The DVD and CD captures the band during the finale of its multi-leg 2006 tour. The Word Magazine (UK) said of a concert on this tour, “I have never, make that NEVER, seen a show better than the one mounted by Bruce Springsteen and his band at Wembley Arena on Saturday, November 11, 2006.” The Sunday Business Post Agenda (UK), in a 5 star review, said, “During the concert’s numerous high points, the crowd was ecstatic and Springsteen was the preacher, spreading a welcome message: We’re open all night.”

Bruce Springsteen with The Sessions Band’s tour last year prompted other incredible reviews. “Sometime, somewhere, a more dramatic and exhilarating confluence of music with moment may have existed… But in nearly 40 years of concert-going, I haven’t witnessed one,” said LA Times. The Washington Post declared, “It was the best live show I’ve seen in at least five years. (And I’ve seen a few.)” Meanwhile, The Independent (UK), said, “It’s been an astonishingly rich evening.” The Observer (UK) proclaimed, “Springsteen and the Seeger Session band were an inspiring triumph.”

‘Bruce Springsteen With The Sessions Band Live in Dublin’ was produced by George Travis and produced and edited by Emmy Award winner Thom Zimny, who recently took home a Grammy Award for directing “Wings For Wheels: The Making Of Born To Run,” a DVD in the acclaimed ‘Born To Run’ box set. Legendary mixer Bob Clearmountain mixed the DVD in both stereo and 5.1 surround sound. Bob Ludwig mastered the DVD and CD at Gateway Studios. Documented with nine cameras, the concert was filmed in High Definition (HD).

Make room on the CD racks.

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Corruption is not partisan

The call last week by Assembly members Bill Baroni and Alex DeCroce for a special legislative session to develop and approve anti-corruption legislation should be heeded. If not with a special session, then with real, bipartisan ethical reform.

While some are dismissing it as nothing more than politics — and make no mistake, there is a whole lot of politics involved here — the fact is that the corruption they are pointing to exists and it is incumbent upon legislators to rein it in.

Last week, state Sen. Wayne Bryant, a Camden County Democat, became the latest in a long line of high-profile state officials, along with a bevy of lower-level officials (housing officials in Passaic County, zoning officials in Monmouth County), to face indictment. Like former state Sen. President John Lynch — the Middlesex County Democratic power broker who pleaded guilty last year to federal corruption charges — Sen. Bryant is accused of abusing his office. In his case, he’s been accused of trading a no-show job with the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey in exchange for his steering of grant money to the school.

The problem is greater than Sen. Bryant or former Sen. Lynch — far greater, of course, than any individual politician. It is systemic, a product of a state tradition that allows New Jersey’s elected officials to hold more than one public job, creating a nexus of influence that encourages, in the words of Alfred Doblin, editorial page editor of The Record of Hackesnack, the “regular exchange of ‘Christmas’ presents among legislators, local elected officials and organizations with financial ties to state and local governments.”

Doblin, in a column on Monday, blames the double-dipper — the elected official who holds multiple, interwined public jobs — but also the political status quo, which has done very little to change the system. And this goes for both political parties — Bryant, Lynch, James Treffinger and all the others have been getting away with things for too long.

Wayne Bryant was in the Legislature for a long time. Are voters supposed to believe that no other legislators or their staffs had an inkling of what was going on? That’s as improbable as being told that no one in Trenton knew former Gov. Jim McGreevey was gay. Either the folks in Trenton are dim or we are.

Hence, the call for reforms by the Republicans.

“We are at a critical mass of corruption in New Jersey,” Assemblyman Baroni said last week. And it is difficult to argue. Voters believe that New Jersey politicians are on the take — and too many are.

Are the Republicans manipulating the issue? Of course. Did the Democrats do the same in Congress with the Abramoff scandal, and are they doing the same thing now with the firing of the U.S. attorneys? Yes. But that does not mean that scandals were not real.

Framing the issue as a purely political question obscures that corruption has become a fact of life in New Jersey for both sides and that the Democrats, by virtue of their status as the majority party, have a responsibility to do something aobut it.

The package of bills being pushed by the GOP has some interesting and useful suggestions — an end to double-dipping and pay-to-play reforms — and deserves a hearing.

The governor already has signed legislation sponsored by Assembly Democrat John Adler that imposes tough sanctions on lawmakers who violate ethical standards. But the Democrxatic majority has been slow to enact a real ban on dual-office holding and double-dipping and to create tougher pay-to-play restrictions and clamp down on contractors and developers. They have an opportunity now to fix a broken system — to expand the clean elections program, give the state comptroller some real powers and create a corruption czar in the AG’s office among them.

There are a lot of potential reforms that could alter the climate here. We shouldn’t let politics get in the way.

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