Labor goes for Singh, finally

After several notable unions, including the state AFL-CIO and several CWA locals, lined up behind Assemblyman Bill Baroni, a Republican, in his bid for the state Senate from the 14th District, the Middlesex County Central Labor Council , which is headed by Jamesburg Borough Councilman Joe Jennings, has lined up behind Democrat Seema Singh.

The union has 17,000 members in the county, but Middlesex makes up only about 45 percent of the district, so it is unclear what kind of impact this will have.

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D’Angelo’s conservative attitudes

An interesting bit of information on Democratic candidate Wayne D’Angelo, via Politics NJ and the national Project Vote Smart organization:

Democrat Wayne D’Angelo is pro-life, supports the death penalty, and opposes Governor Jon Corzine’s plan to lease the New Jersey Turnpike, according to an issue survey D’Angelo submitted to the non-partisan Project Vote Smart.

According to the survey, D’Angelo says Abortion should be legal only when pregnancy results from incest or rape, or when the life of the woman is endangered, and he supports requiring clinics to give parental notification before performing abortion on minors.

He also supports voluntary prayer in public schools, and says he is undecided on New Jersey recognizing gay marriage or if he would support a constitutional amendment defining marriage as between one man and one woman — but he did say the state should continue to recognize civil unions between same-sex couples. He took no positions on gun control issues, other than say that gun owners should be licensed.

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Silly season takes to the road

We are in the midst of a silly stretch as regards the governor’s so-called “monetization plan.” The plan, which would sell, lease or in some other way turn assets like the N.J. Turnpike or the state lottery into instant cash for use to pay down debt (primarily) has little support around the state, including in the state Legislature.

But a questionable inclusion in the state budget granting the governor money to study the plan (and the likelihood that the governor will not be presenting a plan until after the November elections) is drawing fire.

We received a press release the other day from Republican candidates for the state Assembly, Adam Bushman of Jamesburg and Tom Goodwin of Hamilton. (They have been very aggressive in sending out releases, more aggressive than their opponents.) Here is the text of the release:

State Assembly Candidates Tom Goodwin and Adam Bushman today criticized Assemblywoman Linda Greenstein for voting down an amendment that would have stricken a line item from the state budget during Thursday’s budget debate, authorizing the sale of state assets including the New Jersey Turnpike.

Goodwin described the move as being detached from New Jersey voters.

“This vote exposes how out-of-touch Assemblywoman Greenstein is with the families of the 14th District,” asserted Goodwin. “As I knock on doors, I continue to hear the same message: voters oppose selling the New Jersey Turnpike because it will lead to more toll increases. Ms. Greenstein should have followed the lead of Assemblyman Baroni in voting to strike from the state budget the provisions to sell public assets.”

During Thursday’s budget debate, Assemblywoman Greenstein voted against removing a budget provision allowing unlimited funding for “legal and engineering fees, financial advisers and other consultants and services associated with, as well as any other costs determined necessary in preparation for, the monetization, sale or lease of public assets.” (Section 75, FY2008)

Bushman called the vote “fiscally irresponsible.”

“Assemblywoman Greenstein’s vote to allow the sale of the Turnpike is bad for New Jersey,” said Bushman. “This is an election year ploy that gives the administration a blank check to sell off state assets while hiding the details of the deal from the voters until after Election Day. It is fiscally irresponsible to sell off our state assets and disconnected from the families of the 14th District.”

The budget line, as I said, did not authorize the sale, but only the study. But that matters little at election time. On the flip side, we have the Democrats’ release, issued today:

Assemblywoman Linda Greenstein and Assembly candidate Wayne DeAngelo today declared their unalterable opposition to any plan that would authorize New Jersey toll roads to be sold or leased to any private or foreign entity.

“Any plan that proposes giving control of New Jersey’s toll roads to a private profit-seeking firm is an absolute non-starter,” said Greenstein (D-Plainsboro). “Over the past 50 years, New Jersey built these roadways for the public’s use and with public’s money; they must remain in public hands.”

Greenstein and DeAngelo said they would vote against any plan that potentially could place the New Jersey Turnpike, Garden State Parkway, or Atlantic City Expressway under private or foreign ownership – either before or after Election Day.

DeAngelo said continuing public control over the highways is the only way to protect against unchecked toll hikes.

“Handing over our state’s vital infrastructure to any company whose primary concern is their stockholders is an open invitation to higher costs for commuters,” said DeAngelo (D-Hamilton). “Our highways should be operated with the interests of New Jersey’s motorists, not global corporate interests, as the paramount concern.”

OK. So the Democrats are opposed, as well. Then why not vote down the amendment? Simply, it was an election-year ploy on the part of Republicans, as most of this debate has been.

No one, aside from the governor, seems to think this is a good idea. But it certainly makes for good political theater.

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And then there was one

Five of the six candidates for Senate and Assembly in the 14th District have crossed the first Clean Elections threshold, qualifying for public financing and it appears that the second threshold — 800 $10 contributions — maybe within reach soon.

The only candidate not to qualify — as far as public reports go — is Democrat Wayne D’Angelo, who was away and unavailable when we tried to reach him on a separate question earlier this week.

It looks like the program will be a success and it will be interesting to see how the election plays out once everyone is on board. Maybe there is a chance that the amount of money given to each candidate can be reduced in the future?

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Speculative values

Interesting bit of speculation on the Blue Jersey site (where I blog occasionally) on the 14th and its potential ramifications down the road:

Baroni is running for State Senator, and though no public polls have been done, he’s the odds-on favorite to win. He’s gaining endorsements from labor unions and other progressive groups and he enjoys solid support from Republicans, who feel he’s the not-so-distant future of the state party.

Before Inverso’s retirement, Baroni was touted as a serious challenger to Lautenberg in 2008. He’s definitely on the short list to run for state office in the next 5 years — likely for Governor or the new Lieutenant Governor’s position (Christie-Baroni ’09?). But to get the extra boost he really needs, Bill Baroni will have to do something extraordinary. Something that will turn heads across the state — not to mention with the big Republican money around the country. What can he do to accomplish that?

Paint the 14th red.

And he could do it. Say Baroni runs a modest campaign this fall: he’ll win by ten points easily. He’s running against a newcomer — Seema Singh — in a “Clean Elections” campaign, where she cannot use a large warchest to saturate the airwaves and bring up her name recognition. It’s going to come down to the streets, where
Baroni is a dynamo — no one’s knocked on more doors than he has.

If Baroni goes all out, pummels Singh in the free media early, pushes his runningmates to knock Greenstein hard, too, and campaigns his heart out — he could very well carry the entire GOP ticket to victory.

I’m not so sure — as my response indicates (the response quoted below has been edited some):

Baroni is likely to win pretty big, taking five of seven towns, including South Brunswick, where he’s well-known and popular. He will lose, however, in Monroe and Plainsboro pretty convincingly, as will his running mates. (Republicans are nearly extinct in those communities.)

The question, ultimately, is how well Linda Greenstein can do in Hamilton and South Brunswick. In the last race, she finished third in Hamilton by a handful of votes and finished second in South Brunswick, beating former SB Police Chief Michael Paquette in the process. She also won West Windsor and Jamesburg outright — taking four of the seven towns in the district.

Her opponents are a Hamilton councilman and a former Jamesburg councilman who has lost his last two or three bids for Jamesburg council. I think this is going to come down to a three-way race to see who serves with Greenstein in the Assembly, with the two Hamilton candidates battling for the spot and Adam Bushman, the former Jamesburg councilman, finishing fourth (I like Adam, by the way — he’s more progressive than many Dems I know on many issues and we have endorsed him several times for Borough Council).

My sense, right now, is that the political make up of the 14th is likely to remain as is, with a Republican state senator (albeit a more progressive one), and a split in the Assembly.

I should point that this is speculation and is not a reflection of how the South Brunswick Post and The Cranbury Press will endorse come November. It’s just an interesting thought experiment.

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