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Corzine can blame himself

By Gabriel Gardner

There seems to be a consensus developing in the media that this week's election results suggest a national GOP resurgence. This fails to recognize that the result in New Jersey was actually due to Gov. Corzine's shortcomings in office.

Although the New Jersey election may have coincided with a national shift away from the Democrats, it should be considered distinct from it.

New Jersey has seen its total debt triple in the past decade of Democratic rule. Corzine was elected governor in 2005 on the promise that he would resolve the state's financial crisis, including state debt in excess of $29.5 billion.

But despite his rhetoric, Corzine did nothing of the kind. He actually accomplished the opposite: The state Treasury's 2008 audit reported that the state debt had grown to nearly $45 billion, a 50 percent increase during Corzine's tenure.

Meanwhile, recent projections suggest a state budget deficit next year of $7 billion to $8 billion. To the voters of New Jersey, it seems simple enough that government spending should not continue to exceed revenues while the state debt is so massive.

Corzine has clearly struggled to understand this simple concept during his term. The governor supported a 2007 ballot question that would have allowed the state to borrow $450 million for stem-cell research over the next 10 years. Despite clear support for stem-cell research among the electorate, the proposal was voted down by 6 percentage points, illustrating an unwillingness to continue burying the state in debt.

It should be as clear to the media as it was to New Jersey voters on Tuesday that Republican Christopher J. Christie's victory is a result of Corzine's fiscal irresponsibility. The government's liberal spending and borrowing has simply become unacceptable to the voters, who are already burdened with a nearly 10 percent unemployment rate and annual property taxes in excess of $7,000 per household.

Rather than worrying about funding future stem-cell research and creating new social programs, the governor should have focused on what he was elected to do: lower property taxes, unemployment, and state debt.

While the governor was failing to focus on these issues, the state's problems have gotten far worse. As a result of his inaction, New Jersey continues to have the highest property taxes in the nation, rising state debt, and mounting unemployment.

All of this has little to do with President Obama or a national Republican resurgence. The president's approval rating in New Jersey was 68 percent last summer, when he first began campaigning for the governor. Meanwhile, Corzine's was 36 percent.

Furthermore, from the beginning of Obama's involvement to the days before the election, Corzine was able to diminish Christie's 10-percentage-point lead in the polls to a statistical tie. This repudiates the argument that the election outcome may have been a result of a national GOP resurgence. On the contrary, it suggests that Obama was actually a positive influence for Corzine.

There's a clear lesson here for the state's next leader: Do not spend or attempt to spend money that you do not have. By neglecting the concerns New Jersey voters elected him to address, Gov. Corzine determined his own fate.


Gabriel Gardner is a New Jersey native studying for a graduate degree in political science at San Diego State University. He can be reached at gabrielgrdnr@gmail.com.
Comments   
Posted 06:11 AM, 11/06/2009
tr88
You want to know how you can tell the loss in Jersey was a repudiation of Obama's big government big spending high tax policies? Look how many editorials and commentators are telling you just the opposite. "Conventional wisdom" is left wing disinformation.
Posted 07:29 AM, 11/06/2009
rmw38
Let's see how fat boy digs us out of the mess created by his mentor George W. The State will be in the same sad shape when Christie runs again. It is not just New Jersey. PA has no budget, California and Florida are Republican states that are broke. The evil that George W left us lives on.
Posted 07:35 AM, 11/06/2009
xi_lives
Stay in denial..it will make the coming debacle of 2010 that much sweeter.
Posted 08:57 AM, 11/06/2009
RADDOCSJ
NJ, like Ca is a "progressive's" dream state, yet both have unconscionable tax burdens, bloated public sectors, costly "progressive" laws and regulations (aka paid leave) that are driving businesses out. Coincidence ? Doubt it. NJ voters may have finally realized businesses and high income earners are not a cow to be milked. The continuation of same will result in the entire state having the economy of, well, Detroit. Cut taxes, cut regulation, make the state economically competitive again before the last successful person out of the state forgets to turn off the lights...
Posted 09:04 AM, 11/06/2009
tr88
California is a republican state?
Posted 10:03 AM, 11/06/2009
lefty
Taxing, borrowing and spending are inherent traits that Dems bring to the table. For them, it's endemic. Okay, the guy has the personality and energy of a day-old loaf of bread, but he did manage to purchase a few previous elections. So, it's not fair to say that Corzine's lose is "distinct" from national trends. If polls say that 60+% of NJ voters said it wasn't about Obama, the other 40% thought otherwise. As reported this morning, today's overall national unemployment at 10.2%! You better believe that voters are going to continue say to themselves, "We just can't afford to continue to tax, spend and borrow!"
Posted 10:15 AM, 11/06/2009
Carl07
Corzine's numbers basically stayed the same from the summer through the election. Closing the gap with Christie had NOTHING to do with Obama's visits. What closed the gap was the surge Daggett had in the polls. One of the last polls before the election showed Daggett with 12% of the vote. In the end he received 6%. You don't have to be a math genius to figure out that the majority of the 6% Daggett lost went to Christie and that put him over the top. Also, if Obama has the ability to reach out to independents, why were his last two appearances in the state in the Democratic strongholds of Newark & Camden? Who was he going to sway in those two cities? No one. Both were in the bag for Corzine. Obama knew this was a lost cause and he wasn't about to go any place where he wouldn't be greeted by his adoring "disciples".
Posted 12:22 PM, 11/06/2009
lefty
Carl07, no denying that a vote for Daggett was a vote for Corzine. That said, it doesn't change the fact that one or more voters- independent or otherwise- objected to Obama's broken promises, etal., thereby overroding any doubts they may have had about voting for Christie.
Posted 03:15 PM, 11/06/2009
tr88
Denial is not a river in Africa.
Posted 05:56 PM, 11/06/2009
camtheman
"Furthermore, from the beginning of Obama's involvement to the days before the election, Corzine was able to diminish Christie's 10-percentage-point lead in the polls to a statistical tie." Or could it have been that Corzine began the influx of his vast fortune to fund negative attack ads that flooded local tv saying Christie was fat. Ever thought of that Gabriel?
Posted 09:02 PM, 11/06/2009
ACBaughman
As the Federal government gets bigger, it is going to become more and more difficult to keep NJ spending in check.
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