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Editorial: Now it's on Christie


How Corzine failed to connect

In many ways, it seemed like a perfect fit.

Jon S. Corzine, one of the most liberal members of the U.S. Senate, came to Trenton in 2006 to lead one of the most liberal states in the nation.

Yes, there were deeply entrenched financial problems that could hamper his visions of better schools and expanded health coverage. But Corzine's fiscal acumen, honed through a career on Wall Street, would help resolve them. At least that's what he and his campaign said.

In reality, economic issues buried Corzine in Tuesday's election.

His biggest attempt to solve the debt problems he inherited resulted in a colossal and costly defeat. The national recession soon followed. It did not create Corzine's political woes, but it compounded them.

For Corzine, it turned out the timing was all wrong.

The recession and soaring unemployment would have damaged any incumbent. But it was particularly difficult for Corzine, a former chairman of the investment bank Goldman Sachs, whose Wall Street resumé suddenly became a liability. His failure, like the failures of many before him, to significantly change the state's tax system became more glaring.

And while his often-awkward and professorial manners worked while talking policy, his inability to connect with the public meant he built up little personal capital to face an increasingly angry and anxious electorate.

"Nobody was going to cut any slack for Jon Corzine, because there was a simple sense that he doesn't understand what a middle-class New Jersey taxpayer goes through," said Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute.

Sensing a lack of enthusiasm for Corzine's reelection as he faced Republican Christopher J. Christie and independent Chris Daggett, his campaign tried to tie him to President Obama. But it didn't work.

Obama remains popular in New Jersey, with approval ratings of 57 percent, but he didn't drive the huge Election Day turnout Democrats hoped for.

Murray said any incumbent in New Jersey, with its long stretch of financial struggles, was going to feel the wrath of an uneasy public amid such economic turbulence. Democrats said Corzine was in a position few could have survived.

"Unfortunately for Corzine, he's the guy standing there holding the bag," said Senate Majority Leader Stephen Sweeney (D., Gloucester).

Carl Golden, the onetime press secretary for former Govs. Thomas H. Kean and Christie Whitman, said polls and many observers, including himself, "didn't really appreciate the core depth of that anger."

But there were also major state issues that damaged Corzine even before the economic turmoil struck.

After both parties contributed to the state's annual budget deficits, voters had seen years of rising taxes and persistent short falls. Even during boom times, the state's economy was sluggish compared with the rest of the nation.

Corzine made a go at solving some of New Jersey's economic problems, but with mixed results. He called for "historic" property-tax reforms, but only slowed continuing increases. He worked hard to balance the budget, but also increased spending in his first two years. The progress he made was largely wiped out by the recession.

Corzine struggled to work with a Legislature controlled by his own party, and seemed to disregard image problems that muddied his message.

For example, he campaigned as a reformer, but continued to write huge checks to political machines that fostered several major corruption convictions. One guilty verdict came in late October, giving Republicans an opening to paint Corzine as an "enabler."

But the biggest self-inflicted wound came when Corzine placed a huge bet on a plan to increase tolls by up to 800 percent to halve state debt. The reaction was swift, angry, and decisive.

Murray said Corzine's numbers fell when he introduced the toll idea, but really dove once Corzine went on a public tour to sell the plan.

"Most voters walked out and said, 'This is a guy that doesn't understand the pain we're going through,' " he said. "That lack of an ability to connect was probably his Achilles' heel as a governor."

Corzine's approval ratings tanked, and months later, the Wall Street implosion made recovery near impossible.

Many of Corzine's backers say that the irony is that he is friendly and charming in small settings, and that he has been most passionate while standing up for the needy.

"Gov. Corzine has been better at doing the work and being an effective governor than he has been at being an effective communicator," said Assembly Speaker Joseph J. Roberts Jr., (D., Camden). He said Corzine did not spend much time promoting his accomplishments, such as reforming school funding, cutting the state workforce, and expanding health care. "He has been defined as this Wall Street guy who is out of touch, and that's not accurate, and that's what stuck, and he paid a price for it."

Corzine had said this year's race would be his last. Before the election, friends said the governor, who has put more than $120 million into his campaigns, talked about going back to the private sector once his days in office end.

It would be a return to an arena that gave Corzine the prestige and wealth that paved the way for his entry into public life. Corzine built his career at Goldman as a bond trader, choosing the right bets at the right time.

His political life, however, has been marked by inopportune circumstances. Corzine joined the Senate in 2001, just as his party lost the White House. He led Democrats' efforts to take back the Senate in 2003 and 2004, but faced a Republican tide that swept George W. Bush back into office and expanded the GOP majority.

He came to Trenton in 2006 with big ideas and a booming national economy. That all ended with a recession triggered in the financial world Corzine once strode.

"He's a very unlucky governor," State Sen. Shirley Turner (D., Mercer) said Tuesday night amid the disappointment of the Democrats' postelection party. "He made a lot of decisions that rubbed people the wrong way, and he did it his way. The people spoke today, and said they did not want another four years of his way."

 


Contact staff writer Jonathan Tamari at 609-989-9016 or jtamari@phillynews.com.

Staff writer Adrienne Lu contributed to this article.

 

Comments   
Posted 08:37 AM, 11/05/2009
Tucci
Oh, so now the arrogant schmuck is supposed to have been blasted out of Drumthwacket because he's "unlucky," eh? Catch a hint, Mr. Tamari. Your rape-and-pillage "Liberal" dork got the Florio treatment (now he's the SECOND incumbent governor to have failed of re-election since the present state constitution got shoved down our throats in '47) because under his administration the state of New Jersey has suffered from nothing but bloat, waste, "pay-to-play" racketeering in public office, corruption, and as near an open policy of blatant peculation as damn-all. We just held him accountable. And guess what? We're holding your Marxist Messiah accountable, too. Remember 1993, Mr. Tamari? Guess what you "Liberal" scumbuckets are in for when the polls close this time NEXT year.
Posted 08:52 AM, 11/05/2009
patp
Tucci, if I had a million years and a degree in English, I could NOT have said it any better!
Posted 10:48 AM, 11/05/2009
lefty
"...slowed continuing(property tax) increases?" Corzine dumped the burden on townships which, in turn dumped on residents. They were forced to cut or curtail services while forced to increase their share of property taxes. In 2008, we saw a 22% increase in township taxes. This year, an 11% increase- separate from all other related property taxes, such as school, fire, open spaces, county, etc. Since John Corzine' first state budget, we have witnessed an overall property tax increase of almost 40%. The property tax rebate program? It has more twists and turns than maze. There's simply too much spending in NJ and too many blighted, urban areas that suck the very life out of the rest of it. NJ has become the epitome of "welfare state." If Christie's promises- unexplained during the campaign- go unfulfilled, he too will get the axe. As for the dwindling number of tax payers willing to stay in NJ? Are there are out-of-state home buyers willing to assume our burden?
Posted 11:44 AM, 11/05/2009
NJ_taxpayer
Jonathan, are you corzine's brother? this article is full of false excuses. He was voted out of office because the taxpayers of NJ are tired of tax and spend liberals. We want less spending and less taxes. we want state employees slashed, we want idiot out of control borrowing and spending stopped. We receive NO benefit from our incredibly high taxes that you can't also get in any of the other 49 lower taxed states in the union. jonathan, with writing like this, you should never be allowed print space again. you have no clue.
Posted 11:56 AM, 11/05/2009
tomfox
There's no secret here. Corzine and the clowns before him simply taxed the "rich" to help the "poor." Billions were poured into places like Camden and Newark at the expense of the rest of the state, driving the deficits in the name of "urban renewal." On Tuesday, those who are tired of paying for these preposterous policies, struck back. The first act of the Christie administration will be to turn off the faucet and halt the flow of money to these sinkholes. State government is going to be reduced by 20 percent. Those cutbacks are going to force counties and townships to follow suit. It's the only reasonable solution to the state's $10 billion deficit. Corzine just didn't get it. Now he will probably seek a return to the Senate since Lautenberg is approaching the century mark.
Posted 12:05 PM, 11/05/2009
dreamkiller
I want all New Jerseyans to understand that the only way to solve the states budget woes is to cut taxes, reduce the size of government and make the state business friendly!! The state of Nazi Jersey is now its largest employer, the state has a 30B dollar budget, business taxes and regulations that are more oppressive than Cuba's. This formula fuels the fire for corruption and net emigration out of the state. Instead of rescuing Camden/Trenton/Newark again with billions, lets cut the property/income/business taxes in those areas, get gov't out of the way and watch what happens. Instaed of funneling more tax dollars to a corrupt education cabal how about charter schools and vouchers!! Christie will now have a short timeline to use his new political capital to get things done. Whichever approach he takes one thing is certain the current plan and model of doing things has not worked and never will. Shift power from the state to the people and this state will flourish once more.
Posted 02:30 PM, 11/05/2009
MikeP
I don't see how replacing a supposed "Tax and Spend" liberal with a "Deficit and Spend" Republican does much for the average tax payer. Republicans can make all the wild claims they want but the only thing that matters is actual results. The govenor doesn't have the authority to "reduce state government by 20%". It will never happen. People were unhappy with the results from Corzine. They'll be just as unhappy with Chritie's results. And there are no Republicans with a track record of reducing spending. Easier said than done. I wish Christie luck. He'll need it. You'd be hard pressed to find a Republican that thinks cutting spending during a depression is a great idea. We're still waiting to hear exactly what spending Christie will cut.
Posted 05:16 PM, 11/05/2009
puddydawg
The entire article can be said in the one sentence, [[He worked hard to balance the budget, but also increased spending in his first two years.]] Increased spending, how do you fix a deficit by increasing spending? Dolt got what he deserved.
Posted 06:00 PM, 11/05/2009
94Bravo
Don't forget that he tried to make Christie's weight an issue, just made him look petty. People remember stuff like that when they go to the polls. Funny how you seemed to have forgotten that in your article...
Posted 06:47 PM, 11/05/2009
fightback
Again and Again- why do you people fight over Republican and Democrat..THEY ARE THE SAME! We had a chance to vote for a REAL candidate ( CHRIS DAGGETT).. and YOU ALL BLEW IT! I blame ALL OF YOU for voting for big money, corrupt, greedy selfish Democrats and Republicans. You ARE ALL SHEEP!
Posted 11:07 PM, 11/05/2009
John Gualt
New Jersey's Democratic voters by a large percentage are looking for handouts. There's no hope for NJ. Will the last productive citizen to leave turn out the lights. Vote Democratic it’s easier than working.
11 comments
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