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Archive: July, 2009

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Monday, July 27, 2009

Gov. Corzine's re-election bid only got tougher when 29 public officials, almost all Democrats, were arrested in a sweeping corruption sting last week, according to several takes in the weekend newspapers. In all 44 people were arrested, including a 15 on money laundering charges.

No one in Corzine's administration was charged. The closest the scandal got was a cabinet member, Joseph Doria, whose office was raided, but Doria was not arrested and Corzine quickly called for, and got, his resignation. Still, the image of a parade of Democrats in hand cuffs won't help the governor.

The Record's Charlie Stile calls the arrests a "body blow." Aside from the optics of the situation, Corzine will lose many of the people Democrats depend on to get out the vote in vote-rich Hudson County, where many of the indictments landed, Stile writes.

The New York Times describes Corzine as "discouraged and frustrated" and says some Democrats were discussing the possibility of replacing the governor on the ballot. (For his part, Corzine does not appear to have any intention of walking away). The Washington Post writes that Corzine will have to change tactics after spending much of the early part of the campaign assailing Republican Chris Christie's ethics.

Corzine, however, moved to quickly change the subject on Friday, a day after the arrests, when he announced that he was choosing Sen. Loretta Weinberg as his lieutenant governor candidate and running mate. Weinberg has strong reform credentials - she fought and won against Bergen County's entrenched Democratic leaders - and the campaign has played up that strength. Weinberg was long on Corzine's short-list, but several Democrats said she was put over the top as his choice after Thursday's arrests.

Click here for Philly.com's politics page.

Posted by Jonathan Tamari @ 4:57 PM  Permalink | 9 comments
Wednesday, July 22, 2009

It has been a busy week for the Corzine and Christie campaigns despite heading into what is typically the slowest part of the political year.

Gov. Corzine has spent two days this week playing up his gun control credentials, attempting to further press an issue that he believes shows a clear divide between himself and Republican Chris Christie. In Washington Tuesday, Corzine joined New Jersey's two Senators to bash a proposal that would extend individuals' concealed weapons permits nationwide, regardless of which state they got permission from. Wednesday Corzine joined Attorney General Anne Milgram for a press conference praising a partnership between the state and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives that led to gun trafficking charges against 12 people. Corzine has made gun control one of the top "values" issues he has stressed in his attempt to paint Christie as out of touch with New Jersey's blue state sensibilities.

But polls show that Corzine continues to trail and that voters are focused far more on taxes and the economy than issues such as abortion and gun control. Christie got an assist on this front from Senate Republicans, who obtained a memo from the non-partisan Office of Legislative Services showing that Corzine's latest budget could leave an $8 billion deficit heading into next year, if all programs are funded to the levels written in law. (They almost never are, but that hasn't stopped governors, including Corzine, from using such doomsday projections in the past when it helped sell their ideas). Christie said the looming shortfall should make Corzine quit the race in shame.

Christie, meanwhile, has been making the round with his lieutenant governor pick, Kim Guadagno, the Monmouth County sheriff. Speculation has continued to grow about who Corzine will choose as his running mate.

A Monmouth University poll out Tuesday had more bad news for Corzine: voters gave him a C- as governor and most don't think he has any major accomplishments. That prompted an analysis from The Washington Post's Chris Cillizza that concludes that, if the poll is to be believed, Corzine "is rapidly approaching the point of no return."

One last note, to update my earlier post on a problem spelling - the Corzine campaign quickly fixed the error, when they spelled the Inquirer as Enquirer.  

Click here for Philly.com's politics page.

Posted by Jonathan Tamari @ 1:18 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
Monday, July 20, 2009

Gov. Corzine unveiled a Web site today called "Christie Facts," which aims to play up all things negative about Republican candidate Chris Christie.

It's about what you would expect from a political attack site, including unflattering photos, slices of video meant to portray Christie as a hard-right conservative and a carefully selected crop of newspaper articles that the site says will provide "Shocking Facts."

One of those articles is an editorial attributed to the "Philadelphia Enquirer" (sic).

Framing an argument, spinning it and hammering your opponent is one thing, and seems to be fair game in a hard-fought race. But can we get the campaigns to at least agree that spelling is sacrosanct?

Click here for Philly.com's politics page.

Posted by Jonathan Tamari @ 4:42 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
About Garden State Grapevine
Garden State Grapevine covers politics and government in Trenton and South Jersey.

Cynthia Burton has covered politics and politicians in Philadelphia, Trenton and South Jersey. She wrote about Frank Rizzo's last mayoral race, was Philadelphia City Hall bureau chief, and now covers the New Jersey races for the House and U.S. Senate.

Jonathan Tamari has reported on New Jersey government and politics since 2004, including the 2006 state government shut down. He joined the Inquirer this year.

Adrienne Lu returned to the Inquirer, where she first worked in newspapers, in 2008. She writes about state government and politics in New Jersey. She has also worked at The News & Observer in Raleigh, N.C. and The Record of Bergen County.