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Friday, November 6, 2009

The post-mortems are in, and the consensus among reporters is that Gov. Corzine lost for three big reasons:

- he failed to ease the property tax burden and repair state finances, two of the key promises of his 2005 campaign

- he never mastered politics, standing aloof from the political players he needed to help move his agenda, backing off of too many fights and failing to connect with the public he was leading

- he was hit with an economic storm that made all his inherent problems worse.

Here are some takes. Tom Moran of the Star-Ledger says it was a "pointed personal loss" for Corzine, who he described as the state's "unabashed liberal leader."

"He promised to ease the burden of property taxes and failed. He promised to use his Wall Street savvy to fix the state’s ever-broken finances, and he failed again," Moran wrote.

The Record's Charlie Stile writes that "For all his smarts, ambition and, of course, his money . . . Corzine never mastered the art of politics." He says the governor didn't learn he had to promote his own ideas, failed to take care of image problems and was stubbornly attached even to "politically radioactive" ideas.

Ross Baker, a Rutgers political scientist, told David Kocieniewski of The New York Times that Corzine was too timid to see his visions through. Kocieniewski writes that Corzine's "inability to stare down the state’s free-spending Legislature and its public employee unions doomed his efforts to straighten out New Jersey’s troubled finances."

My story took a look at how economic issues -- taxes, the recession, Corzine's ill-fated attempt to deal with state debt -- cost the governor who was sold as having economic expertise.

Those stories examined the four year arc of Corzine's time in Trenton. The particulars of Election Day came down to two big story lines: motivated Republicans turned out huge for Christie, while unenthusiastic Democrats delivered diminished margins in their party's strong holds.

We look at how the GOP-heavy Shore counties gave Christie a massive boost. The Star-Ledger examined the low turn out in Democratic bastions.

The most thorough vote break-down I have seen comes from Patrick Murray of the Monmouth University Polling Institute. On his blog, Murray takes a look at region-by-region results. His biggest conclusions: turnout was down overall, but way up among Republicans in Ocean and Monmouth counties, and down in key Democratic counties, Hudson and Essex. And that Middlesex, which swung from a 17.6 point Corzine win in 2005 to a 2.7 point loss this year, may be the state's new bellwether.

 

Click here for Philly.com's politics page.

Posted by Jonathan Tamari @ 4:10 PM  Permalink | 12 comments
Comments   
Posted 04:28 PM, 11/06/2009
Tucci
All of these "Liberal" mainstream media groans and moans over the defenestration of yet another tax-and-spend government goon, and to what purpose? The essence of the Inquirer/Daily News political masturbation fantasy is that civil government is omniscient, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent, and to achieve paradise on earth, all that's necessary is bigger and bigger government, taxing the private citizen of everything he makes, providing that citizen every possible service, and "regulating" every aspect of that citizen's life, from conception to decomposition. And when that citizen - who does NOT belong to the "Liberal" mainstream media religion, and believes none of these insanities - ra'rs back and flings a media-crowned "Liberal" politician like Corzine into the dungheap, all the mainstream media dorks can do is maunder about how terrible it is. Mr. Tamari, let's hope you're in the next round of Inquirer lay-offs. We've about had our fill of you.
Posted 05:27 PM, 11/06/2009
dragoon6
Tucci - great use of "defenestration." Good to see NJ isnt a one party state anymore. Chris gets four years to make good.
Posted 04:23 AM, 11/07/2009
No Ids
Yeah keep using big words to mask the fact youre a brain dead knuckle dragging right winger,fatslly tied to a failed corporatist ideology.
Posted 04:28 AM, 11/07/2009
No Ids
Fatally
Posted 07:13 AM, 11/07/2009
NJsux6569
WAAAAAAHHHHHHH!!!!! Another whiny article because Corzine lost, lol.
Posted 08:00 AM, 11/07/2009
camtheman
That's right No Ids, using name-calling in your response really gets to the heart of your argument. BTW....Big dems like Corzine, Kerry, and Dodd are just some in that party who have ties to the corporate world, so you might want to layoff the hypocrisy.
Posted 10:34 AM, 11/07/2009
kelprod1
Corzine lost because he did not produce results. Much like the knucklehead in the white house, Corzine (and the left wing looney media) finds it easier to play the "blame game" then take responsibility for his inability to accomplish anything positive. And it is funny to watch Obama whoring himself out for Corzine after making a speech about Wall Street greed...where does Obama think Corzine got the tens of millions of dollars he spent on running for governor twice?? Could not have come from Goldman, huh?
Posted 03:01 PM, 11/07/2009
Christine
No Ids...making up words is not a sign of intelligence. "Corporatist" nice try. Christie won, and so did New Jersey.
Posted 06:57 PM, 11/07/2009
MikeP
It was Bush and the Republican controlled Congress that grew the size of government at a historic rate. Yeah, they gave a massive tax cut to the wealthiest. But their out of control spending created crippling deficits or was funded by interest bearing loans from Communist China. What's the difference between a tax increase and a deficit plus a loan with interest? There is none. How will we pay off all that debt? Taxes. And in the end, look at the economy. We got nothing for all the spending. Obamma and the Democrats are taking a far, far, far better approach. Republicans can give lip service to cutting spending all they want but their actions spoke louder than their words. They were worse than the Democrats. That's a fact.
Posted 11:03 AM, 11/09/2009
Ilmare
I can put it in much simpler terms. He acted like a complete and uncaring jerk.
Posted 12:39 PM, 11/11/2009
phan in TN
Did the governor get thrown out of a window?
Posted 09:18 AM, 11/12/2009
delcodanno
No Ids, sorry your feeling got hurt. You still have the guy in the White House.
12 comments
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.