New Jersey gubernatorial election, 2009



















New Jersey gubernatorial election, 2009







← 2005
November 3, 2009
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Turnout 46.9%[1]






































 

Christie (cropped).jpg

SenatorJonCorzine (cropped).jpg

No image.svg
Nominee

Chris Christie

Jon Corzine

Chris Daggett
Party

Republican

Democratic

Independent
Running mate

Kim Guadagno

Loretta Weinberg

Frank Esposito
Popular vote

1,174,445
1,087,731
139,579
Percentage

48.5%
44.9%
5.8%




2009 NJ GovElect Result.svg
Winning percentage by county:

Christie:      40-49%      50-59%      60-69%


Corzine:      40-49%      50-59%      60-69%








Governor before election

Jon Corzine
Democratic



Elected Governor

Chris Christie
Republican
























The New Jersey gubernatorial election of 2009 took place on November 3, 2009.[2]Democratic Governor Jon Corzine was running for a second term and was being challenged by Republican Chris Christie, Independent Christopher Daggett and nine others, in addition to several write-in candidates. Christie won the election, with about 48.5 percent of the vote, to 44.9 percent for Corzine and 5.8 percent for Daggett.[3] Christie won the largest margin for a first term Republican since 1969.[4] Christie assumed office on January 19, 2010.


This was the first election to fill the newly created office of Lieutenant Governor. The candidates for governor and lieutenant governor were joined together as a single choice, so that voters did not have the opportunity to split the ticket. Kim Guadagno, Christie's running mate, became New Jersey's first lieutenant governor following her inauguration.




Contents






  • 1 Democratic primary


    • 1.1 Candidates


    • 1.2 Campaign


    • 1.3 Results




  • 2 Republican primary


    • 2.1 Candidates


      • 2.1.1 On ballot


      • 2.1.2 Removed




    • 2.2 Campaign


    • 2.3 Debates


    • 2.4 Fundraising


    • 2.5 Polling


    • 2.6 Results




  • 3 General election


    • 3.1 Candidates


      • 3.1.1 Major


      • 3.1.2 Minor




    • 3.2 Campaign


    • 3.3 Debates


    • 3.4 Lieutenant governor factor


    • 3.5 Regional factors


    • 3.6 Political factors


    • 3.7 Endorsements


    • 3.8 Polling


    • 3.9 Results


      • 3.9.1 County results






  • 4 See also


  • 5 References


  • 6 External links





Democratic primary



Candidates



  • Roger Bacon, businessman[5]

  • Carl Bergmanson, former Mayor of Glen Ridge[6]


  • Jeff Boss, perennial candidate[7]


  • Jon Corzine, incumbent Governor



Campaign


Although Corzine was unpopular among independents and Republicans, he polled much more highly among registered Democrats. His three opponents were former Glen Ridge mayor Carl Bergmanson, who ran on a platform of fiscal discipline, governmental reform, and removing the tolls on the Garden State Parkway, the New Jersey Turnpike and the Atlantic City Expressway; perennial candidate Jeff Boss; and businessman and former Congressional candidate Roger Bacon. A Quinnipiac poll conducted shortly before the primary and released on May 20, 2009, indicated that 65% of Democratic primary voters would vote for Corzine, with the other three candidates each receiving 4%–5%. Also, 62% of Democrats approved of him while 24% did not.[8]


On the primary election night, when Corzine accepted his party's nomination, Vice President Joe Biden campaigned for him, saying that he and President Barack Obama would help him get re-elected. Biden also characterized Corzine as "America's governor."[9]



Results













































Democratic primary results[10]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Jon S. Corzine

154,448

77.18


Democratic
Carl Bergmanson
17,125
8.56


Democratic
Jeff Boss
16,639
8.31


Democratic
Roger Bacon
11,908
5.95
Total votes

200,120

100.00


Republican primary



Candidates



On ballot




  • Chris Christie, former U.S. Attorney and former Morris County Freeholder


  • Steve Lonegan, former Mayor of Bogota[11]


  • Rick Merkt, State Assemblyman[12]



Removed



  • David Brown, businessman[13]

  • Christian Keller[14]


  • Brian D. Levine, Mayor of Franklin Township[15]


Lonegan disputed the nominating petitions of Brown, Keller and Levine, and administrative judges ruled that their petitions fell below the threshold of 1,000 valid signatures. As such, their names were removed from the primary ballot.[16]



Campaign


Most of the focus in the primary campaign was on the Republican contest between the front-runner, former U.S. Attorney Chris Christie, who was heavily favored by the party establishment, and former Bogota mayor Steve Lonegan. Both sides released numerous television and radio advertisements, as well as mailers to registered Republicans. Christie focused on his record of fighting corruption, while Lonegan emphasized his credentials as a lifelong conservative.


On April 1, Lonegan released the first attack ad of the 2009 campaign, and released another one on April 19. He accused Christie of ethically dubious awarding of no-bid monitor contracts during his tenure as U.S. attorney, described him as a moderate, and made other allegations.[17] However, on April 24, Christie responded with a new 60 second radio ad noting that Lonegan has lost many elections in his career, including losing by a landslide to Steve Rothman for Congress in 1998 and finishing fourth (out of seven) in the Republican primary of the 2005 New Jersey Governor's race. He also claimed that Lonegan's "flat tax" plan, a crucial part of the candidate's platform which calls for applying the same income tax rate to everyone, "would raise taxes on almost 70 percent of New Jersey workers", and characterized Lonegan's previous attacks as "desperate."[18]


Among those to endorse Christie in the primary were former New Jersey Governor Thomas Kean, Sr., businessman Steve Forbes, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney.[19] In addition, all county GOP organizations endorsed Christie, as did several New Jersey congressmen.


Joe the Plumber endorsed Lonegan and campaigned with him on May 5.[20] On May 14, United States Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) sent out an email endorsing Lonegan and asking for donations to Lonegan's campaign. Economists Art Laffer and Peter Schiff also endorsed Lonegan, as did New Jersey General Assemblyman Michael J. Doherty.


Christie was declared the winner of the primary, defeating Lonegan by a margin of 55 to 42 percent. Lonegan immediately endorsed Christie, stating:


.mw-parser-output .templatequote{overflow:hidden;margin:1em 0;padding:0 40px}.mw-parser-output .templatequote .templatequotecite{line-height:1.5em;text-align:left;padding-left:1.6em;margin-top:0}

It's our job now, it's your job now to change our focus on taking this Republican Party in a new direction. We must have one common cause, one cause. We need to beat Jon Corzine.[21]



Debates


Two state-sponsored televised debates were held before the primary. The first, on May 12, was broadcast on NJN, while the other, held on May 17, was broadcast on the New York television station WABC-TV. Both debates were between Christie and Lonegan. Because Merkt did not meet the fund-raising or spending thresholds set by the state, he was not allowed to participate.[22]
However, all three candidates were featured in two additional radio-only privately sponsored debates shortly before the primary.



Fundraising




















Candidate
Amount of money
Chris Christie
$3 million
Steve Lonegan
$500,000
Rick Merkt
$44,000
[23]


Polling



















































































Source
Dates Administered
Chris Christie
Steve Lonegan
Richard Merkt
Difference between two top candidates

Rasmussen Reports
May 27, 2009

46%
35%
4%
11%

Monmouth University
May 20, 2009

50%
32%
2%
18%

Rasmussen Reports
May 13, 2009

39%
29%
3%
10%

Quinnipiac University
April 4–20, 2009

46%
37%
2%
9%

Fairleigh Dickinson University
March 30 – April 5, 2009

44%
21%
2%
22%

Quinnipiac University
March 4–9, 2009

45%
19%
1%
21%

Fairleigh Dickinson University
February 25 – March 2, 2009

43%
15%
1%
28%

Quinnipiac University
January 29 – February 2, 2009

44%
17%
2%
27%

Fairleigh Dickinson University
January 2–7, 2009

32%
15%
5%
17%


Results






  Christie >= 50%

  Christie >= 60%

  Lonegan >= 40%

  Lonegan >= 50%







































Republican primary results[10]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Christopher Christie

184,085

55.08


Republican
Steve Lonegan
140,946
42.17


Republican
Rick Merkt
9,184
2.75
Total votes

334,215

100.00


General election



Candidates



Major


The following three candidates all qualified to appear in the state-sponsored debates.




  • Chris Christie, Republican of Mendham Township – former United States Attorney for the District of New Jersey (2001–2008) and former Morris County Chosen Freeholder (1995–1998)[24]


  • Jon Corzine, Democrat of Hoboken – incumbent Governor (serving since 2006) and former United States Senator (2001–2006)[25]


  • Chris Daggett, Independent of Basking Ridge – former New Jersey Commissioner of Environmental Protection, Environmental Protection Agency regional administrator, and Deputy Chief of Staff to Governor Thomas Kean[26]



Minor


The following nine candidates were third-party or independent candidates who qualified for the ballot but did not raise enough money to qualify for the state-sponsored debates.[27]



  • Jason Cullen, Riverdale Board of Health Chairman, ran under the banner People Not Politics[28]

  • Kenneth Kaplan, real estate broker and perennial candidate, was unanimously selected by the New Jersey Libertarian Party State Committee on April 26, 2009, to be the party's candidate for governor. Kaplan previously chaired the state party and sat on the state party's steering committee. He had been the Libertarian nominee for governor in 1993, and he has run for General Assembly on multiple occasions.[29][30]

  • Joshua Leinsdorf, a former Princeton School Board Member, ran under the banner Fair Election Party[28]

  • Alvin Lindsay, Jr. of Sewell ran under the banner Lindsay for Governor[28]

  • Attorney David R. Meiswinkle of East Windsor ran under the banner Middle Class Empowerment[31]


  • Greg Pason, National Secretary of the Socialist Party USA and a state committee member of the NJ National Writers Union,[32][33] ran as the Socialist candidate.

  • Kostas Petris of Bordentown ran under the banner For The People[28]

  • Attorney Gary T. Steele of Kinnelon ran under the banner Leadership, Independence, Vision[34]

  • Gary Stein of Mullica ran using different slogans in each county; for example, his slogan in Atlantic County was Rock The Boat.[28] Stein is not the same person as former New Jersey Supreme Court Justice Gary Stein.


Write-in candidates



  • Angela Lariscy, communist political organizer and perennial candidate of the Socialist Workers Party, is running a write-in campaign.[35][36]

  • Eddie McOwskey, a candidate since 2005, ran a write-in campaign on a Balance Ya Taxes platform.[37][38]

  • John Meehan, former mayor, deputy mayor, and current committee member of Bethlehem Township ran a write-in campaign.[39]


  • Uncle Floyd, a popular comedian, announced in April that he would run a write-in campaign.[40]

  • Carl Peter Klapper, a populist poet, frequent letter writer to The Washington Post and columnist at the Johnsonville Press has been writing about the issues of New Jersey and the country from the Popular Capitalist View since early 2009. In discussing the premier issue of this campaign, he has called for sweeping educational and civil service reforms, as well as the abolition of the property tax.[41] Mr. Klapper is running a write-in campaign.[42]



Campaign


Corzine kicked off his campaign in June criticizing his Republican opponents and tying them to former President George W. Bush.[43] Corzine also released the first two television campaign ads, both were 30 second spots, released on January 5. One of the ads compared the two candidates' positions on social issues.[44] The Republican Governors Association shot back, releasing two of its own television ads showing how Corzine had broken campaign promises on June 16.[45]


Corzine was criticized by GOP leadership for granting contract concessions to state workers, by granting them an additional seven paid days off, after threats were made to protest the primary election night event where Vice President Biden was the keynote speaker. It is estimated that these concessions will cost the state $40 million.[46]


The election became a three-way race on July 7, when independent candidate Christopher Daggett, a former regional administrator for the Environmental Protection Agency and Deputy Chief of Staff to former governor Tom Kean, announced that he had raised enough money to qualify for public funds and to qualify for participation in the debates.[47] During the campaign, many pundits suggested that Daggett could act as a "spoiler," helping Corzine win a second term by splitting his opposition.[48][49] Both Democratic and Republican leaders took Daggett's campaign seriously. Only a day before the election, the New Jersey Democratic State Committee admitted to funding political robocalls in Somerset County attacking Christie and urging a vote for Daggett. Party chairman Joe Cryan initially denied the charges until it was revealed that the disclaimer at the end of the call declared it was paid for by "Victory '09, a project of the NJDSC," the abbreviation referring to the state Democratic party. Kevin Roberts, a spokesman for the New Jersey Republican State Committee, attacked Cryan as an "outright liar," adding that "Corzine's party boss knows what we know: Jon Corzine's record is so dreadful that they feel they need to try to trick voters into a second term."[50] Similarly, state senator Marcia Karrow, a Christie campaign coordinator in Hunterdon County, declared that Daggett voters "might as well pull the lever for Corzine."[51]


On July 15, the New Jersey chapter of a liberal environmental group, the Sierra Club, released a report critical of the Corzine administration's environmental record, with New Jersey Executive Director Jeff Tittel stating that group believes "this will go down as the worst environmental administration in state history."[52] The state organization formally endorsed Daggett on August 17, its first endorsement of an independent candidate.[53]


Corzine was the target of a vigorous advertising campaign funded by the Christie campaign and the Republican Governors Association, attacking his record as governor, tying him to corrupt officials, and assailing him for failing to deliver on his campaign promises. The RGA set up a mock newspaper website, "The Corzine Times", collecting newspaper articles critical of Corzine.


One of Corzine's main lines of attack involved Christie's ties to the unpopular former president George W. Bush, who appointed Christie to the U.S. Attorney's office in 2001. In August 2009, Bush political strategist Karl Rove revealed that he had held conversations with Christie about a potential gubernatorial run during Christie's time as U.S. Attorney. U.S. Attorneys are prohibited from engaging in partisan political activities by the Hatch Act of 1939.[54] Corzine quickly incorporated this into his advertisements targeting Christie.[55]


The Corzine campaign filed requests under the Freedom of Information Act since March 2009 seeking records of budgets, travel expenses, and no-bid contracts from Christie's tenure as U.S. Attorney. The U.S. Attorney's office did not release the requested documents before election day.[citation needed] Christie Facts, a website paid for by the Corzine campaign, attacked Christie on many fronts, including for not demanding an end to the "stonewalling" by the U.S. Attorney's office. On August 12, Christie's successor, Acting U.S. Attorney Ralph J. Marra, Jr., issued a press release defending the office:



The U.S. Attorney's Office has worked as professionally and expeditiously as it can to fulfill all the requests and has been in virtually daily contact with the Executive Office for United States Attorneys (EOUSA) in Washington to accomplish this burdensome and continuous task. ... At absolutely no time has there been an effort to slow down or inhibit the FOIA process.[56]


On August 18, 2009, Christie acknowledged that he had loaned $46,000 to First Assistant U.S. Attorney for New Jersey Michele Brown two years ago, while serving as her superior as the state's U.S. attorney, and that he had failed to report the loan on either his income tax returns or his mandatory financial disclosure report to the New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission.[57] In response to the disclosure of the financial relationship between Christie and Brown, Weinberg called on Brown to recuse herself from the task of retrieving U.S. Attorney's Office records requested by the Corzine campaign under the Freedom of Information Act.[58] On August 25, Brown resigned from her post, stating that she does not want to be "a distraction" for the office.[57] Although the Corzine campaign sought to make the loan a major campaign issue, a Quinnipiac poll showed that only 43% of voters believed that the loan controversy was a legitimate attack, while a plurality of 49% called it an unfair attack.[59]


As of September 20, Corzine had put out 4,806 television advertisements to Christie's 1,393 ads.[60]



Debates


Corzine, Christie, and Daggett debated each other three times by the election. Two debates were sanctioned by the state's Election Law Enforcement Commission; Christie and Daggett were required to participate in these debates, as they received public financing. Corzine did not seek public financing but appeared in both ELEC debates. The first debate, sanctioned by the ELEC and sponsored by NJN, Gannett New Jersey, and The Philadelphia Inquirer, was held on October 1 in Trenton. It was televised on NJN.[61] It was widely reported by mainstream media that Chris Daggett won the first debate.[62]


The second ELEC-sanctioned debate, sponsored by Fox News, The Record, WWOR-TV out of Secaucus, and WTXF-TV out of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was held on October 16 at William Paterson University in Wayne. It was televised on WWOR-TV and WTXF-TV.[61][63]


All three candidates appeared in a third debate, which was not sanctioned by the ELEC, that was held on October 22. The debate was broadcast on the radio on WBGO, a Newark-based jazz station, and was simulcast on WNYC out of New York City, WHYY-FM out of Philadelphia, and public radio stations throughout the state of New Jersey.[64] Christie and Daggett agreed to participate in a fourth debate, broadcast on the radio on New Jersey 101.5; Corzine declined to participate.[65]


There was also a debate between the three major candidates for lieutenant governor: Loretta Weinberg, Kim Guadagno, and Frank Esposito. This debate, sponsored by Leadership New Jersey, was held at Monmouth University in West Long Branch on October 8. It was televised on News 12 New Jersey and broadcast on the radio on New Jersey 101.5.[61]



Lieutenant governor factor



This was the first gubernatorial election since the position of lieutenant governor was created.[66] As such, this year's candidates were the first gubernatorial candidates in New Jersey history to pick running mates.[67] All 12 candidates for governor appearing on the ballot selected their running mates by the July 27, 2009 deadline.[68]


Christie, as the Republican nominee for governor, selected Monmouth Beach's Kim Guadagno, the sheriff of Monmouth County, as his running mate. Others mentioned for the post had included New Jersey Senators Diane Allen and Jennifer Beck, as well as Bergen County Clerk Kathleen Donovan.


Corzine, as the Democratic nominee, selected Teaneck's Loretta Weinberg, a New Jersey Senator and former New Jersey General Assemblywoman, as his running mate. Other mentioned for the post had included Newark Mayor Cory Booker, New Jersey Senators Nia Gill and Barbara Buono, New Jersey General Assemblywoman Bonnie Watson Coleman, and wealthy businessman Randal Pinkett.


Daggett, having qualified for matching funds, selected Ocean Township's Frank J. Esposito, a longtime professor and administrator at Kean University who served as an advisor to the Commissioner of Education in the Thomas Kean, Sr. administration, as his running mate. Others mentioned for the post had included Edison Mayor Jun Choi and Passaic County freeholder James Gallagher.


Other Lieutenant Governor candidates on the ballot:



  • Gloria Leustek of Gladstone ran with Jason Cullen (People Not Politics)

  • John Paff of Somerset ran with Kenneth Kaplan (NJ Libertarian Party)

  • Joanne Miller of Newark ran with Joshua Leinsdorf (Fair Election Party)

  • Eugene Harley of Wenonah ran with Alvin Lindsay, Jr. (Lindsay for Governor)

  • Noelani Musicaro of Hillsborough ran with David R. Meiswinkle (Middle Class Empowerment)

  • Costantino Rozzo of Vineland ran with Greg Pason (Socialist Party USA)

  • August Petris of Jackson ran with Kostas Petris (For The People)

  • Nancy A. Pennella of Towaco ran with Gary T. Steele (Leadership, Independence, Vision)

  • Cynthia Stein of Mullica ran with Gary Stein. The Steins used a different slogan in each county, for example: "Love And Marriage" in Warren County.



Regional factors


In New Jersey, Republicans tend to be strongest in the Northwest and Shore regions of the state, Democrats tend to be strongest in urban areas, and suburban areas such as those in Mercer County, Middlesex County, Union County, Passaic County, and Bergen County are considered toss-ups. In the Democratic primary, Corzine got over 70% of the vote only in the urban areas, doing relatively poorly among suburban Democrats. His weakest performance was in Warren County, where he won with just 55% of the vote.[69] On the other hand, Corzine performed strongly in Bergen County, winning with almost 87% of the vote.[70] In the Republican primary, Christie lost some key Republican strongholds, such as Hunterdon County (where he received 45.8%[71]) and Warren County (where he received 46.9%[72]) to Lonegan.


According to a September 1 Quinnipiac University poll, Hudson County and Essex County were the only counties where a majority of voters viewed Corzine favorably. Corzine had upside-down ratings in all 19 other counties in that poll.[73] In contrast, Christie had upside-down ratings in those two counties but was viewed favorably by pluralities of voters in every other county except for Atlantic County, Ocean County, and Monmouth County, where a majority of voters viewed him favorably.



Political factors


Taxes and the economy were overwhelmingly the top issues in this campaign. Corzine's strongest issue was on education, but it was the most important issue for only 4% of likely voters.[74] Christie attacked Corzine's record of raising taxes, failing to deliver property tax relief, and presiding over a period of unusually high unemployment in the state. Corzine pointed to the global economic recession as the reason for the state's economic troubles. However, Republicans contended that Corzine's policies led to over-taxation and economic decline, causing an out-migration of residents documented in a report by the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy at Rutgers University.[75]


Christie also campaigned on the issues of ethics, reducing corruption, and ending fiscal waste. These issues were brought back to the forefront of the debate after 44 individuals, including several public officials in New Jersey, were arrested by the FBI in July 2009 in Operation Bid Rig. Corzine was not a target of the probe; however, the office of a member of his cabinet, Commissioner of Community Affairs Joseph Doria, was raided by the FBI in connection with Operation Bid Rig. Governor Corzine asked for, and accepted, Doria's resignation on July 23. Doria has not been charged with any crime. Although Corzine has not been accused of any wrongdoing, the corruption sting, which resulted in the arrests of mostly Democratic officials, nevertheless further injured Corzine's reputation. Former EPA Regional Administrator Alan J. Steinberg predicted in his July 23 column that the corruption scandal would doom Corzine's re-election bid, as ethics would become a major issue again, thus helping Christie.[76] State Senator Ray Lesniak, a prominent Democrat, acknowledged that "If it's about ethics, Corzine loses. Not because Jon Corzine's weak on ethics, but because it's Chris Christie's strength, and now it's national news."[77]Paul Mulshine, a conservative columnist for The Star-Ledger, wrote in a July 28 column that the excessive "red tape" prolonged by the Corzine administration contributed to the corruption, further harming Corzine's campaign.[78]


Under normal circumstances, Corzine would have been considered to have an inherent advantage in the "blue state" of New Jersey. No Republican has won New Jersey's electoral votes in a presidential election since George H.W. Bush in 1988. Furthermore, prior to the 2009 election, no Republican had won a statewide election in New Jersey since 1997, when Governor Christine Todd Whitman won re-election with 47.1% of the vote. The last Republican to win a statewide election in New Jersey with over 50% of the vote was incumbent Governor Thomas Kean in 1985, who won with 71% of the vote.[79] No Republican has won a U.S. Senate election in New Jersey since liberal Republican Clifford Case in 1972.


However, between February 2009 and the end of his term, Corzine's approval ratings ranged between 33% and 42%. His disapproval ratings ranged between 46% and 66%.[80] These weak poll numbers were the result of several factors. Going into the 2009 fiscal year, New Jersey faced a budget shortfall of approximately $3 billion. Corzine attempted to close this gap by enacting pay freezes and furloughs of state employees, a policy that was unpopular with many public employee unions, a major Democratic constituency. Corzine had also cut state aid to local governments, which hurt his standing in the urban areas which made up another key segment of the Democrats' base. Across the state, voters expressed sentiments that taxes were too high and too few budget cuts were being made, and further public dissatisfaction mounted following the economic recession in 2008. By the end of May 2009, Corzine's job approval was the lowest of any New Jersey governor in modern history, putting him behind Christie in early election polling.[81] These weak numbers indicated that he could be vulnerable against a strong Republican challenger.[82] Moreover, no Democrat has won re-election to the state governor's office since Brendan Byrne's victory in 1977.[83]


Some thought that Corzine would benefit from the popularity of President Barack Obama, who carried the state in 2008 with 57% of the vote and had higher approval ratings than Corzine had. However, Obama's approval ratings in the state varied, ranging from as high as 68% in a June Quinnipiac poll[84] to as low as 53% in a PPP poll, which is lower than what he obtained on election day in 2008.[85] Another poll in July gave him 55% approval in the state, also less than what he obtained on election day. In the same poll 47% believed Obama would help Corzine's numbers in the election by campaigning with him.[86]


After Vice President Biden's June appearance at a "poorly attended" Corzine primary-night event, the Barack Obama administration approached President of the New Jersey Senate and former governor Richard Codey to consider running in the governor's place if the incumbent withdrew from his reelection bid, citing polls showing that Codey led Christie.[87] Obama held a campaign rally for Corzine on July 16. Originally the rally was set to be held at Rutgers University,[88] but ultimately it was held at the PNC Bank Arts Center instead.[89]



Endorsements





Chris Christie

Newspapers



  • Asbury Park Press[90]


  • Burlington County Times[91]


  • Courier News[92]


  • Courier-Post[90]


  • The Daily Record[93]


  • Home News Tribune[90]


  • New York Post[93]


  • The Press of Atlantic City[93]


  • The Trentonian[93]


Organizations



  • Family Research Council[94]


  • National Federation of Independent Business[95]

  • New Jersey Outdoor Alliance[96]

  • New Jersey Environmental Federation[97]

  • New Jersey Restaurant Association[98]






Jon Corzine

Newspapers



  • New York Daily News[93]


  • The Jersey Journal[93]


  • The New York Times[99]


  • The Philadelphia Inquirer[100]


  • The Record[90]


  • The Times of Trenton[90]


Elected Officials



  • Barack Obama, President of the United States


  • Joe Biden, Vice President of the United States


  • Robert Menendez, U.S. Senator from New Jersey[101]


Organizations



  • Human Rights Campaign[102]

  • New Jersey Fraternal Order of Police[103]

  • Latino Leadership Alliance[104]


  • Planned Parenthood of New Jersey[105]

  • Dominican American Elected Officials Caucus of New Jersey[101]

  • Legislative Latino Caucus[101]


Unions


  • New Jersey Education Association[106]

  • New Jersey Police Benevolent Association


  • Service Employees International Union[107]






Chris Daggett

Newspapers



  • The Newark Star-Ledger[108]


  • Recorder Newspapers[109]


  • The Express-Times[93]


Organizations


  • Sierra Club of New Jersey[110]



Polling



















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Source
Dates Administered
Corzine (D)
Christie (R)
Daggett (I)
Undecided

Public Policy Polling
October 31 – November 1, 2009
41%

47%
11%


SurveyUSA/WABC-TV
October 30 – November 1, 2009
42%

45%
10%
3%

Monmouth University/Gannett
October 30 – November 1, 2009

43%
41%
8%


Democracy Corps
October 29 – November 1, 2009

41%
37%
15%
8%

Quinnipiac
October 27 – November 1, 2009
40%

42%
12%
6%

Fairleigh Dickinson University
October 22 – November 1, 2009

43%
41%
8%
5%

Monmouth University/Gannett
October 28–30, 2009
42%

43%
8%
5%

Rasmussen Reports
October 29, 2009
43%

46%
8%
3%

Zogby
October 27–29, 2009

40%
39%
14%
6%

Neighborhood Research
October 27–29, 2009
35%

42%
8%
15%

Democracy Corps
October 27–28, 2009

43%
38%
12%
7%

SurveyUSA/WABC-TV
October 26–28, 2009

43%

43%
11%
3%

Research 2000
October 26–28, 2009
41%

42%
14%
3%

Fairleigh Dickinson University
October 22–28, 2009
39%

41%
14%
4%

Rasmussen Reports
October 26, 2009
43%

46%
7%
4%

Public Policy Polling
October 23–26, 2009
38%

42%
13%
6%

Quinnipiac
October 20–26, 2009

43%
38%
13%
5%

Suffolk University
October 22–25, 2009

42%
33%
7%
14%

Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research
October 21–22, 2009

42%
39%
19%


SurveyUSA
October 19–21, 2009
39%

41%
19%
1%

Rutgers-Eagleton
October 15–20, 2009

39%
36%
20%
5%

Rasmussen Reports
October 19, 2009
39%

41%
11%
8%

Monmouth University
October 15–18, 2009

39%

39%
14%
8%

Rasmussen Reports
October 14, 2009
41%

45%
9%
5%

SurveyUSA/WABC-TV
October 12–14, 2009
39%

40%
18%
3%

The New York Times
October 9–14, 2009

40%
37%
14%
9%

Public Policy Polling
October 9–12, 2009
39%

40%
13%
8%

Quinnipiac University
October 7–12, 2009
40%

41%
14%
5%

Neighborhood Research
October 6–8, 2009
35%

36%
11%
18%

Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research[permanent dead link]
October 6–7, 2009

41%
38%
14%
7%

SurveyUSA
October 5–7, 2009
40%

43%
14%
2%

Penn, Schoen & Berland Assoc.
September 30 – October 5, 2009
38%

43%
13%
6%

Rasmussen Reports
October 5, 2009
44%

47%
6%
3%

Fairleigh Dickinson University
September 28 – October 5, 2009

38%
37%
17%
8%

Research 2000
September 28–30, 2009
42%

46%
7%
5%

Monmouth University
September 24–29, 2009
40%

43%
8%
9%

Quinnipiac
September 22–28, 2009
39%

43%
12%
6%

Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research
September 22–23, 2009
39%

40%
11%
10%

Strategic Vision
September 18–20, 2009
38%

46%
8%
8%

Rasmussen Reports
September 14–17, 2009
41%

48%
6%
5%

Neighborhood Research
September 14–17, 2009
33%

40%
7%
20%

Public Policy Polling
September 11–14, 2009
35%

44%
13%
7%

Monmouth University
September 8–10, 2009
39%

47%
5%
7%

Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research
September 8–9, 2009
38%

41%
10%
10%

Rasmussen Reports
September 9, 2009
38%

46%
6%
10%

Fairleigh Dickinson University
August 26–30, 2009
42%

47%
1%*
6%

Quinnipiac University
August 25–26, 2009
37%

47%
9%
6%

Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research
August 25–26, 2009
41%

43%
7%
9%

Rasmussen Reports
August 25, 2009
36%

47%
7%
11%

Neighborhood Research
August 12–21, 2009
36%

39%
6%
19%

Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research
August 11–12, 2009
35%

40%
10%
15%

Quinnipiac University
August 11, 2009
42%

51%
7%
6%

Research 2000
August 5, 2009
40%

48%
3%
9%

Rasmussen Reports
August 4, 2009
37%

50%
5%
8%

Monmouth University
July 29 – August 2, 2009
36%

50%
5%
4%

Public Policy Polling
July 24–27, 2009
36%

50%

14%

Strategic Vision
July 17–19, 2009
38%

53%
5%
4%

Monmouth University
July 9–14, 2009
37%

45%
4%
13%

Quinnipiac University
July 8–12, 2009
38%

47%
8%
7%

Basswood
July 7, 2009
33%

48%

19%

Rasmussen Reports
July 7, 2009
39%

46%
5%
10%

Public Policy Polling
June 27–29, 2009
41%

51%

9%

Strategic Vision
June 19–21, 2009
39%

51%
2%
8%

Quinnipiac University
June 3–8, 2009
40%

50%
1%
9%

Rasmussen Reports
June 3, 2009
38%

51%
5%
6%

Research 2000
May 25–27, 2009
39%

46%

15%

Rasmussen Reports
May 14, 2009
38%

47%
6%
9%

Monmouth University
April 23–25, 2009
35%

39%
2%
18%

Quinnipiac University
April 14–20, 2009
38%

45%
2%
14%

Fairleigh Dickinson University
April 5, 2009
33%

42%

25%

Rasmussen Reports
March 10, 2009
34%

49%
7%
10%

Quinnipiac University
March 4–9, 2009
37%

46%
1%
15%

Fairleigh Dickinson University
February 25 – March 2, 2009
32%

41%

27%

Quinnipiac University
January 29 – February 2, 2009
38%

44%
2%
16%

Monmouth University
January 12–14, 2009

38%
36%
2%
21%

Rasmussen Reports
January 2–7, 2009
40%

42%
5%
13%

Fairleigh Dickinson
January 2–7, 2009

40%
33%

26%

Quinnipiac University
November 17, 2008

42%
36%



Research 2000
September 11, 2008

43%
41%

16%

Zogby
August 11, 2008

45%
36%



Quinnipiac University
August 10, 2008
40%

41%
1%
17%

"*" denotes voluntary response only. In the August 26–30 FDU poll, 4% also responded "neither" or "other."



Results
































































































































New Jersey gubernatorial election, 2009[111]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Chris Christie

1,174,445

48.46%

+5.43%


Democratic

Jon Corzine (inc.)
1,087,731
44.88%
-8.59%


Independent

Chris Daggett
139,579
5.76%



Libertarian
Kenneth R. Kaplan
4,830
0.20%
-0.47%


Independent
Gary T. Steele
3,585
0.15%



Independent
Jason Cullen
2,869
0.12%



Independent
David R. Meiswinkle
2,598
0.11%



Independent
Kostas Petris
2,563
0.11%



Socialist

Gregory Pason
2,085
0.09%



Independent
Gary Stein
1,625
0.07%



Independent
Joshua Leinsdorf
1,021
0.04%



Independent
Alvin Lindsay, Jr.
753
0.03%

Majority
86,714
3.58%
-6.87%

Turnout
2,423,684




Republican gain from Democratic

Swing




County results




Results of the general election by municipality, darker colors indicate higher win percentage:
-Red municipalities won by Christie
-Blue municipalities won by Corzine





















































































































































































































































County
Christie %
Christie votes
Corzine %
Corzine votes
Daggett %
Daggett votes
Other %
Other votes

Atlantic

48.53%

35,724
45.32%
33,360
4.91%
3,611
1.24%
913

Bergen
46.26%
121,446

48.52%

127,386
4.74%
12,452
0.48%
1,262

Burlington

48.41%

66,723
45.79%
63,114
4.59%
6,333
1.21%
1,669

Camden
39.29%
52,337

54.93%

73,171
4.63%
6,166
1.15%
1,526

Cape May

54.34%

18,992
38.28%
13,379
6.08%
2,126
1.29%
451

Cumberland
41.75%
14,079

50.69%

17,092
5.82%
1,962
1.74%
586

Essex
27.53%
50,240

67.31%

122,640
4.52%
8,240
0.74%
1,357

Gloucester

47.26%

39,815
43.99%
37,066
8.04%
6,777
0.70%
593

Hudson
26.08%
30,820

69.44%

82,075
3.40%
4,017
1.08%
1,280

Hunterdon

65.75%

33,360
25.41%
12,893
8.08%
4,098
0.76%
387

Mercer
39.27%
39,769

54.51%

55,199
5.36%
5,424
0.86%
874

Middlesex

47.42%

94,506
45.02%
89,732
6.54%
13,034
1.02%
2,023

Monmouth

62.24%

129,039
31.19%
64,672
5.76%
11,952
0.80%
1,658

Morris

60.04%

99,085
31.26%
51,586
8.07%
13,321
0.62%
1,031

Ocean

65.73%

124,238
28.44%
53,761
4.80%
9,068
1.03%
1,955

Passaic
43.78%
48,500

51.46%

57,010
3.87%
4,288
0.89%
981

Salem

47.18%

9,599
40.91%
8,323
9.88%
2,011
2.02%
411

Somerset

56.23%

57,481
34.33%
35,089
8.72%
8,911
0.72%
740

Sussex

63.69%

31,749
25.82%
12,870
9.15%
4,563
1.33%
664

Union
42.15%
56,769

51.13%

68,867
5.94%
7,999
0.79%
1,058

Warren

62.35%

20,174
26.10%
8,446
9.97%
3,226
1.58%
510


See also



  • Politics of New Jersey

  • New Jersey General Assembly elections, 2009



References





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External links



  • New Jersey Division of Elections – Official General Election Results


  • 2009 New Jersey Gubernatorial General Election: Christopher Christie (R) vs Gov. Jon Corzine (D) chart of aggregated poll results from Pollster.com (includes Daggett starting in July)


  • New Jersey 2009 Governor campaign contributions from FollowTheMoney.org


  • Elections from NJ.com


  • New Jersey Elections from USElections.com


Campaign websites (Archived)



  • Chris Christie

  • Jon Corzine

  • Jason Cullen

  • Chris Daggett

  • Gary Steele

  • David Meiswinkle

  • Carl Bergmanson

  • Jeff Boss

  • David Brown

  • Christian Keller

  • Brian Levine

  • Steve Lonegan

  • Rick Merkt










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