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N.J. conservatives deserve a "Torricelli" on Chris Christie
Star-Ledger ^ | 7/19/2009 | Paul Mulshine

Posted on 07/21/2009 6:32:17 AM PDT by NewJerseyJoe

In golf they call it a “mulligan.” In Jersey politics we call it a “Torricelli.”

Whatever you call it, conservatives in New Jersey have a right to demand it.

A couple of months ago, Chris Christie was telling us he was the most conservative candidate in a three-man primary. He was condemning the loony-left environmentalism of the Obama administration and running around the suburbs telling Republicans all the good things he was going to do for them if elected governor.

But now that he’s got the nomination, Christie’s embracing the Obama environmental polices and running around the cities telling Democrats the good things he’ll be doing for them.

(Excerpt) Read more at blog.nj.com ...


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: New Jersey
KEYWORDS: christie; corzine; torricelli
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(Admin Mod: although the URL has "blog" in it, this article was published in the print edition of the Star-Ledger on Sunday.)

Didn't see this one posted. Have at it, New Jersey FReepers....

1 posted on 07/21/2009 6:32:17 AM PDT by NewJerseyJoe
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To: NewJerseyJoe

Mulshine’s sources are suspect at best.


2 posted on 07/21/2009 6:40:27 AM PDT by FreepShop1
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To: NewJerseyJoe
bttt

I'm voting for Lonegan. The only way to change the RINO establishment is by not complying with their scare tactics. Otherwise, they will keep serving up the ‘not as bad as’ solution and then blame the conservatives.

3 posted on 07/21/2009 6:40:48 AM PDT by Calpernia (DefendOurFreedoms.Org)
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To: NewJerseyJoe

I’ll be voting with my feet. Moving to Pennsylvania this fall.


4 posted on 07/21/2009 6:44:19 AM PDT by Claud
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To: NewJerseyJoe

Does anyone REALLY think a conservative has a snowball’s chance in hell of winning a major election in NJ??


5 posted on 07/21/2009 6:45:32 AM PDT by ScottinVA (Impeach President Soros!!!)
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To: Calpernia

Exactly! Voting for the lesser of 2 evils is getting us to hell one way or the other.

I’m not saying they have to be perfect, but if we do another McCain type nominee for president we can expect to lose either way. The only real difference in mcCain and Obama is the speed in which they will run toward socialism. With obama running like it’s a 100 yard dash and mccain running as a marathon.

Point is when obama is running as fast as he is, people will be able to connect the dots as unemployement goes to double digits.


6 posted on 07/21/2009 6:48:08 AM PDT by for-q-clinton (If at first you don't succeed keep on sucking until you do succeed)
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To: NewJerseyJoe

Another RINO thinking he can out-pander a democrat.


7 posted on 07/21/2009 6:52:16 AM PDT by sinanju
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To: ScottinVA; NewJerseyJoe

One might be surprised. I have had died-in-the-wool Democrats tell me they were disappointed that they did not have Lonegan to vote for.

The reason: A lot of middle class liberals are seeing the results of electing Corzine up close and personal: long-time jobs lost, horrendous job market, taxes, fees, etc increasing, freebies for illegals who infest the state, hospitals closing, businesses closing, salary cuts...

Corzine has become truly hated, and the Republican party sabatoged their best chance - Lonegan.

If Lonegan concentrated on fiscal conservatism, I’m certain he could have won.


8 posted on 07/21/2009 6:56:54 AM PDT by algernonpj (He who pays the piper . . .)
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To: NewJerseyJoe

In NJ, they are all Democrats. It’s just a matter of degree.

We saw that with Tom Kean and Christine Todd Whitman.

And it was obvious with Christie, who has never held elected office in his life, so sure, why not run for Governor?

Steve Lonegan is the real deal as a Conservative.Christie was a poser as a Conservative.

But in NJ, people are so braindead, that even though they all know they need saving, they resist all who have the means to save them.

We went through the same thing with getting that idiot McGreevey over Bret Schundler as Governor. A fatal choice if there ever was one.

I left NJ over three years ago. The only surprise since then was that California became the first bankrupt state, ahead of NJ. NJ is ready to explode fiscally, and all the parties are doing is rearranging the deck chairs on a sinking ship.

With ACORN, “walking around” money,vote fraud in the inner cities, and $ 17 billion in stimulus money to distribute thanks to Obama, Corzine will be a lead pipe cinch to be re-elected. They’ll make it happen by a slim margin for drama, but he will win nevertheless.

NJ is a beautiful state—but it has the worst, most corrupt, arrogant ruling class of both parties you can imagine. NJ is the golden goose that will soon die of exhaustion, having spit out its last golden egg.


9 posted on 07/21/2009 6:56:57 AM PDT by exit82 (Sarah Palin is President No. 45. Get behind her, GOP, or get out of the way.)
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To: Claud

Have fun with the lack of road sings and Fast Eddie Rendell as you governor!


10 posted on 07/21/2009 6:58:58 AM PDT by Clemenza (Remember our Korean War Veterans)
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To: Claud

Have fun with the lack of road signs, lots of Obama voters, and Fast Eddie Rendell as you governor!


11 posted on 07/21/2009 6:59:16 AM PDT by Clemenza (Remember our Korean War Veterans)
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To: NewJerseyJoe

This article is a follow up from a letter written by Steve Lonegan posted also by the writer of this article. In it Lonegan calls out the NJ GOP as being two-faced and corrupt.

http://blog.nj.com/njv_paul_mulshine/2009/07/heres_the_lonegan_letter.html#m


12 posted on 07/21/2009 7:03:46 AM PDT by TheBigIf
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To: algernonpj

Plus I’m writing in Lonegan.


13 posted on 07/21/2009 7:04:36 AM PDT by algernonpj (He who pays the piper . . .)
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To: TheBigIf

bttt


14 posted on 07/21/2009 7:08:52 AM PDT by Calpernia (DefendOurFreedoms.Org)
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To: NewJerseyJoe
I no longer vote RINO....Have a nice life NJ...I'm outa here as soon as I can arrange it.
15 posted on 07/21/2009 7:12:08 AM PDT by rightwingextremist1776
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To: TheBigIf

Lonegan is correct.

Imagine if Christie went after Corzine the way he went after Lonegan - just the Goldman Sachs connection should do it.


16 posted on 07/21/2009 7:12:36 AM PDT by algernonpj (He who pays the piper . . .)
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To: TheBigIf

Why Principle Matters

By Steve Lonegan

Since the Primary Election, loyal Republicans have been baffled by the behavior of the GOP establishment in New Jersey. First, operatives in the campaign of our nominee for Governor, Chris Christie, monkeyed around with the social issues page on his website, gaining the attention of the media before resolving what they caused.

Then, at the meeting of the Republican State Committee - the men and women elected from each county to formulate and advance the party’s principles - the party leadership blocked a move to formally adopt the platform of the national Republican Party, as well as blocking a resolution condemning Governor Corzine’s tax hikes. At least one major newspaper, the Star-Ledger, linked the leadership’s refusal to adopt our Party’s platform to the fact it contains Pro-Life and Pro-Traditional Marriage planks.

The impact of not adopting the platform - a set of principles to guide the party and its elected officials - would soon manifest itself. Just days later, Tom Kean Jr., the Republican leader in the New Jersey State Senate, led a small group of Republicans in voting with liberal Democrats in support of the life-time confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Barry Albin to the state’s highest court.

Albin has been the state’s most liberal activist judge, authoring the radical Lewis vs. Harris decision in support of civil unions—a decision that drastically alters the meaning of marriage and changes the course of our culture without voter input. Albin is the architect of the left wing social engineering scheme known as COAH and the failed Abbott education funding mandates that have given New Jersey the highest property taxes in America. The action of these Republicans was a slap in the face to their own nominee for Governor, who has promised to appoint “conservative judges who will uphold the Constitution”.

That same day, Senate Republican Leader Kean and his allies would rise alongside Jon Corzine to support another liberal scheme - the bonding of $400 million for “open space”. No one opposes open space, but at a time when the state’s debt has reached crushing levels more debt simply isn’t rational. Lacking any platform, Republicans like Senator Kean have left themselves increasingly vulnerable to emotional, feel-good appeals.

Meanwhile, over at the Assembly, Republican Leader Alex DeCroce lobbied to pass a destructive COAH bill. This legislation gives central planners in Trenton the power to override local mayors and councils and planning boards, forcing them to convert projects approved as “over-aged-55 housing” to open housing as long as there is a 20% low income housing component. This bill shifts power to Trenton bureaucrats and developers’ lobbyists. Republicans should be united behind defending home rule, but instead, without a guiding set of principles, they are lost.

But just when you thought it couldn’t get worse, along comes the vote on the largest tax increase in America’s history — Barack Obama’s “Cap & Trade” scheme.

Only ten days after the failure of the New Jersey Republican State Committee to adopt the platform of the Republican Party, this tragic bill passed the House of Representatives by a narrow 219 to 212, with eight Republicans joining 211 Democrats. Our state had the dubious distinction of seeing three of those prosperity destroying votes cast by New Jersey Republican Congressmen Leonard Lance, Frank LoBiondo, and Chris Smith. No other state in America saw so many Republicans vote with President Obama and the Democrats. In New Jersey, three of our five Republican congressmen did.

To make matters worse, the Atlantic County Republican Committee sent out a release attacking those Republicans in Congress who stood up for taxpayers and came close to stopping President Obama, Speaker Pelosi, and their destructive legislation. But it should come as no surprise that in a state where Republican leaders refuse to adopt Republican principles there is no semblance of principled leadership.

The question that haunts many of us is, “Why?”

To understand how we got here, we need to look at who controls the levers of power within the GOP establishment in New Jersey. For the most part, it’s not the elected officials. In New Jersey, most elected officials are part-timers. You must look behind the Republican “leader” - to the permanent bureaucracy who runs our legislative caucuses.

The players in this bureaucracy slide through a revolving door that takes them from legislative staffer, to lobbyist, to holder of government contracts or appointments, and then back in time to secure a fat taxpayer-funded pension. These are the hollow men who are there when a freshmen legislator arrives in Trenton - and remain twenty years after he’s gone.

Only our party - the Republican Party - can bring change to Trenton. The Democrats cannot bring the fiscal responsibility New Jersey needs. They are captive of their own base vote - of public employee unions and those dependent on government. They dare not risk their contract with these constituencies.

Republicans have a base vote who wants fiscal change. It is the hollow men who reject it, and they do so for the simple reason that it is in their financial interests to maintain the status quo. At the back of every seemingly inexplicable betrayal by a GOP “leader” sits a close personal advisor with his own personal reasons. And in a state GOP without principles - that fails to adopt its own party platform - this kind of venal corruption is rampant.

That’s why it is so important for the New Jersey Republican State Committee to take a principled stand, adopt the party platform, and then use those principles when the hollow men come round with their personal agendas.


17 posted on 07/21/2009 7:15:29 AM PDT by Rodamala
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To: Claud

Great ! I did it in April and picked up my CCW permit in only 2 weeks !


18 posted on 07/21/2009 7:29:24 AM PDT by Renegade (You go tell my buddies)
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To: Rodamala

bttt!


19 posted on 07/21/2009 7:30:46 AM PDT by Calpernia (DefendOurFreedoms.Org)
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To: NewJerseyJoe

I’m a Lonegan fan and voted for him in the primary. I hate Corzine but think he will do less damage than RINO Christie. No one does more damage than a liberal Republican. They are so worried about being called mean and insensitive to the needs of the great unwashed that they will go along with anything. Just can’t say no. Corzine will be so worried about being held responsible for the coming collapse of NJ that he may actually so something to rein in spending. The Dems may be getting so worried about compounding Obama’s problems with Corzine’s bad moves that they may do something right for a change.


20 posted on 07/21/2009 7:44:01 AM PDT by Freds2nd
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