Insider NJ’s Morning Intelligence Briefing: 3/3/2026

Insider NJ's Morning Intelligence Briefing

Below is Insider NJ's Morning Intelligence Briefing:

 

QUOTE OF THE DAY: "There are plenty of districts, a number of districts that are getting more money than they need. And look, no district is ever going to admit they’re getting more than they need. That’s where leadership comes in. You go in, you dig into their budgets and you say, “Look, we can’t afford certain things. We can’t afford your million dollars of your travel budget. We can’t afford your hundreds of thousands of dollars in entertainment and balloons.” It’s garbage. And by the way, the kids are still getting a crappy education in Newark and in other places." - Senator O'Scanlon on school funding

 

TOP STORY: CD-11 Collision: Mejia Versus Hathaway

 

Insider NJ's Morning Intelligence Briefing

 

Governor Sherrill is picking a fight, and getting one, with ICE and the federal government, according to Politico NJ.

 

The Gateway Tunnel project battle could add $1B to the final price tag, according to NJ.com.

 

Some NJ towns average $16k+ just in school taxes, according to NJ.com.

 

Atlantic County will act on landfill growth, according to the Press of Atlantic City.

 

The RNC filed a lawsuit alleging Bergen County's Elections Board won't allow them a list of poll workers, according to NJ Globe.

 

ICE's intentions for a Burlington County detention facility remains hazy, according to NJ Globe.

 

Cape May County's median teacher salary is trailing the state average, according to Cape May Herald.

 

Essex Commissioner Gill says its time for 'new faces' as he opts against re-election, according to NorthJersey.com.

 

Passaic County cities are on alert amid the Iran strikes, according to NorthJersey.com.

 

Rep. Gottheimer may oppose the War Powers resolution, according to Tom Moran's Jersey Lowdown.

 

NJPAC welcomed a new CFO, according to BINJE.

 

ICYMI: Roxbury ICE disappointment and anger; Malinowski conceded

 

Insider NJ's Morning Intelligence Briefing

 

In CD7, President Trump is causing a midterm headache for Rep. Kean, according to Politico NJ.

 

In CD9, Rep. Pou was endorsed by Bergen Democratic leaders, according to NJ Globe.

 

In CD11, data shows thousands registered to vote in the special primary, according to NJ Globe.

 

Abdrabough is running for Atlantic County Democratic Chair, according to NJ Globe.

 

Montclair Mayor Baskerville ended her campaign for Essex County commissioner, according to NJ Globe.

 

Monmouth County Commissioner Licitra won't seek re-election; Middletown Mayor Perry is the leading candidate to succeed him, according to NJ Globe.

 

ICYMI: In CD7, Bennett secured Hunterdon Dems backing; in CD11, Hathaway hopes to turn district red; Roxbury ICE saga putting heat on Bucco; Kean getting busy; Hunterdon Dems postponed convention; CD11 special election now set; Dems size up 2028

 

Insider NJ's Morning Intelligence Briefing

 

Senate President Scutari is aligning with Republicans over coastal development rules, according to Politico NJ.

 

Senator O'Scanlon says Governor Sherrill has a chance to steer the state clear from fiscal risk, according to NJ Spotlight.

 

Assemblywoman Bagolie says the state's cryptocurrency fraud problem deserves federal action, according to NJ.com.

 

The NJBIA expressed support for workforce development bills.

 

Princeton Strategic Communications acquired Nonprofit Partners.

 

ICYMI: Sherrill warned of a 'serious structural deficit'; Smith grilled Cha; SJU advanced ICE mask ban; lawmakers advanced legislation targeting ICE

 

Insider NJ's Morning Intelligence Briefing

 

In Asbury Park, a tax deal was approved for a apartment plan, according to the Asbury Park Press.

 

In Atlantic City, public housing is set for a major modernization, according to the Press of Atlantic City.

 

In Bayonne, mayor and council slates are almost set, according to TAPinto.

 

In Clifton, the city manager was accused of unlawful conduct in a tort, according to NorthJersey.com.

 

In Collingswood, students questioned the BOE on course changes and a merger, according to the Retrospect.

 

In Dover, a project would bring hundreds of apartments, according to MyCentralJersey.

 

In Edison, a vote on pay raises was delayed, according to MyCentralJersey.

 

In Haddonfield, parents urged the BOE to protect sports and staff as cuts loom, according to the Retrospect.

 

In High Bridge, solutions to the sewer system saga are being explored, according to TAPinto.

 

In Holmdel, the town is giving some PILOT revenue to schools, according to the Asbury Park Press.

 

In Jersey City, Pompidou will be turned into affordable housing, according to JC Times. O'Dea waded into the Ali v. Morris fued, according to Hudson County View. Conflict broke out between the BOE President and a activist at a ICE protest, according to Hudson County View.

 

In Livingston, Klein won't seek re-election, according to NJ Globe.

 

In Manasquan, parking rules were updated, according to TAPinto.

 

In Montclair, costs from the referendum ballots and litigation are mounting, according to Montclair Local.

 

In New Brunswick, 800 apartments were proposed, according to MyCentralJersey.

 

In Ocean City, superintendent candidates are being interviewed, according to Cape May Herald.

 

In Phillipsburg, a pedestrian safety signal will be installed on Roseberry Street, according to TAPinto.

 

In Princeton, financial reckoning looms in the near future, according to TAPinto.

 

In Raritan, a conflict claim halted a planning board meeting, according to TAPinto.

 

In Somerville, residents challenged a affordable housing proposal, according to TAPinto.

 

In South Orange, budget requests were reviewed, according to TAPinto.

 

In Teaneck, a housing vote was delayed, according to NorthJersey.com.

 

In Toms River, a BOE member resigned, according to Jersey Shore Online.

 

AROUND THE WEB:

 

 

N.J. governor visited family-owned bakery. Now it’s facing backlash.

Rebecca Heath, NJ.com

 

  • A family-owned Gloucester County bakery has faced backlash after Gov. Mikie Sherrill visited the shop last week. Sherrill — a Democrat in her second month as governor — met with the owners of Two Sweet Boutique in Deptford on Friday to discuss ways to support small businesses, the bakery wrote in a statement on Facebook.

 

Opinion: Jersey City is the economic engine of New Jersey. The state must help keep it running

James Solomon, Brian Stack, Angela McKnight, Raj Mukherji, Ravi Bhalla, Katie Brennan, Gabriel Rodriguez, William Sampson, Larry Wainstein, Jerry Walker, Craig Guy

 

  • Jersey City taxpayers are confronting an unprecedented fiscal crisis that follows years of steep, abrupt reductions in state school aid. Hundreds of millions were already stripped from a city that is still home to deep poverty, forcing local taxpayers to shoulder a burden no working class community could reasonably sustain. Forcing the city’s predominantly working class taxpayers to absorb further shocks will trigger a fiscal unraveling whose effects will reverberate across the entire state’s economy.

 

Carl Zeitz, statehouse reporter and N.J. casino regulator, dies at 83

David Wildstein, NJ Globe

 

  • Carl Zeitz, a legendary and much-admired statehouse political reporter who later served on the New Jersey Casino Control Commission and founded a successful public relations firm, died today. He was 83 and had been dealing with a series of health issues over the last several years.

 

NJ tax deadline 2026: Why residents delay filing

Eric "EJ" Johnson, NJ1015

 

  • Taxcrastination: yeah we know we have to do it, but we still don't. It’s early March...already! We can feel spring in the air. And we can feel that tex deadline looming too. You’ve seen those W-2s sitting on your desk since late January. Extensions of envelopes have been torn and peeked into. You know the April 15 deadline is creeping up — yet here we are, deep in the abyss of taxcrastination. That’s the act of putting off your taxes despite knowing full well the deadline — aka impending doom — is right around the corner.

 

‘ICE OUT Jersey City’ youth-led protest marches down Grove Street

Dan Israel, Hudson County View

 

  • An entirely youth-led protest referred to as “ICE OUT Jersey City” marched through Jersey yesterday afternoon, calling to abolish U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) amid a recent wave of actions in Hudson County.

 

Guhl-Sadovy accepts inaugural Joe Fiordaliso Award with gratitude – and tears

Tom Bergeron, BINJE

 

  • It began with a quick dab of the eyes. Then the tears came. And before long, BPU President Christine Guhl-Sadovy was all but sobbing. When Guhl-Sadovy was presented with the inaugural Joe Fiordaliso Award last week during a New Jersey Energy Policy Coalition event, and received it directly from Fiordaliso’s son, it became more than she could hold back.

 

Hoboken Farms turns up heat with $4M boost

Kimberly Redmond, NJBIZ

 

  • Fueled by more than $4 million in fresh funding, a spicy new flavor and soaring demand from grocery stores across the U.S., New Jersey-born clean-label pasta sauce brand Hoboken Farms is turning up the heat. Founded by native Hobokenite Brad Finkel, the venture is the only independently owned company that has organically grown from a local, outdoor farm market into an emerging national brand.

 

Wall collapse in Trenton disturbs neighbors on Sunday morning

LA Parker, The Trentonian

 

  • Gladys Carvajal felt the earth move under her feet on Sunday morning. The Mott St. resident experienced another collapse of an outer wall belonging to one of many industrial buildings falling down and apart in Trenton. This latest crash occurred on the first block of Mott St. between S. Clinton Ave. and Hudson St.

 

N.J.’s war on pricing software could make your home rent even higher | Opinion

Michael Busler

 

  • In Trenton, lawmakers are searching for a new scapegoat for New Jersey’s persistent housing crisis, and they’re zoning in on “algorithmic pricing.” With concerns swirling that software used by property managers is driving up rents from Newark to Cape May, legislators are considering banning these digital tools.

 

Under Sherrill, N.J. has momentum to become a national leader for affordable housing | Opinion

Adam Gordon

 

  • One month into Gov. Mikie Sherrill’s administration, New Jersey stands at a pivotal moment on housing — with a strong framework in place and a clear opportunity to build on it.

 

If we want a stronger democracy after 250 years, it starts in N.J. classrooms | Opinion

Nicholas A. Chiaravalloti

 

  • This summer, America turns 250. From Los Angeles to Philadelphia to Trenton, communities across the country will mark a quarter‑millennium of self‑governance. There will be parades and fireworks, speeches and commemorations. But when the last hot dog is eaten, we will be left with a harder question: Are we preparing the next generation to carry this republic forward?

 

LaPlaca expected to plead guilty to child endangerment charge

Zach Blackburn, NJ Globe

 

  • Lumberton Committeewoman Gina LaPlaca is expected to plead guilty on Monday to a child endangerment charge on Monday, charges that stem from a 2025 drunk-driving incident with her young child in the car, the New Jersey Globe has learned.

 

U.S. Postal Service completes probe of Kean mail dump in ’24, sends it to Justice Department

David Wildstein, NJ Globe

 

  • A complaint that a Roxbury postal worker allegedly dumped about 300 pieces of mail in support of Republican Rep. Thomas Kean, Jr. (R-Westfield) into a supermarket dumpster in Pennsylvania in the fall of 2024 has been sent to federal prosecutors in New Jersey. “The OIG completed the investigation and referred the case to the United States Attorney’s Office,” said Jonathan Jimenez, the assistant special agent in charge of the U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector General.

 

Is it illegal to use a cellphone at a red light? What state law says

Amanda Wallace, NorthJersey.com

 

  • Have you ever reached for your cellphone while in the driver's seat? Whether it's to read a text message, pull up a map or simply skip a song, using a cellphone while operating a vehicle is against the law in New Jersey, and across much of the United States.

 

Boyd Sands, Hall of Fame educator and retired executive director of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association, has died at 88

Gary Miles, Philadelphia Inquirer

 

  • Boyd Sands, 88, formerly of Glassboro, Gloucester County, retired teacher, coach, principal, and superintendent of the Delsea Regional School District, and Hall of Fame former executive director of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association, died Saturday, Jan. 17, of complications from a stroke at Cape Canaveral Hospital in Florida.

 

Time theft in Trenton Police Department vs. time theft in the Health Department

LA Parker, The Trentonian

 

  • Trenton Mayor Reed Gusciora and his police Director Steven Wilson have become so adept at word manipulation that both can tie a cherry stem with their tongue while drinking a glass of TWW water.

Previous comments for: Insider NJ’s Morning Intelligence Briefing: 2/26/2026

  1. Stephen Brickman LTC USA (retired) says:

    as the upcoming audit of the Department of Education approaches it would wise to consider the amount of money going into education is not producing the results one would hope for. US is on the bottom of the list for the number of our kids falling below in their education levels. I think the states would beach be more efficient in that area as the parents receive the power to demand what the kids are taught and have the ability to vote on who serves as Principal, and can fire teachers that are judged ineffective, as the rule of tenure is eliminated as proposed by the President. If the Department of Education is too large and too frivolous with OUR money is should be gone, and I"m sure Mrs. McMahon would sure of that, after the DOGE audit.

  2. Stephen Brickman LTC (USA retired) says:

    Bravo to New Secretary of Homeland Security Norm for deputizing the national guard to give them the power to arrest illegals attempting to enter our country illegally. That same idea might work in sanctuary states by deputization of police to be able to bypass governors another elected officials, such as mayors and city and county commissioners. Deputization is a weapon not often used but in this instance it would work to accomplish the mission of Homeland Security. On another note the overt anger shown towards Kash Patel by the Democratic senators is telling. His confirmation will mean the entire mission of the Democratic Party will be deep sixed by the cleansing of the FBI’s weaponization. It means our country will be back to Constitutional Republic. Of course if the mainstream media media wants its audience back it might want to go along with Constitutionality also.

  3. Maryann says:

    I have relatives that live in Texas, they have to live in fear? I don't think so.I don't hear any Democrats having any spine to challenge Biden.Who did he let skate? If they were so innocent he wouldn't have to pardon them would he

  4. Stephen Brickman LTC USA (retired) says:

    The selling off the wall piecemeal by Biden's administration was not addressed, but it has to be looked at as a huge black eye for Biden. To counter this it seems prudent to advise those companies that bought in to the "Great American Fraud" that returning their purchase is a most patriotic act, even if there is a monetary reward of maybe 25 cents on the dollar, as well as not being seen to be in collusion with the deep state.in this fraudulent act. Remembering that American taxpayers already paid millions for the wall and would very much appreciate getting it back to increase Homeland Security, which was its purpose in the first place.

  5. Stephen Brickman says:

    Once Trump pardons the Jan 6 participants they should immediately begin Class Action suit against Nancy Pelosi who was instrumental in conducting a huge Political Kangaroo Court unfairly sending hundreds of of participants to jail. They should seek 200 million dollars for redress as well as compensation for Ashley Babbit’s shooting for being unarmed and unthreatening and totally not deserving of a death sentence. And it should cover the medical needs of those jailed who were denied adequate medical care. This was a total abuse of politely power and a Class Action suit is needed to clear the air.

  6. Vincent says:

    (The state’s voting system is secure, according to NJ Spotlight.) This was without doubt one of the most farcical articles perhaps ever written. To give you an idea just how corrupt and lawless the voting system is, in 2021 Governor Murphy deviously ousted the Bergen County Superintendent of Elections with over 30+ years of experience (coerced and strongarmed into early retirement) in order to then deliberately and deviously insert Loretta Weinberg's Chief of Staff who, had absolutely NO previous election experience whatsoever. This was all masterfully formulated and then executed just several weeks prior to the Gubernatorial primary. But of course there was nothing nefarious regarding such an abrupt change. Although Bergen County is not the largest County in New Jersey it is however home to the most registered voters of which the vast majority are also Democrats. Keep in mind The Superintendent of Elections Office is also in charge of voter "registrations" - polls books, voting machines and of course - investigating any and all reports of voter fraud. Murphy's intentions had been to leave the position vacant until "after" the Gubernatorial Election in November but the media exposed his chicanery and he was forced to fill and announce his personal "appointment" immediately and how all of this came to light. The former Superintendent of Elections was also a Republican and certainly would've never voluntarily retired "prematurely" but just prior to a major election. Her integrity was legendary throughout the entire County. But of course there was nothing to Murphy's sudden lead change "in the middle of the night" in Bergen County after the polls had already closed. Murphy was and still remains loathed and despised by all because of his despotic actions and stance on the Covid lockdowns. He knew there was no other way he could ever beat Ciattarelli and never did. But certainly not legally nor ever legitimately. But keep believing "the voting system in NJ" is actually secure.

  7. Stephen Brickman RPh says:

    Concerns about Jan 6 violence The simple solution to allay the concerns of the Jan.6 violence happening again is to make sure the election is run in an honest and above board manner, which must include voter I.D. via a totally transparent system. Otherwise I’m betting all bets are off.

  8. Stephen Brickman LTC USA (retired) says:

    Assemblyman Schaer's Bill to define antisemitism for New Jersey residents and to be able to react to it is great. But what about our kids going off to college, especially the Jewish kids. They should have a means to know what schools have active anti-Jewish protests, and/or pro-Palestinian demonstration allowed on and off campus. They should be able to feel safe wherever they go, and not have their studies interrupted by what I consider this unlawful activity. Are there websites with this kind of information posted?

  9. Joe says:

    Great article, thanks for keeping us informed!

  10. Stephen Brickman LTC USA (retired) says:

    NOTE TO SENIORS I was 85 when I got my Carry permit. If you want to protect yourself and your family you are never too old to carry. As log as you can pass the test at the range, which is pretty simple, and you have a handgun you can handle (which is why I purchased a Walther CCP M2 PLUS which is easy to rack) and you have no police record or mental health problems, you can qualify. Of course you need to get a Federal weapons ID card, if you don't already have one. We are targets because we are older and look easy. Well surprise , surprise. The more folks that are carrying the less crime because the bad guys wont know if you are armed and might not try something. By the way it doesn't matter- male or female!!

  11. Tom says:

    Stop complaining about taxes ,our schools , our crime, ,after all folks we keep voting in the same Democrat party politicians each time . For instance who would think that every Democrat who represents us in congress would vote for men playing in woman sports ,but they did , ask yourself are you the kind of a person who would kill ( sorry to use that word kill but hard not to since the law is that is a human being and if the mother is murdered it’s a double homicide ) a baby up to the moment of birth sorry to tell you that is the law in New Jersey. So stop complaining your part of the problem.

  12. Kyran Connor says:

    Can't seem to access the Steinberg column on Sam Alito, Sr. on your website. Suggestions?

  13. Stephen BrickmanRPh says:

    Changing the regulations to allow Optometrists to perform surgery is foolhardy and dangerous. Their training is doing vision tests and prescribing the correct glasses to improve vision. Only an MD in ophthalmology should be the one to do eye surgery. That’s like asking the fellow filling your gas tank to fix a ball joint suspension. This is not the answer to a shortage of ophthalmologists

  14. Stephen Brickman says:

    Reclassifying marihuana from CI to any other category will involve Pharmacy because by law only a Pharmacist with a DEA license can purchase or sell any drug with a CII to CV Classification. (CI is exempt because it’s heroine or any other drug with no medical purpose). This is a National problem because it is all under the DEA. And since marihuana is a hallucinogen among other things it requires control. The whole weed issue has put the cart before the horse and really requires reining in to have it conform to the legal requirements. (Sorry Mr. Weedman). And recreational use will get the biggest hit because it will require a prescription for medicinal use, but that cuts out the recreational aspect. Maybe in the future Pharmacists may be able to prescribe it but not yet. And how many physicians and Nurse Practitioners will want to be involved in the weed industry, I wonder? Lots of questions and few answers so far.

  15. Lisa Bonanno says:

    Could you please fix your “bay blood spots “ typo. It sounds like a horror movie. Although “baby blood spots” isn’t much better. Maybe there’s a clearer and less distressing turn of phrase for all of our sensitive readers, lol. Please and thank you.

  16. Stephen Brickman LTC USA (retired) says:

    Studies show that recreational cannabis is responsible a 10% increase in motor vehicle accident deaths. These studies show that cannabis impairs driving ability and driving while high is common among regular users. Since cannabis is still an illegal drug, insurance companies are within their rights to deny coverage in for an accident ruled a DUI due to cannabis. However a state that approved its recreational use should be held accountable for any and all the consequences of that DUI. States are more interested in the money they make but they should accept the responsibility for having approved the use of recreational cannabis.

  17. Stephen Brickman says:

    With the mainstream media touting the current president and suddenly discovers he’s been lying to us all about how supportive he is of Israel when it is reported he is receiving BIG donations from Soros and Rockefellers , both proven anti-American donors, to become pro Palestinian and Pro Hamas and Anti Israel by holding up ammunition shipments to Israel. And solidly answering the question of why he never goes directly against Iran. Is the MSM party to this also. How can the general public now know who and what to trust. They warn us how terrible a trump administration will be as if they have totally forgotten how good we had it under Trump. All I can say is put on your big boy pants and tell us how it really is.

  18. Gregg Mele says:

    The problem with the Line is that there is no vetting process. Whoever pays the most and/or is specifically unqualified and therefore relegated to the status of puppet is who the county bosses support and threaten the committee members to support. My opponent said on-air that he will do whatever they tell him. What kind of leadership is that. I have 8-10 organizations endorsing me to his zero. I have served many statewide for almost 4 years while he has never helped anyone but himself. No-brainer who is qualified, and they know it. That's why they are getting nasty and vile while I continue to take the high road.

  19. Stephen Brickman RPh says:

    Iowa gets it right. What better school security is there than trained, armed teachers with concealed carry permits. You wonder what parents and local government officials when they oppose this idea. Apparently they would rather wait for some demented individual, either a student or maybe an ex student pulls out a handgun of his backpack , or a long gun out of a duffel and starts firing do they can call it in and wait for help to show up. This move would save many lives and I would heartily endorse this idea nationwide. Of course I’m just an average gun owner who believes that our kids are our most valuable asset and need real protection.

  20. Steve Caruso says:

    The liability limits for taxi cabs are extreme starting July 1. It was a plan in place through the insurance banking committee and it was abruptly changed with an amendment. The guys are barely making a living today and you’ve increased their insurance. What’s fair is fair and this is not it was an incremental increase, which was fair, and was removed by the governor please refer back to the original plan

  21. Stephen Brickman RPh says:

    Note to Concealed Carry permit holders: make sure you subscribe to one of the insurance companies that specialize in CCP, ie: US LAW SHIELD. If you ever have to fire your weapon , that has to be the first phone call you make. The second is 911, the third is your family. With so many new permit holders there will probably be an increase in discharges until word gets out that it’s actually unsafe for criminals to be in New Jersey and crime will take a nosedive. Now unless you have a conviction in your background you can get that CCP and really defend yourself and your family. And more women are applying which is great for family defense. The stats that record gun violence will have to be re-organized into guns used for crime and guns used to prevent crime. A lot of get-always here because sometimes just brandishing a firearm is enough to stop a crime. But it should be reported anyway..

  22. Stephen Brickman LTC USA (retired) says:

    How's his for an idea? Uncover the identities of the un-elected advisors to Pres. Biden, and publish their names. That way there is actually someone to blame when we lose valuable lives from unanswered attacks by terrorist organizations. We know Biden isn't making these decisions on his own. My guess is that these advisors will quit the team rather than take the heat for poor decisions, revealing a big weakness in this administration. It might lead to improvements to the decision-making process.

  23. Stephen Brickman RPh says:

    The governor signed off on having Narcan available in all schools grades 9 through 12. But what about the idea of having Narcan available in ALL SCHOOLS in New Jersey?

  24. Stephen Brickman says:

    Voting should be based on understanding what’s actually happening and knowing who would make life safer and more livable. The only way to do that is to get both sides of the information remembering there are always two sides to a story. Mainstream media in my area includes the Star Ledger and the Easton Express. If you look at the bylines of the opinions you will find writers from the Washington Post and Bloomberg, both notoriously on the left. Even the political cartoons are a dead giveaway. CNN and CNBC are also left leaning. So what are the options for getting opinions and news from the right? Fortunately cable news has Fox, which is near center, and Newsmax, and NewsNation which are full right. Watching these even just occasionally will show a much broader picture and give the reader more information with which to make an informed voting decision. And remember you DONT have to vote party if you feel there’s a wiser choice.

  25. Stephen Brickman says:

    I’m a conservative and I do believe life begins at conception but the problem is that each mother is responsible for that life and it is in the realm of her mental and physical health that she will either bring it to term or abort it. This should not be a political decision and should not be be dictated by thousand of strangers. The Supreme Court turned it over to the states but it still remains personal for the mother and her family. I don’t think it should be an “agenda item” for any political party. A state medical society may want to impose a time frame within which an abortion can occur but even that may be subject to the mother’s doctor’s discretion. I say just quit discussing it and leave it up to the mother a father.

  26. Adam says:

    Teaneck property taxes pays for the school budget. Teaneck High School students walk out. Is a Hamas military shuffle march property tax bill included?

  27. Stephen Brickman LTC U.S.A. (Retired) says:

    The military serving in the Middle East represents every state in the Union. Those are our sons and daughters, Moms and Dads and yet we are very little to protect them, or REALLY retaliate when they’re attacked. Governor Murphy is the Chairman of the Democratic Governors Association, and past chair of the National Governors Association and yet you never hear him mention about any requests either organization makes to Biden to be more aggressive about protecting our kids in harms way. It’s as though it doesn’t seem to matter to them. No wonder we look so weak to the rest of the world.

  28. Stephen Brickman says:

    How about those unintended consequences. New Jersey mandating that all cars being sold by 2035 be electric is telling us what we can or cannot buy with our own money. There will always be gasoline powered vehicles because of the power produced by internal combustion compared to the power produced by batteries; which is to say the more power the bigger the battery to the point of rediculousness. My thought is that if the state wants fewer gas powered vehicles on the road it should create a mass transit electric powered system that would emphasize convenience for commuters and everyday shoppers. Of course that would mean vehicles weighing tons more because of the size of batteries and that creates a whole other question of where to dispose of them (also for elelectric car batteries), since they are composed of highly toxic materials that can’t be burnt or buried. These are unintended consequences no- one is willing to grapple with until its too late. I think by 2035 th he electric car fantasy will go the same way the offshore wind farm has gone. Stephen Brickman 206 Stonehenge Dr Phillipsburg,NJ 08865 Stephen.Brickman@gmail.com Sent from my iPhone

  29. Moe says:

    NJ is one of the most corrupt and racist places to live. There’s “0” accountability for the criminal acts, corruption, and unfair treatment of the people of this state. It starts with our governor who cares less for truth and honesty. Continue to ruin the lives of the citizens of this state.

  30. Stephen Brickman says:

    Gun owners don't have to talk about guns because they know that they have to come out and vote to protect their constitutional right to bear arms. The Supreme court decision has affirmed that right and somehow our "leaders" haven't learned how to read.

  31. beylikdüzü masaj salonu says:

    Your exquisitely curated blog epitomizes erudition, captivating readers with its intellectually stimulating content and profound philosophical insights.

  32. ilan says:

    Your blog is a haven of positivity in a sometimes chaotic online world.

  33. Stephen Brickman says:

    lETS NOT FORGET that during the pandemic Donald Trump sent the MERCY, a fully equipped, COVID prepared Hospital ship to save lives of victims and healthcare workers . But Murphy in his wisdom would rather send Patients back to nursing homes that were ill-equipped to treat these patients so they could die , rather than utilize a life-saving gift and be like NY governor Cuomo, another anti-Trump tool.

  34. Complete Medical Wellness says:

    Meet Dr. John Shiau, the leading neurosurgeon in NJ, at Complete Medical Wellness. Discover his expertise and how he can help you with your neurological conditions. Check out this article for more information. neurosurgeon NJ

  35. Complete Medical Wellness says:

    Neurosurgery is a complex and demanding medical specialty that requires an exceptional level of skill and experience. Dr. Shiau is undoubtedly one of the best neurosurgeons in New Jersey, and patients in Jersey City, Maplewood, Holmdel, Paramus, and Bergen County can rest assured that they are receiving the best possible care under his expertise. Neurosurgeon nj

  36. Tree Service says:

    Nice article! thanks for sharing the post!

  37. Moe says:

    Murphy doesn’t want to be the president, he wants to be a state trooper.

  38. NJMCDirect says:

    very informative thank you so much

  39. Complete Medical Wellness says:

    What a fantastic post! This blog is so full of useful information I can't wait to dig deep and start utilizing the resources you have given me. I have a similar article that will surely help. Increasing Use of Cosmetic Products & Their Side Effects

  40. JG B says:

    Murphy running for President is LAUGHABLE. Nased on what??

  41. Charlie Abisror says:

    lmao imagine supporting lockdowns after the largest mass death event in american history and calling that a feeling driven conclusion? maga chuds never fail to disappoint

  42. Mary Ann McKinney says:

    So....about those 56 machines in Bergen... <<>>

  43. John Fiorentino says:

    He;s "vacationing" at his villa in Italy, while Covid surges and the state is paralyzed by "remote work"............translation: NO WORK

  44. Zyra Alissa says:

    What I — and most of the women I know who are passionate about cosmetics —like about make up isn't that the right gloss can make your lips poutier or that false lashes can make your eyes more doe-like. Rather, it's how women can communicate messages and express ourselves through makeup. Certainly it's not our single factor of communication, but it's one of many forms of expression that allow us to showcase our individual styles.

  45. Amber Si says:

    OK

  46. yanre says:

    keeping up with the news

  47. Sha H says:

    That is what happens in practicality when they are "suspending their disbelief" (HR Clinton) in real numbers and going on predictive models to make decisions. And then after doing that, they vote with "feelings."

  48. Sha H says:

    Murphy celebrates "a full week of declining numbers" then says "status quo of lockdown will remain until new cases and fatalities decrease." So, which of Murphy's statements is accurate? He said 2 opposite things in a single paragraph of speaking.

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