2005 New Jersey gubernatorial election

The 2005 New Jersey gubernatorial election was a race to determine the Governor of New Jersey. It was held on November 8, 2005. Democratic Governor Richard Codey, who replaced Governor Jim McGreevey in 2004 after his resignation, did not run for election for a full term of office.

2005 New Jersey gubernatorial election

← 2001November 8, 20052009 →
 
NomineeJon CorzineDoug Forrester
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Popular vote1,224,551985,271
Percentage53.5%43.0%

Corzine:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Forrester:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      >90%
Tie:      50%

Governor before election

Richard Codey
Democratic

Elected Governor

Jon Corzine
Democratic

The primary election was held on June 7, 2005. U.S. Senator Jon Corzine won the Democratic nomination without serious opposition. Former West Windsor Mayor Doug Forrester received the Republican nomination with a plurality of 36%. Corzine defeated Forrester in the general election. New Jersey is reliably Democratic at the federal level, but this was the first time since 1977 in which Democrats won more than one consecutive gubernatorial election in the state. This was the first time since 1965 that a Democrat won a gubernatorial race without Ocean County, and the first since 1961 that they did so without Monmouth County.

The 2005 general election also saw a public referendum question on the ballot for the voters to decide whether to create a position of lieutenant governor, alter the state's order of succession, and whether the state's first lieutenant governor would be chosen in the subsequent gubernatorial election held in 2009.[1][2] The question passed by a tally of 836,134 votes (56.1%) to 655,333 (43.9%).[3] To date, this is the most recent election that Salem County voted for the Democratic candidate in a gubernatorial race.

Background edit

Governor Jim McGreevey was elected in 2001 by a large margin but resigned from office in November 2004 after Golan Cipel, an Israeli national and former advisor to the Governor, threatened to bring a lawsuit for sexual harassment, and thus reveal McGreevey was homosexual. Though McGreevey admitted to an "adult consensual affair with another man" on August 12, 2004, he announced that he would not resign from office until November 15, after the fall general election.[4][5][6][7]

McGreevey's decision to delay the effective date of his resignation until after September 3, 2004, avoided a November special election for governor, which would have coincided with the election for President of the United States. The 2004 election between George W. Bush and John Kerry was expected to be competitive, the political aftermath of the September 11 attacks in the state, and some observers speculated that McGreevey's decision to delay his resignation was designed to improve Kerry's political position and preserve Democratic Party control of the office of Governor.[8][9][10]

Republicans and Democrats alike called upon McGreevey to make his resignation effective immediately.[11][12] The New York Times editorial board opined, "Mr. McGreevey's strategy to delay resignation does not serve New Jersey residents well. The state will be led by an embattled governor mired in personal and legal problems for three months."[13] On September 15, U.S. District Judge Garrett E. Brown Jr. dismissed Afran v. McGreevey,[14] a lawsuit by Green Party members claiming that the postponement of McGreevey's resignation had left a vacancy, thereby violating New Jerseyans' voting rights.[15][16]

New Jersey Senate President Richard Codey took office upon McGreevey's resignation[17] and served the remainder of the term until January 17, 2006.[18] At the time of McGreevey's resignation, the New Jersey State Constitution stipulated that the Senate president retains that position while serving as acting governor.[19] In the wake of McGreevey's resignation, and in consideration of other past New Jersey governors who had left office before the end of their terms,[20][21] the New Jersey legislature passed a resolution establishing a public referendum on the creation of the position of Lieutenant Governor of New Jersey.[22]

Democratic primary edit

Candidates edit

Nominee edit

Eliminated in primary edit

Declined edit

Results edit

Democratic Primary results[25]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticJon S. Corzine 207,670 88.08
DemocraticJames D. Kelly, Jr.19,5128.28
DemocraticFrancis X. Tenaglio8,5963.65
Total votes235,778 100.00

Republican primary edit

Candidates edit

Nominee edit

Eliminated in Primary edit

Declined edit

Results edit

Republican Primary results[28]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanDoug Forrester 108,941 36.01
RepublicanBret Schundler94,41731.21
RepublicanJohn J. Murphy33,80011.17
RepublicanSteve Lonegan24,4338.08
RepublicanRobert Schroeder16,7635.54
RepublicanPaul DiGaetano16,6845.52
RepublicanTodd Caliguire7,4632.47
Total votes302,501 100.00

General election edit

Candidates edit

Debates edit

The New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission declared that the four candidates would be included in the official gubernatorial debates to be aired on NJN. They included Jeffrey Pawlowski and Hector Castillo.

Predictions edit

SourceRankingAs of
Sabato's Crystal Ball[29]Likely DOctober 25, 2005

Polling edit

SourceDateJon
Corzine (D)
Doug
Forrester (R)
OtherUndecided
RasmussenJune 8, 200547%40%5%8%
RutgersJune 12, 200543%33%
QuinnipiacJune 15, 200547%37%
RasmussenJuly 15, 200550%38%4%8%
Strategic VisionJuly 19, 200548%40%
Fairleigh Dickinson-PublicMindJuly 21, 200547%34%
RasmussenAugust 7, 200545%37%5%
QuinnipiacAugust 10, 200550%40%
Strategic VisionAugust 18, 200550%40%
Star-Ledger/Eagleton-RutgersSeptember 12, 200548%28%
Strategic VisionSeptember 16, 200547%36%
RasmussenSeptember 19, 200547%36%5%
Fairleigh-DickinsonSeptember 26, 200548%38%4%10%
Monmouth UniversitySeptember 28, 200546%38%
QuinnipiacSeptember 28, 200548%44%
Rasmussen Archived 2005-10-18 at the Wayback MachineOctober 6, 200545%38%5%
Star-Ledger/Eagleton-RutgersOctober 3–6, 200544%37%
MaristOctober 10, 200544%43%
Survey USAOctober 11, 200549%41%5%5%
Strategic VisionOctober 13, 200546%40%
QuinnipiacOctober 19, 200550%43%
Rasmussen Archived 2005-12-27 at the Wayback MachineOctober 20, 200549%40%3%
Survey USAOctober 25, 200550%41%7%3%
Strategic VisionNovember 2, 200548%42%
Fairleigh-DickinsonNovember 2, 200544%40%3%13%
QuinnipiacNovember 2, 200550%38%
Marist CollegeNovember 4, 200551%41%
Monmouth UniversityNovember 4, 200547%38%
RasmussenNovember 6, 200544%39%5%12%
QuinnipiacNovember 7, 200552%45%
Survey USANovember 7, 200550%44%5%2%

Results edit

New Jersey Gubernatorial Election, 2005[30]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticJon Corzine 1,224,551 53.47% 2.96
RepublicanDoug Forrester985,27143.02% 1.34
IndependentHector Castillo29,4521.29%N/A
LibertarianJeffrey Pawlowski15,4170.67% 0.46
GreenMatthew Thieke12,3150.54% 0.26
Legalize MarijuanaEdward Forchion9,1370.40%N/A
IndependentMichael Latigona5,1690.23%
IndependentWesley Bell4,1780.18%N/A
Socialist WorkersAngela Lariscy2,5310.11% 0.06
SocialistConstantino Rozzo2,0780.09% 0.02
Majority239,28010.45%-4.31%
Turnout2,290,099
Democratic holdSwing
Results by county[30]
CountyCorzine votesCorzine %Forrester votesForrester %Other votesOther %
Atlantic34,53953.3%28,00443.2%2,2383.5%
Bergen142,31955.6%108,01742.2%5,6832.2%
Burlington64,42150.5%57,90845.4%5,2034.1%
Camden76,95560.4%45,07935.4%5,4584.3%
Cape May14,37545.2%16,17950.9%1,2433.9%
Cumberland18,58057.2%12,69239.0%1,2313.8%
Essex131,31272.7%45,78925.4%3,4561.9%
Gloucester41,12853.2%33,22543.0%3,0043.9%
Hudson87,40975.4%25,76922.2%2,6912.3%
Hunterdon15,00433.6%27,52161.6%2,1794.9%
Mercer56,59257.1%38,87139.2%3,5963.6%
Middlesex107,17656.0%75,02139.2%9,0854.7%
Monmouth85,18743.8%101,08551.9%8,3764.3%
Morris60,98641.3%82,55056.0%3,9972.7%
Ocean71,95341.6%93,69354.2%7,2424.2%
Passaic61,80357.9%41,53238.9%3,4133.2%
Salem10,05748.6%9,60846.5%1,0084.9%
Somerset40,45943.3%49,40652.8%3,6613.9%
Sussex14,85435.1%25,28359.7%2,1825.2%
Union77,98259.2%50,03638.0%3,6772.8%
Warren11,46036.8%18,00357.9%1,6545.3%

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican edit

See also edit

References edit

External links edit

Candidates