Here is a column that I wrote for The Jewish Link of Bergen County in June 2013:
WHEN ELECTION DAY BECOMES GROUNDHOG DAY
By:
N. Aaron Troodler, Esq.
You may remember the
1993 movie Groundhog Day, in which
Bill Murray’s character, meteorologist Phil Connors, relives the same day over
and over. The way things are shaping up politically, voters in New Jersey will
soon be experiencing their own version of Groundhog Day.
After the passing of
Senator Frank Lautenberg, the rumor mill immediately began churning as the
political establishment in New Jersey and inside the Washington Beltway speculated
what would happen next. With Republican Governor Chris Christie essentially
holding all the cards, whether it be through his power to appoint an interim
successor or to determine the timing of an election to replace the long-time
Democratic senator, the political pundits had a field day contemplating all the
possible scenarios.
Complicating the situation
was the fact that Governor Christie, who has made no secret about his
presidential aspirations, is up for re-election this November. A huge win over his
Democratic challenger, State Senator Barbara Buono, in an overwhelmingly “blue
state” would theoretically propel him to the front of the pack of Republican
presidential hopefuls for 2016.
Christie had several
options. Pursuant to New Jersey law, he could order that the Senate seat be
filled this November on Election Day. There was also talk that Christie might
delay the election until November 2014. According to the statute, the governor is
permitted to make a temporary appointment to the Senate seat until such time as
an election has taken place. The law gives the governor great latitude in
determining the time frame for setting an election date, stating that the
governor has the power to call a special election if he “shall deem it
advisable.”
Well, Governor
Christie apparently “deemed it advisable” to call a special election for
October 16, 2013, just three weeks before Election Day, which will be preceded
by a primary election on August 13. While discussing the rationale for his
decision, Christie explained that, “I want to have an elected senator as soon
as possible.”
The decision was
fraught with political pitfalls for Governor Christie.
Newark Mayor Cory
Booker, who has achieved celebrity status in New Jersey and across the nation, declared
his interest in the Senate seat last December, before Senator Lautenberg
announced in February that he would not seek reelection.
With all of the hype
that would inevitably surround a special election and the prospect of being on
the ballot together with a well-known commodity like Cory Booker, setting the
election to fill Lautenberg’s seat on Election Day in November would virtually ensure
that New Jersey Democrats would come to the polls in droves, thereby affecting
Christie’s desired electoral outcome by perhaps cutting into his large expected
margin of victory.
Had Christie delayed
the election until November 2014, he could have given a gift to the national
Republican Party, whose support he covets for a possible presidential run, by
naming a Republican to the Senate for a year and a half, as opposed to a much
shorter period of time. The prospect of having a Republican senator fill what
has historically been a Democratically-held senate seat undoubtedly left the
GOP giddy.
Instead, Christie ostensibly
sought to protect his own political interests. When he named his long-time
friend and confidant New Jersey Attorney General Jeffrey Chiesa to fill
Lautenberg’s seat on interim basis until the election this fall, he gave the
Senate Republicans an extra vote, albeit temporarily.
And he all but
assured himself a big win on Election Day, with no other heavily contested
statewide contest on the ballot which might have attracted more Democratic
voters to the polls.
Governor Christie did
take some heat in the press for the hefty price tag that is associated with his
decision. By calling a special election, the state will incur costs of
approximately $24 million. When asked by the media about this new and perhaps
unnecessary expenditure of taxpayer funds, the governor, in typical
“Christie-esque” style, replied, “I don’t know what the cost is, and I quite
frankly don’t care.”
The bottom line is,
New Jersey voters will be going to the polls during the dog days of summer.
With the primary less
than two months away, it appears that it will be a four-way race on the
Democratic side. Cory Booker will square off with Representatives Frank Pallone
and Rush Holt, and Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver.
With an abbreviated
election cycle and an accelerated timetable, the candidates are under intense
pressure to demonstrate their fund raising prowess and to line up key supporters
rather quickly.
The question is, will
New Jersey voters show up to the polls?
With the regularly
scheduled primary election that took place earlier this month, the Senate
primary in August, the special Senate election in October, and Election Day in November,
New Jersey voters will have gone to the polls four times in just six months.
It will certainly
feel like Groundhog Day, with voters being told they need to go to the polls
and vote again and again.
Rather than feeling
resentment at the overabundance of elections, our community should embrace the
opportunity to make our voices heard at the polls at every available
opportunity.
With so much at
stake, we cannot afford voter fatigue. We may be inclined to tune out politics
while we are enjoying our summer vacation, but to ignore a gubernatorial race or
a Senate race would
send a dangerous message to our elected officials that our community simply does
not care.
So, in the
midst of summer camp and trips to the beach, get ready for a flurry of political
activity. And when the calls come to go to the polls on multiple occasions and
vote, let’s be sure that we answer the calls accordingly and do our civic duty
each and every time.
N. Aaron Troodler is an attorney and a principal
of Paul Revere Public Relations, a public relations and political consulting
firm. Visit him on the Web at www.PaulReverePR.com
or at www.JewishWorldPR.com or
follow him on Twitter: @troodler
No comments:
Post a Comment