Monday, May 31, 2010

Little To Appear With Reuben Torres

By Rueben Torres

Congressional Candidate Anna Little will be my guest on the show this Thursday from 9:00 pm to 10:00pm. Anna will discuss her candidacy for the United States Congress and her challenge to unseat Frank Pallone.

Anna is currently serves as Mayor of the Borough of Highlands, New Jersey. As Mayor, Anna has proven her ability to manage a fiscally responsible municipality by reducing the budget, and implementing an economic growth vision for her hometown. From 2006-2008, Anna served as a Monmouth County Freeholder, bringing her vision of responsible government to the county by establishing the Continuous Budget Review Committee, and by hosting an Economic Development Summit. She is committed to improving her community as a trustee for the Frielinghaus Memorial Scholarship Fund, and as a member of the Historical Society of the Highlands. Anna also enjoys singing with the Choir at her local church.

“Lets Get Real With Reuben Torres " is an open forum where topics on politics, immigration, health, education, and other global issues, that affect our country and the world at large, are discussed and debated at local, national, and global levels. "Lets Get Real With Reuben Torres " airs every Thursday evening from 9:00 pm to 10:00 pm unless otherwise noted.

To listen to the program, go to: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/patriotsheartnetwork
All are welcome to participate by calling (347)-215-6929

Visit annalittleforcongress.com for more information
Reuben Torres
Radio/Television Host
Public Relations Director for W.A.M (WAKE UP AMERICAN MOVEMENT)
http://wakeupamericamovement.ning.com/

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/patriotsheartnetwork/2010/05/21/reuben-torres


www.blogtalkradio.com/LETSGETREALWITHREUBENTORRES

Little On Illegal Immigration


Over the last several days, questions have arisen regarding my position on illegal immigration as it relates to my profession as an immigration attorney. Unlike our current representation in Washington, I understand that I work for the voters of the 6th District and that their concerns deserve honest, forthright answers.

I was admitted to the bar in 1992. I opened my own practice in 1994. I did this because I wanted to choose the cases for which I was responsible and the people that I represent. My undergraduate degree from Seton Hall University was in Modern Languages. I am fluent in Spanish and French as well as English. I also have working knowledge of Japanese and Russian.

The United States is a nation of immigrants. Even the American Indians did not originate in the territory that we now call the United States.

An attorney must practice under the law that has been enacted by the Congress. After gaining experience in government as an elected official, I have decided to transition from following the laws others have made to creating the laws that they should have made.

I have 20 + years experience in navigating the progressive laws that enable illegal immigration. I have encouraged illegal immigrants to legalize or to go home and return with a proper immigration status. In many cases, illegal immigrants come to my office before ICE knows where they are. I choose to help illegal immigrants legalize or repatriate because that is the best policy for the United States. I have always promoted a strategy that avoids the unnecessary expenditure of taxpayer dollars on detention and taxpayer funded deportation. Unless enforcement is encouraged and effected cooperatively between federal and state levels of government, true immigration reform will never be accomplished.

This is one major reason that I have chosen to run for Congress. With my strong background in Immigration Law I will promote and fund the full and unequivocal enforcement of present Immigration Law. I will suggest federal regulations requiring reporting by temporary visitors and workers before their visas expire and denial of future visas if non-immigrants fail to report. I will propose legislation that makes citizenship derivative from a parent's legal immigration status. Children of illegal immigrants should not derive citizenship simply by virtue of having been born here. Children born in the United States of lawful permanent residents or citizens shall derive citizenship under my proposal. I will support funding of the wall along our Southern Border because I am keenly aware of the need to narrow entry opportunities between the US and our foreign neighbors to the south.

E-verify is an effective mechanism by which employers can confirm work authorization of job applicants. I support the extension of this program indefinitely. I further recommend that a similar system be made available to verify the validity of temporary visas and their expiration dates. Such a system would be essential to effective enforcement of the immigration law by state officials.

State legislation like that promulgated in Arizona is necessary to permit the use of state resources to house illegal immigrants when federal facilities are full. Section 287g is proof that the federal government requests help from the states and the people in Immigration Enforcement. Arizona should be commended for stepping up to the plate in the spirit of Independence and Self Government on which this nation was founded. All states should heed the call of the Federal Government for cooperative enforcement of Federal Immigration Law.

Mayor Anna Little-Candidate for Congress-(R) NJ6

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Get Out And Enjoy The Weather!

Yesterday MoreMonmouthMusings had the most visitors it ever has had on a Saturday, and today is on track to be the biggest Sunday ever.

Hey, it's a holiday weekend. Go out and enjoy yourself with friends and family.

The next blockbuster is not coming until Tuesday morning.

No Fair!

Multiple sources are sending in word that CD-6 GOP candidate Diane Gooch was "asked to leave" the St. Catherine's Fair in Middletown last evening.

How does that happen?

Maybe she was working on the next edition of "Comment, No Comment."



In case your not familiar with Comment, No Comment, we refer you to our friends at RedBankGreen:

A little background is in order here.

In addition to the weekly newspaper she and her husband bought from Geraldo Rivera in 2004, Gooch also publishes a magazine called “TRT: The Book.” (A “book” is what people who work in the magazine industry call magazines, but never mind.) The Book, which caters to the carriage trade, has been on hiatus for a year because of the recession’s impact on advertising, Gooch says.

Before it went dark, each issue of The Book included in its high-gloss pages a two-page photo feature, with pictures credited to Gooch herself, called “Comment/No Comment.”

On the Comment page were photos of unidentified shoppers, beachgoers and the like, displaying fashion sense that Gooch apparently approved of, though there was no accompanying text: just photos of women, usually, in fitted skirts, adorable prints or stylish hats.

On the No Comment page were unmistakably unflattering pictures of women in too-tight pants, undersized bathing suits, or with their plumber’s smiles showing.

What the pictures had in common was that they appeared to have been taken from a distance without the subjects’ knowledge. Overwhelmingly, they also focused on tuchases.

We’re talking a double truck of dainty derrieres, bulging backsides and flappity mud flaps.

Prior to Gooch’s formal announcement last night, redbankgreen finagled a short sit-down with her. With one of her handlers impatiently urging us to stick to questions about her campaign, we asked Gooch whether she regretted taking and publishing the photos.

“I don’t think I did anything that was hurtful,” she said. “It was supposed to be light and fun.”

She said she had appeared in the No Comment page herself, face-down after a bumpy ride in a fighter jet, and once published a shot of her own sister’s butt, though she didn’t say which page that one ran on.

“Sometimes you just have to give people a break and have some fun,” Gooch said.

We couldn’t agree more.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Knowing What Pallone Knows

Adam Herbsman, Frank Pallone's opposition researcher

Frank Pallone's opposition researcher is Adam Herbsman of New York City. Adam was the Deputy Research Director of the Corzine '09 campaign. He's probably the guy who came up with the "dirt" on Chris Christie last year, i.e., the loan to Michelle Brown, the traffic stop in Lawrenceville and the accident in Elizabeth. All pretty obscure stuff. Herbsman must have good research skills. As a graduate of Columbia and Tufts, he's probably a smart guy.

On April 25, Herbsman submitted an OPRA request to the Rumson Police Department (in the 12th congressional district) for "any reports filed for police calls" to the residence of Diane and Mickey Gooch. In case this is your first time reading this blog, Diane Gooch is a candidate for the Republican nomination for Congress in the 6th congressional district. The seat is presently occupied by Frank Pallone.

Much to triCityNews publisher Dan Jacobson's chagrin, I am happy to report that there are no police reports concerning domestic violence because of Diane throwing a gold ingot at Mickey, as Jacobson speculated in his newspaper. Nor are there any calls initiated by the Gooch's neighbor General Pete Dawkins, as Jacobson also speculated. I'd link you to the triCityNews article, but Dan doesn't publish on the Internet.

However, there are two reports that will keep Herbsman busy for a while, should Diane win the primary on June 8.

On October 4, 2006, Mickey Gooch called the police to report a suspicious vehicle in front of his residence. It was a 1988 Subaru DL AWD Station Wagon. As is did not have historical license plates, it had Montana license plates, an 18 year old Subaru is somewhat out of place in Rumson. According to the report, Mr. Gooch later contacted police headquarters and advised that the vehicle was owned by a friend of his nanny.

Now I'm not a smart professional researcher like Adam Herbsman, but over the years of selling and leasing trucks I've learned that Montana has been an easy state to get a drivers license in, if for some odd reason you don't have the proper paper work to get a drivers license in New Jersey.

I'm not a trained professional researcher like Herbsman, but it only took me a few minutes to discover that this 1988 Subaru DL AWD station wagon was sold in Livingston Montana, with over 127,798 miles on it in August 21, 2003. Some two weeks later, September 5, 2003, the car was serviced at World Jeep Subaru in Tinton Falls, New Jersey. Six months after that in March of 2004, the vehicle was sold in Montana again, according to the Montana Motor Vehicle Department. Six months later, September of 04, it was serviced at World Jeep Subaru again, as it was about every five-eight months through September of 2006.

World Jeep Subaru's service department must have an outstanding reputation in Montana!

On October 11, 2006, seven days after Mickey reported the car as belonging to a friend of his nanny, the car was reported to have been in a front end collision in Monmouth County. It was towed and there are no further reports on the car.

None of this could mean anything about Diane and Mickey Gooch. However, Mr. Herbsman might be inclined to do some further research, especially given one of the other reports the Rumson (12th congressional district) Police Department disclosed.

On November 5, 2005 the Gooch's security company reported an alarm coming from the family room. The sergeant who was dispatched located a housekeeper named Ima waiting near the front door. The Gooch's care taker, who is known to the police, said Ima was OK to be there.

Again, none of this could mean anything. It probably doesn't mean anything. If it did, the Two River Times, the small business that Diane Gooch owns, would have written about it. TRT reporter John Burton OPRA'd the same police reports that I received. He got his three weeks ago, the week the TRT reported that Pallone's operative made the request. I got mine today.

But I bet Adam Herbsman will be digging deeper anyway, should Diane Gooch win the primary on June 8.

Gooch's opponent in the primary is Highlands Mayor Anna Little, a former Monmouth County Freeholder and an immigration attorney.

The 6th district covers portions of Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset and Union counties.


Click here to listen to Anna Little's radio ad.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Sipprelle On The Radio, 5PM Today!

Dear Friends & Supporters:

Scott was invited by the Independence Hall Tea Party PAC to join them on Internet Radio today. Click this link to LISTEN LIVE right from your computer starting at 5:00pm until 6:15pm.

Show your support for Scott by taking a few minutes to call-in and talk with him about his "Blueprint for Renewal" by dialing 1-940-825-1041 or 1-940-825-1042 sometime between 5:00 - 6:15pm.

If you can't make it to the phone, you can email your question to repatriotradio@comcast.net and maybe it will be asked on the air.

Thanks for your continued passion and purpose.

Sincerely,

Team Sipprelle

Little Government Is Good Government

Steve Lonegan endorses Mayor Anna Little for the GOP nomination in CD-6:

I am happy to announce my enthusiastic support for Highlands Mayor, Anna Little, as the Republican "Tea-Party Approved" Nominee in New Jersey’s 6th Congressional District. Earlier this year, Anna overwhelmingly won the straw poll at the Americans for Prosperity and the Political Club for Growth Candidate’s Forum. Mayor Anna Little knows how to lead and govern with an eye toward fiscal responsibility. As Mayor, she has reduced the Highlands budget by 5% and implemented an economic growth vision for her hometown.

From 2006-2008, Anna Little served as a Monmouth County Freeholder and brought her vision of responsible government to the county by establishing the Continuous Budget Review Committee and hosting an Economic Development Summit. Anna is a gifted communicator who will go to Congress as a stateswoman, not a politician, and who will work for the right kind of change in government.

Mayor Little’s common sense approach to government has earned her endorsements from the Conservative Party of New Jersey and several local and regional Tea Party groups including: Independence Hall Tea Party PAC, Middlesex County Tea Party, Bay Shore Tea Party, Jersey Shore Tea Party Patriots and NJ Tea Party. Anna shares my commitment to common sense solutions for strong national defense, real border security, less government control, domestic energy solutions, lower tax rates and greater individual liberty. That is why I am proud to endorse Mayor Anna Little for Congress in NJ’s 6th district.



I encourage all Republicans from New Jersey’s 6th District to vote for Mayor Anna Little in the primary on June 8th as she is the only Republican qualified to represent the 6th District. Aside from her experience, intelligence and independence, she is also the only Republican candidate who actually lives in the 6th district. It is time to retire Frank Pallone; a healthy dose of New Jersey conservatism and common sense in the form of Mayor Little is just the right medicine. Our Country, (and Congress), will benefit greatly from the spirit, passion and unabashed conservatism that Anna brings to the political arena.

Please join me on June 1st in supporting Mayor Anna Little at the Shore Casino in the Atlantic Highlands from 6:30 to 9:00. Purchase tickets by emailing the campaign at anna@annalittleforcongress.com ($60 in advance and $70 at the door) If you are not able to attend on June 1st, I encourage you to visit her website at www.AnnaLittleforCongress.com and donate.

It’s in the name: Little Government is Good Government.
On to Victory,

Steve Lonegan

Costigan Will Challenge Oxley For Monmouth GOP Chair

John Costigan. Photo credit: Rhoda Chodosh
Howell Township GOP Municipal Chairman says he will seek the chairmanship of the Monmouth County Republican Organization at the party's statutory reorganization on June 15, 2010. He will be challenging incumbent Chairman Joe Oxley who has said he will seek a second two year term.

Costigan, who has in recent months publicly declared his support for a second Oxley term told MoreMonmouthMusings that his primary motivation for seeking the chairmanship is his concern for who would succeed Oxley in the event that he is appointed Monmouth County Prosecutor by Governor Chris Christie.

Current Monmouth County Prosecutor Luis Valentin's term expires at the end of July. It is widely believed that Christie will replace Valentin, a Corzine appointee, despite that fact that Valentin worked for Christie in the U.S. Attorney's office.

The Monmouth County GOP has yet to adopt by-laws, as required by legislation signed by Governor Corzine in October of last year. At a meeting of municipal chairs last month, Oxley said that the by-laws would be ready for adoption in July. The chairs recommended that succession of the county chair be handled via a new election by the county committee within 45 or 60 days of a vacancy, with the Vice Chair presiding over the party during that interim period. Costigan was present at that meeting.

Oxley said, "I am seeking a full two year term as chairman. We've accomplished a great deal in the last two years. Our organization is in much better shape than it was before my election. We produced historic results last year with an over 65% plurality for Governor Christie and in gaining control of eight municipalities."

Oxley has refused to comment on the prosecutors job, saying "that is a gubernatorial appointment and I will not presume to speculate about who the Governor will appoint." He said that the matter of succession will be determined by the municipal chairs upon the adoption of the by-laws.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

NJ Right To Life Endorses Little in CD-6

Marco Rubio and Anna Little

The New Jersey Right to Life PAC has endorsed Highlands Mayor Anna Little for the GOP nomination in CD-6.

"We're thrilled to have a candidate like Anna Little that we can support," said Marie Tasy, Executive Director, "Anna is the right candidate at the right time."

Appropriately, Little got the news from Tasy this afternoon while she was visiting a toddler whose mother she had convinced against having an abortion and who the Little family supported for the first few months of the child's life.

"I am thrilled, honored and proud to have the NJ Right to Life endorsement," Little said, "Marie's phone call was the most satisfying moment of this campaign so far. There is a lot going right for us."

In addition to Little, the NJ Right to Life PAC has endorsed incumbent Congressmen Chris Smith (CD-4), Scott Garret (CD-5) and challenger David Corsi (CD-12).

Burlington, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Ocean County Mayors Endorse Cap 2.5, Gov. Christie's Reform Agenda

Trenton, NJ - Today, the Governor's Office announced the support of 57 mayors from Burlington, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth and Ocean counties for Governor Chris Christie's Cap 2.5 constitutional amendment and Reform Agenda to bring real property tax relief to New Jersey families. Mayors are on the frontline of the property tax crisis, forced to deal with ballooning expenses, unfunded mandates, and cost-drivers which in many cases they have little control over.

"Governor Christie's Cap 2.5 Reform Agenda provides the necessary steps required to rebuild our state," said Jackson Mayor Michael Reina. "I admire Christie's bold move to cap property taxes, showing that New Jersey is working for its people, and not the other way around. I support the Christie Reform Agenda and ask that Mayors around the State make the same decision. It is time to give our tax-payers a well deserved break."

Legislative committee approval for the Cap 2.5 constitutional amendment is needed before the first week of July in order to meet the deadline for the bill to be moved to the floor and approved for placement on the ballot and consideration by the voters in November. Governor Christie is urging the Assembly and Senate leadership and legislators of both parties to work with him in putting this critical government reform before the voters for approval this November.

Today's announcement follows the release of 81 mayors from Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Morris, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex, Union and Warren counties for the Governor's Reform Agenda, bringing the running total of mayors from around the state supporting the Governor's reform for real property tax relief to 138, and growing.

On May 10th, the Governor outlined a sweeping 33-bill reform package to solve New Jersey's property tax crisis and control spending at every level of government. The centerpiece of the plan is Cap 2.5, a constitutional amendment creating a 2.5 percent cap on property tax increases.

Property taxes have grown an astonishing 70% over the last ten years, resulting in an average annual property tax bill of $7,281 on New Jersey families - the highest rate in the nation. Cap 2.5 will halt the astonishing growth in property taxes while the Christie Reform Agenda will give towns and school boards the tools needed to control spending to make Cap 2.5 both realistic and achievable.

Mayors From Burlington, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth & Ocean Counties That Have Endorsed Cap 2.5 & Governor Christie's Reform Agenda:

Burlington County
Mayor Jim Lynch, Bordentown City
Mayor Kate Fitzpatrick, Delanco
Mayor Randy Brown, Evesham
Mayor Arthur Puglia, Mansfield
Mayor Robert Martin, Medford
Mayor Paul Weiss, Medford Lakes
Mayor Daniel Roccato, Moorestown
Mayor Dennis Roohr, New Hanover
Mayor Robert Martin, Riverton
Mayor James Young, Southampton

Hunterdon County
Mayor Mark Peck, Bloomsbury
Mayor Kevin Cimei, Clinton Township
Mayor Stanley Kovach, Glen Gardner
Mayor Edward Burdzy, Holland

Mercer County
Mayor Jack Ball, Ewing
Mayor Robert Patten, Hightstown Borough
Mayor Dave Fried, Robbinsville

Middlesex County
Mayor Wilda Diaz, Perth Amboy
Mayor Ray Eppinger, South River

Monmouth County
Mayor Frederick Rast, Atlantic Highlands
Mayor Kenneth Florek, Colts Neck
Mayor John Morgan, Farmingdale
Mayor Mike Halfacre, Fair Haven
Mayor Dorothy Avallone, Freehold Township
Mayor Anna Little, Highlands
Mayor Serena DiMaso, Esq., Holmdel
Mayor Bob Walsh, Howell Township
Mayor Andrew Lucas, Manalapan Township
Mayor Gerry Scharfenberger, Middletown Township
Mayor Thomas Arnone, Neptune City
Mayor Michael Mahon, Oceanport Boro
Mayor John Ekdahl, Rumson
Mayor Maria Fernandes, Sea Bright
Mayor Mark Clemmensen, Sea Girt
Mayor Terel Cooperhouse, Shrewsbury
Mayor Paul Smith, Union Beach
Mayor Stanley Moslowski, Upper Freehold

Ocean County
Mayor Jeffrey Melchiondo, Barnegat
Mayor Kirk Larson, Barnegat Light Borough
Mayor William Curtis, Bay Head
Mayor Michael Battista, Beach Haven Borough
Mayor Ronald Jones, Beachwood Borough
Mayor Stephen Acropolis, Brick
Mayor Michael Reina, Jackson
Mayor Gary Quinn, Lacey
Mayor Steven Langert, Lakewood
Mayor Walter LaCicero, Lavallette
Mayor Joseph Mancini, Long Beach Township
Mayor Mike Fressola, Manchester
Mayor George Nebel, Mantoloking
Mayor Joe Lachawiec, Ocean Township
Mayor Paul Kennedy, Ocean Gate
Mayor Martin Konkus, Point Pleasant
Mayor William Huelsenbeck, Ship Bottom
Mayor Leonard Connors, Surf City
Mayor Thomas Kelaher, Toms River
Mayor Lewis "Lee" Eggert, Tuckerton Borough

Governing As A One Termer?

Since he announced his intention to seek the Governor's office in February of 2009, Chris Christie has said he would govern as a one termer.

It has always bothered me to hear him say that. As I told him at the conclusion of our first interview during primary season last year, that's how Corzine governed. He laughed and promised it would be very different. Thankfully it has.

Yesterday the governor gave us his first public indication that he is looking past his first term. While celebrating the 2014 Super Bowl coming to New Jersey, Christie said,

"We are going to make sure we are ready for the Super Bowl no matter what happens that day," Christie said.

"The Department of Transportation and every resource that we have at New Jersey's disposal will be there to make sure everything runs smoothly."


according to the NY Post.

Christie's first term ends two weeks before the 2014 Super Bowl.

HAZLET JOINS LONG LIST OF BAYSHORE AREA TOWNS ENDORSING GOOCH

“Diane's positions, energy and grassroots support are exactly what we need to defeat Frank Pallone”

Red Bank, NJ: Diane Gooch is continuing to spread a message of smaller government and lower taxes that is resonating throughout the 6th district. Gooch has already received support from Keansburg, Keyport, Matawan and Aberdeen, and now the Monmouth County Republican Vice Chair and small business owner has picked up endorsements from the Mayor and Republican members of council in Hazlet.

Mayor Scott Aagre, Deputy Mayor David Tinker and Committeeman James Brady announced today their support for Gooch. “Diane's positions, energy and grassroots support are exactly what we need to defeat Frank Pallone in November. She is dedicated to cutting the bloated federal government and lessening the burden on the tax payers; we look forward to supporting Diane now and in November.”

The 6th district covers portions of Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset and Union counties.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Gooch Supporters Unwittingly Promote Little's Website

Marco Rubio and Anna Little, yesterday in Colts Neck
Apparently panicking about the buzz and excitement generating from the Anna Little for Congress campaign, some Gooch supporters are attempting to taint Little as soft on illegal immigration by posting Little's immigration law practice website, annaclittleesq.com on their facebook pages and in email blasts.

As if there is something wrong with immigration attorneys. I mean, didn't Diane Gooch's husband once need one? My grandparents did.

Ever quick on their feet, Anna's militia sprung into action and redirected the url of her law practice to her campaign website. Little's webmaster tells me there has been 50,000 visitors referred to the campaign site from annaclittleesq.com since the switch and $25,000 in donations as a result, just today. I'm kidding. Am I? You'll be checking on June 15. Either way, thanks Joe!

Now the Gooch supporters are spinning their gaffe as "Anna Little took down her law firm's website today. What is she hiding?" 50,000 visitors, perhaps? $25,000? I'll never tell.

For anyone wondering where Little stands on immigration, read this post and/or view this video.

Thanks again Joe! Can we have our signs back now?

GOOCH TAKES MESSAGE OF JOB CREATION AND LOWER TAXES TO LOCAL RADIO STATIONS

“A Strong America Means A Secure America”

Red Bank, NJ: Diane Gooch has successfully televised her message of smaller government and lower taxes to cable news networks throughout the district. Now the Monmouth County Republican Vice Chair and business owner is taking to the airwaves as she broadcasts her message on the Breeze and other local radio stations.

In the ad, Gooch opines that “I am a small business owner who believes that the future of the American Dream is at risk. I believe that growth and prosperity come from the private sector, not from government programs and out-of-control spending. And I believe that a strong America means a secure America.”

When it comes to job creation, Gooch understands what it takes. The company that she helped to start now employs 1700 people. By focusing on less spending, lower taxes and private sector jobs, Gooch identifies herself as the one candidate in the 6th District who can retire Frank Pallone.

The 6th Congressional district includes parts of Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset and Union counties.

NJ Tea Party Endorsement

Mayor Anna Little endorsed by NJTeaParty
for NJ-6 Congressional GOP primary


NJTeaParty has voted unanimously to support Mayor Anna Little of Highlands Borough, NJ for the Republican nomination in New Jersey's 6th Congressional district spanning Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset and Union Counties.

The decision was announced following a vetting procedure established by the organization including research, written commitments by the candidate on 21 policy positions, an intensive two-hour hearing, and final review by the membership ending in a vote.

"Anna Little is the only true Conservative seeking office in the 6th Congressional district," said Jeff Weingarten, President of the group, citing her belief in jobs creation in the private sector, fiscal responsibility, free markets, secure borders, domestic energy production, Second Amendment individual rights and other principles upheld by the Tea Party movement.

"We believe she is the best candidate to defeat Congressman Frank Pallone in November, 2010," he said.

NJTeaParty is an association of the leaders of individual Tea Party organizations and other conservative organizations for the purpose of maximizing their collective influence.

For information go to NJTeaParty.com

Mayor Anna Little of Highlands Borough, NJ

The Christie Reform Agenda: Cap 2.5

Remarks as Prepared for Delivery at The Manhattan Institute For Policy Research

Fiscal Crisis: The Current Budget As An Example

As you all know, we have a fiscal crisis in New Jersey: a $10.9 billion deficit on a $29.3 billion budget.

At 37 percent, it's the worst budget deficit percentage in America—worse than California, worse than New York, worse than Illinois—and we need to take bold steps to deal with it.

On March 16, we put forward a budget with $10.9 billion in reductions against proposed spending of the Corzine administration.

This was not easy to do, so I want to start off by saying that while I stand firmly behind the cuts we proposed, please don't take my firm stance in favoring those cuts as meaning that I don't know how painful they are.

Everybody would love to be governor in a time when you can just give things away and make everybody your friend and make everybody happy.

That's not the time that I'm getting to be governor.

I feel an obligation to stand up and do what the people elected me to do, which is to get our government under control, and to start to reduce the amount of money that people have to pay to the government in taxes.

But if all we do is cut, and we don't get at the underlying problem, we're just going to be back in this spot year, after year, after year.


New Jersey Is On An Unsustainable Fiscal Course

Over the last ten years, municipal spending has grown by 69 percent, and property taxes have grown by 70 percent, until New Jersey property taxes are now the highest of any state in the nation.

This is an unsustainable course.

For nearly 30 years, the citizens of New Jersey have placed in the hands of politicians—mostly politicians from Trenton—the responsibility for fixing property taxes. And in every gubernatorial election since 1973, we've had folks dancing around this property tax problem, putting band-aids on it, but not doing a thing to address the structural issues that allow politicians to hike property taxes year, after year, after year.

We can't increase municipal aid, increase aid to school districts, and increase property taxes without end. At some point, the people's ability to pay runs out.

And now we're there.

With property taxes up 70 percent in ten years, people in New Jersey are now voting with their feet, and they're leaving.

Senior citizens are leaving the homes that they raised their families in, heartbroken because they can't pay the property taxes anymore.

Young couples can't buy their first homes, not because of home prices, but because of the property taxes.

And middle class families are suffering from 9.8 percent unemployment in New Jersey, the highest in the region—higher than Pennsylvania, higher than Connecticut, higher than New York. Many of them are finding that after they've lost their jobs, they're going to lose their homes as well, because their property taxes got raised beyond their ability to pay.

In every poll you'll ever see, New Jerseyans say our biggest problem is property taxes.

So how do we fix it?


The Centerpiece of the Solution: Cap 2.5

First and foremost, we have to impose discipline on every level of the political system. I propose that we start with Cap 2.5, a constitutional amendment to cap property tax increases at no more than 2.5 percent per year.

For 30 years, politicians in Trenton have been passing the buck, and property taxes have gone up and up and up. The people of New Jersey have had enough.

I believe in less government, lower taxes, and empowering local officials who act on behalf of the people who elected them. I came here to do what the people sent me to do.

That may lead to a disagreement or two. Just recently, I had a friendly little exchange with a reporter you might have seen....

But anyone who comes to this discussion talking about "you can't cut this" and "you can't cut that" who doesn't have some way to pay for it besides jacking up property taxes is just joining that pathetic, 30-year tradition of passing along the problem for the next guy to deal with.

When we enact a constitutional amendment to limit property tax increases to no more than 2.5 percent across the board annually, we will have put in place the foundation for getting our fiscal house in order for the first time in a generation.

With that in place, then and only then can we begin to look at doing—in a sustainable way—what New Jerseyans want for urban revitalization, education, and every other big-picture issue.

But first we have to fix the foundation.


Cap the Spending Side, Too

Fundamental fairness dictates that the other part of the constitutional amendment has to be that discretionary state spending—state spending outside debt service or aid to municipalities or school districts—has to be capped at 2.5 percent as well.

We can't ask mayors to make sacrifices while the state goes on its merry way, spending like always.

We need to stop the explosive growth of government. If the projected spending of the Corzine Administration had been permitted to stay in place for Fiscal Year 2011, over the last 20 years state spending in New Jersey would have risen by 322%. That is 16% per year, every year, for 20 years. No economic model can sustain that level of public sector growth. On the local level this growth has also continued unabated.

Even as we speak, it continues in New Jersey at the local level, despite the economic downturn. Consider this fact. In 2009 we lost 121,000 private sector jobs in New Jersey, while the municipal and school board payrolls grew by 11,300 jobs.

The private sector shrank... while the government grew. That's exactly backwards from how it's supposed to be.

The leadership in the State Legislature in New Jersey believes that the solution to this problem is to increase taxes again—for the 116th time in the last 9 years. They passed a bill to raise taxes to 10.75% on those who make $1m per year. I vetoed that bill, literally, one minute after the Senate President handed it to me. I vetoed it because New Jersey does not have a revenue problem; it has a spending and debt problem. I vetoed it because it does not work. Look at the numbers.

In Fiscal Year 2009, the state collected $10.476 billion from our income tax, with no surcharge on small businesses and the wealthy. In Fiscal Year 2010, with Governor Corzine’s surcharge of 10.75% applied to small businesses and individuals, the state collected $10.243 billion. $233 million dollars less than the year without the surcharge. Higher taxes will continue to drive citizens and businesses from New Jersey and keep our private sector job growth at zero, which it was for the entire first decade of this new century.

We must change course.

We must cap the property tax increases. We must cap discretionary spending. They go together.

But that's still incomplete, because mayors still have to provide services and education.

If they have to operate under a cap, then they deserve the tools to help control the underlying expenses.

That's why this reform package is not only a cap on property tax increases, not only a cap on discretionary spending—it also contains a toolkit of 33 specific legislative reforms on collective bargaining, civil service, health care, education, and pensions.

Let me take you through these.

The Toolkit: Collective Bargaining Reform

First: Nearly 75 percent of every municipal or county budget is driven by personnel and labor costs. We need to level the playing field on those costs through collective bargaining reform for our public sector unions.

I stand foursquare in favor of arbitration to resolve the disputes with our public employees who do not have the ability to strike—police, fire, and teachers. Arbitration is there to be sure that these things are fairly resolved—and the key word there is "fair." More often than not these decisions are favorable to labor, but they're not always fair to the taxpayers who have to pay whatever the arbitrator decides.

So under collective bargaining reform, every arbitrator will have to take into account Cap 2.5. They will no longer be allowed to award a benefit that's larger than that. For the first time, arbitrators will have to consider not only who's sitting at the table in front of them, but also who pays the bills.

Municipalities, and mayors, and budgets, and taxpayers... shouldn't be at the mercy of unelected arbitrators who can effectively impose a property tax increase at will. And under this reform, we won't be.

The Toolkit: Civil Service Reform

We also need reform of the civil service system. Civil service was set up over a century ago to protect against political patronage, but collective bargaining has procedures to protect against that as well. We should have one system or the other.

Candidly, I think labor is best served by collective bargaining, so we should give mayors the ability to opt out of civil service, and to manage like a business. If someone isn't doing their job, or that job isn't needed anymore, the mayor ought to be able to get rid of it, and save the taxpayers the expense. Civil service reform will give them the tools to do that.

The Toolkit: Teachers' Fair Contribution to Health Care Costs

When we're taking into account what we spend and how we give raises, we can't act as if health care expenses and pensions aren't a part of it. This has been my big argument with the teachers union over the last number of months. You may have heard something about that....

Everyone values the hard work teachers do. And teachers should be able to have good medical benefits for themselves and their families. That's just common sense.

So this is not about a fight with individual teachers.

This is about a union that has decided that everyone they represent is entitled to free medical, dental and vision benefits for themselves and their families from the day they're hired until the day they die.

You may think I'm exaggerating.

I'm not.

The union does not pay a penny toward the health care of its own members.

That's a pretty sweet deal. I can't think of any other job where your employer says, Well, don't worry about your health insurance. We'll just throw that in no matter what it costs. Yet that's what the union has right now, and their leaders don't seem to feel any need to pay like the rest of New Jerseyans and join the real world on this.

It's a question of fairness. We don't want them to pick up 100 percent of the premiums. We don't want them to pick up 50 percent. Not 25 percent—which is what I paid when I was a federal employee. Not 10 percent.

You know what we ask for? One-point-five percent of their salary.

One-point-five percent.

It's not unreasonable to ask people in public employment to pay 1.5 percent toward their own medical benefits.

If the average teacher makes $55,000, we're talking $825 annually for full family medical, dental and vision coverage. Less than $69 a month.

Now in the private sector, this is a deal employers would run to line up to get.

But the other side on this says this is an attack on public education. I have to tell you, I don't understand why my child would learn better in school if their teacher was paying nothing toward their health benefits as opposed to paying 1.5 percent of their salary.

Candidly, it's still a great deal, so this idea that we won't attract people to teaching because they have to pay 1.5 percent of their salary towards benefits, as opposed to nothing, is just foolish. It makes a mockery of teachers' commitment to their profession and to their students.

Most people become teachers because they find it so rewarding. Of course they want to make a good living, and have financial security like all the rest of us. But the difference between zero and 1.5 percent is not going to cause a dedicated teacher to leave the profession, or stop somebody who wants to teach from doing it in the first place.

I think when the union makes that argument, they're selling their members short.

They may, but I'm not going to.

Also, we need to get away from this one-size-fits-all straightjacket about coverage. We need to give mayors the ability to negotiate with the private sector to offer a full menu of benefits that can lower the cost for municipalities, and give workers the choice to pick the health plan that best fits their needs.

This is not revolutionary. This is happening in the private sector every day. It is also happening with employees of the federal government. Why should state and local government workers in New Jersey have a better deal?

This is restoring a little common sense to the way we spend our tax money.

The Toolkit: Pension Reform

On pensions, I want that pension to be there for every police officer, for every fire fighter, for every teacher who's counting on it.

But our pension system is $46 billion in deficit.

Don't let anybody tell you that is caused by the failure of the state to stand up to its commitment to fund these pensions. That's part of the problem, but it's not the whole thing.

If the state had contributed every dollar it was supposed to over the last ten years, our pensions would be funded at 74 percent of value, instead of 64 percent, which is where they are today. That's only 10 percent difference.

So what does that tell you?

What it tells you is that the benefits are too high and the contributions being made by many of the public sector unions are too low. We need to buttress the pension back up, make it strong for the folks that are in it now, so that it's there for them when they come to retire.


A Real-Life Example of What's at Stake

Now, I'll end with this so you can really understand what's at stake here.

Last week, I had a town hall meeting in Hoboken, and I talked to a family—a husband and wife and three boys—who had a property tax increase last year of $2000. That's an incredible financial hit for any family to take, especially in one year. It's not as if you can go to your employer and say, Hey, I need another $2000.

If Cap 2.5 had been in place for Joe and Jennifer and their three boys, their property taxes would have gone up only $213, not $2000.

For the first time, Joe and Jennifer's property tax bill rose about the $10,000 mark.

Instead of paying the mortgage, or a making a down payment on a car, or saving for college, or taking a vacation, or just keeping up with what it costs to live, another $2000 of their paycheck got sucked up in that ten-year, 70 percent increase in property taxes.

We're long past the point where politicians in Trenton can justify that kind of ever-increasing drain on a family's income.

With Cap 2.5, there's only one out if you want to raise taxes higher than 2.5 percent, and that is to put in on the ballot and let the voters decide. That's what they've done in Massachusetts, and about half the time, the voters say, You know what, it's worth me paying an extra point in taxes this year to have this new program, or to hire more police officers.

The other half of the time, they say no. But the control is in the hands of the people, not the politicians.

New Jersey Needs Cap 2.5

Skyrocketing property taxes hurt seniors, they hurt middle-class families trying to make ends meet, and they hurt young families trying to buy their first home.

Cap 2.5 will cap property tax increases at no greater than 2.5 percent a year for everything: municipal tax, county tax, and school tax.

For 30 years, the politicians in Trenton have failed the people of New Jersey. In the last ten years, those politicians have raised property taxes 70 percent.

We can no longer afford it, and the politicians in Trenton have refused to solve the problem.

Cap 2.5 will allow the people of New Jersey to control property taxes and keep them at no more than 2.5 percent a year, unless the people vote differently.

To fully address the problem, I've matched Cap 2.5 with a toolkit of 33 specific legislative reforms to reform collective bargaining, civil service, health care, education, and pensions.

After three decades of passing the buck, we'll cap increases in property taxes that are wrecking people's lives and driving people out of our state, and we'll give local leaders the tools they need to help control the underlying expenses.

We're going to build a solid fiscal foundation for our state. We’re going to say “No” to those who refuse to understand that the days of something for nothing are over and the days of shared sacrifice are here. We’re going to stand up to the entrenched, special interests that are unused to having the truth told to them without regard to the political consequences. We’re going to stand up for the future of our children and grandchildren—a future in New Jersey that is hopeful, optimistic and full of opportunity and prosperity in a private sector that is growing and a public sector that stops the annual grab for the taxpayers wallets.

The legislature needs to put Cap 2.5 on the ballot this November as a constitutional amendment, and let the people do what the politicians in Trenton have refused to do for 30 years: get out-of-control property taxes under control and, at long last, fix this perpetual fiscal crisis, once and for all.

Thank you.

Tea Party Buzz Giving Anna Little Exposure

Photo credit: Lynn Gordon, Bayshore Tea Party

In the wake of Rand Paul's lopsided victory in the Kentucky U.S Senate primary last week and thanks to the lucky timing of the State Supreme Court hearing the case regarding the effort to recall U.S Senator Robert Menendez, the Tea Party movement has caught the attention of New Jersey's main stream media.



In CD-6, Anna Little is the beneficiary.

Sunday's Asbury Park Press article, Will Tea Party tilt the primaries didn't even mention Little's primary opponent:

In the 6th District, which extends from the northern part of the Shore up into New Brunswick, Somerville, Edison and Plainfield, Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., is being challenged by Republican Tea Partier Anna Little, mayor of Highlands, who blames the federal government for ruining the economy and for ignoring the Constitution on a variety of fronts.


Yesterday in the Star Ledger, Little was declared New Jersey's Tea Party darling:

Jeffrey Weingarten, another tea party activist, thinks Highlands Mayor Anna Little will upset millionaire newspaper publisher Diane Gooch in the 6th congressional district. Gooch has the Republican organization behind her. But Little, the underdog, has built up a base of tea party supporters.

"She has tapped into the tea party energy," Weingarten said. "You can say she’s a tea party darling."


With the primary election two weeks away, the main stream media is now likely to focus on this race. Reporters will start reading the press releases both campaigns send out that so far only bloggers have given any attention.

The marathon race is coming down to a sprint to the finish. Little is likely to get favorable free media to augment her one piece of mail and radio commercials. Gooch will have TV ads that start with her in the dark and end with her giggling. She will probably have at least one more piece of mail. Anna's passionate Tea Party militia will be knocking on doors, putting up signs and making phone calls from home. Gooch will pay "volunteers" to knock on doors while dispassionate party faithful man phone banks from party headquarters.

History favors Gooch, as "off year" primaries are traditionally low turnout "down the line" exercises by traditionalists doing their civic duty. Media buzz, Tea Party passion and Little's quiet support within the ranks of party regulars could make this race a nail biter.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Governor Christie On His Style and Conflict

I bet you won't see this video on NJ.com

Recorded last week while the Governor was meeting with seniors at a town hall meeting in Linden.

Upside Of A Government Shutdown

Photo credit: Lynn Gordon, Bayshore Tea Party. This photo has nothing to do with this story. I just like it because three of my favorite Republicans, Governor Chris Christie, Mayor Anna Little and Mayor Gerry Scharfenberger are in it.

Over at our friends,
InTheLobby, Carl Golden makes the case that there is no upside to shutting down the government.

Golden's point is that there is no political upside for Trenton Democrats to shut down the government. They can get the political talking points they want by passing a budget that includes tax increases and spending increases and let Governor Chris Christie use the line item veto to get rid of those items. The government would keep operating and each side would have fodder for their press releases and campaign literature for the 2011 legislative elections. As if voters will really remember this budget fight when they go to the polls in November of 2011.

But what about for the taxpayers? It seems to me that there is a tremendous upside to shutting down the government. How was your life impacted by the shut down in July of 2006? Couldn't renew your car registration or drivers license? Couldn't lose money in Atlantic City? Please...tell me in the comments.

Governor Chris Christie has already signed an executive order making the Casino Control Commission an "essential government function," thereby assuring that Atlantic City will continue to operate in the event of a shut down. He should do the same for the Motor Vehicle Commission so that people who need to renew their licenses and registration can still drive to Atlantic City legally. He could order that only the Atlantic City area offices of MVC are essential. That could create a little boom for the casinos as drivers would head to AC to stay legal with MVC and drop a new bucks at the tables or on a show.

I felt the shutdown of July 2006 because I am in the vehicle business. My company could not renew registrations or convey titles for our customers. The only other way I knew the state government had been shut down is when a tourist from Ohio stopped me at a gas station off Route 195 and asked if I knew of open any camp grounds since the state parks were shut down.

Did you feel the 2006 shutdown? Really, tell me in the comments. The government workers felt it by getting an extra week of vacation. They couldn't work, but the Democratic legislature and Governor Corzine paid them anyway once the budget was passed with a 17% sales tax increase and $300 million in Christmas tree items.

I don't see Governor Christie pulling a Corzine and paying the government workers for time off due to a shut down. This time a shut down could result in real, sustainable savings. We'd get the immediate savings of not paying to operate all non-essential government services and we could find out from experience which of those non-essential services we wouldn't miss if they were gone.

Why does the government have non-essential services anyway?

Do You Want To Know What Pallone Knows?

Photo credit: Lynn Gordon, Bayshore Tea Party. This photo has nothing to do with this story. I just like it because three of my favorite Republicans, Governor Chris Christie, Mayor Anna Little and Mayor Gerry Scharfenberger are in it.

I do.

A few things have been bothering me about the Too Thin Skinned for Prime Time story I wrote this weekend about Frank Pallone doing opposition research into Mickey and Diane Gooch, and their newspaper, the Two Rivers Times, making a big deal about the OPRA requests that Pallone's opposition researcher made in Rumson for "any and all records of police calls to the Gooch estate on the Navesink River."

In his piece in the triCityNews, Dan Jacobson speculated that Gooch neighbor General Pete Dawkins might have called the police over Diane sunbathing nude or throwing a gold ingot at Mickey's head. I'd link you to Jacobson's piece, but he doesn't publish on the Internet. Such speculation is just Dan being Dan. I enjoy quoting Dan because he says such outrageous things that I can press the envelope and still come off Republican.

You would think such a fine journalistic institution as the Two River Times would have published the OPRA findings. Wouldn't you? I mean, why not tell the whole story? Maybe they did, but I'd think Jacobson would have covered the facts rather than speculate, and I don't want to spend the $22.95 to subscribe to the TRT archives to read the TRT story to find out.

So I did the next best thing and drove over to the 12th congressional district to make my own OPRA requests in Rumson. The new Rumson Borough Hall is gorgeous. The people who work there are the nicest friendliest government workers I've ever encountered. Even the police officer, dispatcher and administrator working in the police department were smiling and friendly. There was none of that tough intimidating police speak that is so prevalent in most police departments I've visited.

I OPRA'd "any and all records of police calls to the Gooch residence" and for good measure, "any and all OPRA requests, and the answers to such requests, concerning Michael Gooch, Diane Gooch and their property." I didn't want to leave anything out, and it would be great to know the name, address and phone number of Pallone's opposition researcher.

The other thing bothering me about this story is, how did Mickey and Diane find out about Pallone's OPRA request? One of the nice people in Rumson Borough Hall must have tipped them off. That is why I'm writing about my OPRA requests now, rather than wait until I get the answers back. I'd like them to hear it from me, rather than get another tip from Borough Hall. Mickey, or someone from his firm, GFI in New York visits this blog several times per day, according to my statcounter, and rumour has it that some campaign staffers check in too.

Maybe Mickey will write a "Besides the Point" column about me or this blog. Lots of other newspapers and websites have mentioned MoreMonmouthMusings over the years, but never the Two River Times, according to their search page.

GOOCH GETS UNANIMOUS REPUBLICAN SUPPORT IN SAYREVILLE

"Key municipality's entire GOP Committee joins long line of endorsements for Gooch"

Red Bank, NJ: Diane Gooch, the Monmouth County Republican Vice Chair and local businesswoman is continuing to pick up support throughout the 6th District. Today, the entire Sayreville Republican Municipal Committee, led by Chairman Frank Markansky, Vice Chair, John Melillo, Financial Secretary, John Rucki and Recording Secretary Rosetta Fischer have joined the list of Republican organizations endorsing Gooch in her bid to unseat 22 year incumbent Frank Pallone.

Markansky stated that, "We are excited to announce our endorsement of Diane Gooch for Congress. For the past 22 years, Frank Pallone has pushed a progressive agenda and expanded the government unnecessarily. Diane Gooch is the only candidate with the dedication and drive to retire Frank Pallone. We look forward to assisting her campaign in whatever way we can so that this November the people of Sayreville will have a new representative in Congress."



The 6th district covers portions of Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset and Union counties.

From My Inbox....

From a CD-6 voter who responded to a "push poll" over the weekend:

FYI, I just got a phone call to participate
in a phone poll,
done by National Research,
based out of Los Vegas, NV.
It was very extensive,
and took almost 10 minutes to complete.
There must have been at least 50 questions,
on many topics.
It asked many questions about
whether I had a very favorable,
somewhat favorable, somewhat unfavorable, or very unfavorable
view of Frank Pallone and Diane Gooch.
It then asked about several issues,
and if the positions of each of them
would strongly influence, somewhat influence, somewhat not influence, or very not influence
my opinion of them.
At the end,
I was asked a question who would I vote for,
if the choice was between Pallone or Gooch.
I said that I would vote for another candidate,
named Anna Little who is running in the NJ primary on June 8,
but he said that was not an acceptable choice.
I then said neither one,
and he said that was also an unacceptable choice.
So I had to pick between one of them,
so I did not know what to do,
so I picked Diane Gooch.
I just wanted to let you know about this poll.
I hope that I did not skrew this poll up.
I did want to get all of my "very unfavorable" opinions
of Frank Pallone and Diane Gooch on record,
so I had to pick one candidate over the other.

I did not like this poll survey at all,
the way it phrased the choices,
and did not allow a "neither" or "no opion" answer..
Also, it seemed to me that this poll
was a vailed attempt to assess
support for Diane Gooch vs. Frank Pallone,
so I stated that my opinion of her
in every category was "very unfavorable".
I hope that I helped with my answers to this poll.

I just wanted to let you know
that this poll is being conducted.

Anna Little Responds to Frank Pallone's Press Release regarding Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act

Photo credit: Lynn Gordon, Bayshore Tea Party


Highlands, NJ - Continuing to misunderstand and misdiagnose the causes of our economic downturn, Frank Pallone on May 17th issued a press release outlining his support of yet another level of useless and detrimental government bureaucracy to the already stifling regulatory system emanating from Washington. Considering how completely out of touch with Main Street Frank Pallone actually is this is not surprising.

Anna Little, small-town Mayor and 6th District Congressional candidate with a direct line to the people she will serve, spoke with the Two River Times and properly addressed the issue rather than demagoging the banks and financial institutions who are merely symptoms of a problem that begins and ends in Washington

Mayor Little said that "Government regulation is not the answer to the fraud and abuse of shareholders that occurs on Wall Street. Government regulation drives up the cost of business and thus costs for consumers, and interferes with free market competition. "

Responding to Pallone’s claims that D.C. has all the answers, regardless of the fact that they are in fact the career politicians who caused the meltdown in the first place, Mayor Little noted that "Business experts know their industry, and can expose fraud, and reckless behavior. The best redress is via the civil and criminal court systems."

Finally, Mayor Little points out that Washington and Frank Pallone have proven themselves wholly incompetent in directing the economy and that more such efforts will only lead to more cost, more loss and near permanent unemployment:

"If the Federal Reserve is an example of the competence of Government to regulate the financial market, my point is made clear. Government must get out of the way for business competition to restore ethics in the financial market and create jobs."

"The Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, HR 4173, is unconstitutional. The Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution, Article 1, Section 8, Clause 3, regulates commerce between the United States and foreign countries, between the United States or any state and the Indians, or commerce between two or more States. The Commerce Clause does not regulate business generally."

Frank Pallone has been meddling in and destroying our economy for over two decades. His liberal party-line voting record is evidence of his complete misunderstanding of how our economy actually works. Rather than getting to the root causes of the issue, career politicians like Frank Pallone, who have never held a real job in their lives, continue instead to stir passions and promote “solutions” that have been tried, tested and proven as failures.

It’s time the 6th District elected someone with the common sense and understanding necessary to reform Washington before destroying our economy with more useless, costly Wall Street reforms.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Tea Party Folks Feeling Their Oats, Risking Backlash

Apparently emboldened by successes elsewhere in the country they had nothing to do with and by some favorable press coverage, the Bayshore Tea Party Group is attempting to throw weight around that they haven't earned yet.

The members of this group that I have met are passionate, energetic and committed. There is no question that they are a force to be respected and admired. The candidates they are backing are thus far fortunate.

However, there is also an underlying angry intolerance for differences of opinion, or failure to tow their "party line", that reeks of the bossism that they profess to disdain in the Democratic and Republican parties.

There is a great deal to be angry about in American today. Much of the Tea Party efforts are driven by that anger. But, if they come on too strong, they risk a backlash from people who are inclined to vote their way.

Last week when I saw one of their members get in the face of a businessman who had something nice to say about Diane Gooch, I thought it was odd. The last couple of days reading and responding to the comments in the David Corsi Interview post, I appreciated the passion and support of their guy. When I met some of those same people face to face today, I thought it was refreshing that they would confront and debate me, when they finally let me get a word in. That's better than the dirty looks and snarky comments that I sometimes get at GOP events.

But when I heard from an local elected official who has been supportive of the group that they are threatening to withdraw promised reciprocal support unless he succumbs to their demands for an endorsement of one of their candidates, the earlier events appeared in a different light.

Populist bossism is still bossism. Making threats to the friendlies is an odd strategy. I hope these folks can harness their anger and make an ongoing lasting difference. A lasting difference is needed.

If it is all anger and threats, they will either burnout or self destruct.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Little Gets Her Palin On



A few weeks ago in the triCityNews, Dan Jacobson called CD-6 GOP candidate Anna Little "Sarah Palin with brains."

I enjoy quoting Jacobson because he says such outrageous things that I am able press the envelope and still come off Republican.

Jacobson is the only other writer paying any attention to CD-6. I'm covering the primary because I want to send Frank Pallone off to his new career as a lobbyist. Dan's covering it because he wants to mate with Diane Gooch and screw Mikey out of $3.2 million dollars, so he says.

I doubt Jacobson really thinks of Little as "Sarah Palin with brains." I think Dan would probably like to mate with Sarah Palin too. Anna just doesn't provoke those kinds of thoughts. That's no commentary on her appearance. When you're around Anna Little you're either thinking about what difference you are going to make or you're trying to figure out how you are going to stop her from making the difference she is going to make despite your best efforts.

And, from the looks of the photo that James Hogan sent me from the Shore Shot Pistol Range, today is probably the first day that Little ever fired a gun. Hogan tells me that Little shot his sw686, a .38 special and from his barretta 92fs. I don't know what any of that means, except it must have been loud.

Hogan says he'll send more photos later.

UPDATE: Thanks to Russ Cote for the additional photo:

Too Thin Skinned for Prime Time

No, not the Star Ledger's Tom Moran. Being thin skinned put him in prime time for 15 minutes.

Mickey and Diane Gooch are too thin skinned for politics at the level they are buying into.

The Gooches recently found out about opposition research.

Frank Pallone sent an opposition researcher to Rumson Borough Hall in CD-12 to make Open Public Records Act (OPRA) requests for any and all records of police calls to the Gooch estate on the Navesink River.

This is true! I read it in Dan Jacobson's triCityNews. Dan read it in Diane Gooch's Two River Times! You read it on Art Gallagher's blog.

I'd link you to Dan's triCityNews piece, but he doesn't publish on the Internet.

I'd link you to the front page Two River Times story, and Mickey's "Beside the Point" column about it, but I don't want to spend the $22.95 to subscribe to their archives and then give you a link that would require you to spend $22.95 to read it. Here's a link to a TRT search page with the front page article on the top and the "Besides the Point" column listed just underneath. It's free.

According to Dan, Mickey wrote in his column:

Like Captain Renault in the movie Cassablanca, I am "shocked, shocked" that the Democratic sleaze machine working on Frank Pallone's behalf has pulled police reports on my family at our home...I conclude that Pallone feels threatened by Diane Gooch's campaign and that he wants to find some dirt on her or me or my children.

Mickey's conclusion is half right.

Pallone wants to find dirt on Diane, Mickey, their children, and anyone associated with them. Pallone has $4 million. He'll probably spend $100K digging into the Gooch's lives. He'll research Mickey's firm, and every business deal, corporation, LLC, land deal, oil deal, etc that Mickey was every involved in. The "Democratic sleaze machine" will be prepared to spin legitimate deals into nefarious schemes that threaten the universe. Remember what they did with Chris Christie's driving record and loan to an employee last year? Pallone figures that the Gooches are easier targets than the former U.S Attorney.

The Democratic sleaze machine will investigate every charity the Gooches support. They will investigate Diane's youth in Queens and Long Island. They will talk to her school classmates, friends and enemies. If Diane got drunk or high at her prom, cheated on a test in community college, or made out under the Coney Island board walk, Frank will know about it and be prepared to spin it terribly.

They will talk to every disgruntled former employee of Mickey's firm and every woman Mickey ever smiled at, looking to expose or manufacture a scandal.

But they are not affraid of Gooch and they won't use what they find....not unless Gooch is the GOP nominee challenging Pallone and if they have polling data suggesting they need to drag her, and her family, through the mud in order to win. Pallone is not threatened by Diane's campaign yet. Pallone is getting prepared for the possibility of the Gooch campaign getting traction. He must. With no record of public service to attack, the Gooch's businesses, backgrounds and personal lives will be fair game.

If Diane is the nominee and she polls within 10% of Pallone, the October airwaves will be filled with unflattering black and white photos of Mickey and Diane smiling accompanied by scary music. Mickey will be portrayed as a heartless robber barron who made billions on the collapse of the economy while regular people lost their jobs and homes and who decided to buy his wife a seat on Congress in order to get her out of his hair.

That is the way it is and that is the way it is likely to be. That Mickey and Diane are "shocked, shocked," and think it is front page news is both disappointing and alarming. Yes, Captain Renault was feigning shock in Cassablanca, as Mickey probably is now. I guess it has been so long since there was a competitive congressional campaign in the area that they don't remember the "twinkle, twinkle Kenneth Star" ads that Rush Holt ran in his race against Mike Pappas. That was nothing. Frank Pallone will do what ever he thinks he needs to to save his job.

That they were not adequately forewarned by the GOP leaders who recruited them into the race is not all that surprising. One of those GOP leaders told me this week, "all I care about is that Pallone spends all of his money."

Diane and Mickey have no idea what is going to hit them in October, should Diane be the nominee and wage a competitive race.

It is a shame. They seem like nice people.

Friday, May 21, 2010

The David Corsi Interview


CD 12 GOP primary candidate David Corsi has been after me for an interview since February. When I met David at the Monmouth County Lincoln Day Dinner, he didn't impress me as a serious candidate. He had not been, to my knowledge, at any party functions and frankly, he didn't know who I was or about this blog. Not that I think I'm a big deal or that the blog is a big deal. In the big picture, I'm not and the blog is not. However in Monmouth County political circles, and to a lesser extent the statewide, this blog is well known and it is sought out by candidates, office holders and others looking to get their message out. Corsi had not done his homework.

I gave Corsi my card, which has my office number, fax number, cell number and email address on it. Over the last couple of months he left me three messages at the office. Never sent a press release or any email. Never called my cell. Again, not to toot my horn, but when I contrast that to the state senator who called my cell phone repeatedly, like seven times, until I answered one evening in March, Corsi didn't want to talk to me that badly.

I really stopped taking Corsi's candidacy seriously when he was a no show at the Middlesex County GOP convention in March. As you will see during part 2 of the interview, he insists he was at the convention and spoke. He wasn't. In case my memorary failed me I went back and checked the photos I took there and called two other people I know would have noticed his absence. He wasn't there. Maybe Dave thinks the screening committee meeting was the convention.

Dave finally got me on the phone earlier this week. I was going to plead too busy, but I had already announced on the blog that all candidates were welcome to interview. I guess Dave finally discovered the blog. I was really hoping Scott Sipprelle or Diane Gooch would call. When he told me he was taping a TV commercial on Friday morning and could meet me in the afternoon, I figured, if he's going on TV, he must be serious.

So here it is. Dave Corsi finally got his interview with MoreMonmouthMusings. He showed up at my office Scott Brown style in a pick up truck with a sign in the bed. I don't regret giving him the time. He might regret his tenacity in getting here.

In part one, I asked Corsi repeatedly why he wants to be a congressman. He gave me his stump speech for 10 minutes when I finally moved on:



In part 2 of the interview, I ask Corsi why he is a better choice than Scott Sipprelle. Again, he doesn't answer the question. He does rail against Republican leadership, making some valid points. He trashes the Independence Tea Party that endorsed Sipprelle and he claims he was in attendance at the Middlesex County convention seeking its nomination:



If you're still viewing, take an Advil. Better take two because part 3 is painful. While discussing tax policy, David favors the "fair tax" or a national sales tax, and how that will solve our national $13 trillion debt and our unfunded liability for social security, Corsi makes a monumental gaffe. He claims that General Motors is actually a profitable company, but that its profits are overseas and that management won't repatriate the money because of our tax system. I checked on his convention attendance claim, but I'm not checking this one. If someone can document that information I'll max out on donating to David's campaign and I'll come up with a poll that Diane Gooch can win.

He did finally answer why he's a better choice that Scott Sipprelle:



David Corsi is a patriot. He is well meaning and actually has some good ideas. He is not ready for Congress. He might want to consider running for council in Oceanport.

Anyone think Scott or Diane will be calling?

How Do You Like That Jazz?

Photo: Big Joe Henry in New Orleans post Katrina

By Grace Cangemi

When it comes to putting a political agenda ahead of the well-being of our children, some NJEA members here in Monmouth County are leading by their shameful example. The victims this time are the children participating in the annual Basie Awards at the Count Basie Theatre.

The Basie Awards, acknowledging the achievement of local children in the performing arts, has been attacked by a Howell music teacher and her NJEA friends. This year's volunteer host, NJ 101.5 radio personality Big Joe Henry, has stepped down in the wake of a made up controversy masterminded by Regina McAllen and a few bullies from the NJEA. While Big Joe has never offered any comment about the NJEA, school boards or budgets, these folks have decided that fighting the presence of someone whose fellow employees have at times been critical of the NJEA is more important than supporting the kids they are paid to teach.

As a proponent of full disclosure, I must start off by saying that I have never worked with Regina McAllen and the NJEA to create a charity that returns over 97% of its fundraising to the New Jersey charities it supports. I have never spent the day before Christmas with Ms McAllen driving a rented UHaul full of toys to needy families in the heart of one of our poorest cities. I must say that I have never spent an evening with Ms. McAllen or the NJEA in 100 degree heat on the beach giving children a chance to sing their hearts out in a talent show that reaches thousands of people. I have never seen Regina McAllen and her union buddies spend hours in a hot, sweaty Santa suit bringing Christmas gifts to families that lost everything they had in Hurricane Katrina. Although it appears that Regina McAllen is a music teacher, I have not worked with her or the NJEA to found a scholarship to help a kid from New Jersey attend the Berklee College of Music, one of the most prestigious music schools in the country. I have seen Big Joe do all of that and more.

While Ms. McAllen and her NJEA pals were busy lobbying and collecting their paychecks, I watched Big Joe Henry and his radio station, NJ 101.5, stand beside us to help thousands of New Jersey kids as well as children all around the country.

Let me be clear. I admire the dedication and passion of many teachers. I stand in awe of what some of them have accomplished with their students (this is my little shout out to the Red Bank Middle School Band, their teachers, and all the other groups like them).

Politics has no place in academic achievement and recognition. The NJEA and Ms. McAllen have set an appalling example. In her published letters to the Count Basie Theatre, she has talked about the possibility of losing her job, but she never once mentioned her students. Good to know where the NJEA’s priorities stand.

Again, in the effort of full disclosure, I am a founding board member of the Rock and Roll Music Fund, as is Big Joe Henry. I am an avowed Republican – the only one on our board. Big Joe has never, to my knowledge (even though I goad him endlessly) taken a political position. Our membership tends to split firmly at 50% to each side of the aisle. And when it comes to helping kids, NOBODY CARES ABOUT POLITICAL AFFILIATION.

EXCEPT THE NJEA. Apparently, as Ms. McAllen would have you believe, simply knowing someone who disagrees with the NJEA makes you ineligible to help kids.

Forget that you do it for free.

Forget your exemplary record of service to your community.

Forget the hundreds of thousands of dollars you have helped raise.

Forget your hands on dedication to needy families.

Forget your ongoing support of police and firefighters.

You don’t count because you don’t pay dues to the NJEA.

What a disgrace.

The Basie Awards are a wonderful acknowledgement of the talented children in our area. Big Joe could have had a well-deserved night off instead of volunteering to host an event that honored these special kids. Instead, as I have seen him do time and time again, he offered his support.

And Regina McAllen and the NJEA say he’s not good enough. He works for NJ101.5 and some of their personalities (not Big Joe), publicly disagree with their union.

And that’s reason enough to toss the kids aside and take what should be a lovely and memorable event and turn it into a political hatchet job. Their bullying, “me first” tactics have once again put our kids last.

The children being awarded Basie Awards deserve a host as qualified, caring, and distinguished as Big Joe Henry.

The children who are seeking a future in music, theatre, and the performing arts deserve a champion as passionate as Big Joe Henry.

Big Joe Henry has once again put children first by stepping down and trying to remove the controversy. He did it to preserve the integrity of an event that should focus on kids. I know Big Joe well enough to know that he would rather we leave this go and focus on the kids. And when the Basies are awarded, I hope that we will. But in the interim, it is vital that we step back and take a hard look at the NJEA and some of its members and realize who really puts our kids first.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Did Sweeney Call In A SWAT Team To Intimidate Protesters?

Hat tip to our friends at TheStateNJ for this story you are not likely to see in Tom Moran's Star Ledger.

Photo credits: Americans for Prosperity





















Only in New Jersey, a TownHall blog reported yesterday that the West Deptford Police and the Gloucester County SWAT Team tried to prevent the Americans for Prosperity protest at Senate President Steve Sweeney's office demanding that Sweeney hold hearings and a vote on Governor Chris Christie's nominee to the state supreme court, Anne Murray Patterson.

And Moran thinks Governor Christie is confrontational!

CD 6: Money

Prior to the national wave of anti-incumbent, anti-establishment, Tea Party driven elections that took root with Scott Brown in Massachusetts and have spread to Utah, Pennsylvania, Arkansas, and Kentucky, the conventional wisdom was that Frank Pallone could not be beat.

Pallone is entrenched and has a $4 million war chest. That is why Diane Gooch and not Mary Pat Angelini is the establishment choice to challenge Pallone this fall. Gooch's ability to self fund her campaign will force Pallone to spend down his war chest and weaken him, not in this race, but in a future statewide race for U.S. Senate should Frank Lautenberg retire or not seek another term.

Gooch says she thinks she can win, not, in her own words, because she is so great, but because Pallone is so bad. Very few others think so. Gooch is the establishment candidate because she can self-fund and also contribute to local and county races. She's not supposed to win. She's supposed to weaken Pallone and help local Republicans get elected.

It would have been a sensible plan if not for the Tea Party driven wave sweeping the country. There is a growing sense in the district that Frank Pallone can be beat. There is a very strong sentiment that he must be beat.

Governor Chris Christie's election last fall and the school budget elections last month, while not Tea Party driven, are a strong indication that the New Jersey electorate is ripe to participate in the Tea Party wave.

Anna Little is riding that wave and tapping that sentiment. With very little money, she has Gooch in a tight race for the nomination. Every move that Gooch makes, TV ads, fund raising letters and events and a rigorous schedule of retail campaigning is a testiment to Little's considerable appeal.

Many were surprised to receive Gooch's fundraising appeal in the mail last week. "If she is self funding, why is she asking me for money?" "I did not even open the letter" are the two comments I've heard most frequently. Gooch has a fund raiser tonight. A email went out yesterday with a discount offer for county committee members. Discounts for county committee is code for "we need to fill the room."

So here we are, 20 days before the primary and we have two candidates asking for money. Which one are you more likely to donate to? You can vote in the poll on the side bar and you can vote with your credit card here:

Help pay for Diane Gooch's TV ads

Help pay for Anna Little's radio ads

GOOCHS CAMPAIGN MESSAGE RESONATING WITH VOTERS ONLINE

"Diane Gooch For Congress Attracts Over 1000 People to Facebook and YouTube"

Red Bank, NJ: The wave of grass roots support for Monmouth County Republican Vice Chair and local businesswoman Diane Gooch continues to build for her campaign to unseat Frank Pallone. Over 1000 people are now supporting Gooch on her Facebook page (http://www.facebook.com/DianeGooch4Congress) which displays hundreds of campaign photos, keeps the electorate up to date on Gooch's whereabouts and chronicles the numerous endorsements Gooch has received throughout the 6th District.

Meanwhile, on Monday, Gooch released her first television commercial, playing on cable news networks throughout the 6th Congressional District. In just a couple days, it too has reached the 1000 mark, with over 1000 YouTube visitors viewing the 30 second spot. (http://www.youtube.com/goochforcongress) Gooch's message of being ready to represent the people, their interests and their families with less spending and lower taxes is clearly resonating as voters realize that Gooch is THE alternative to Frank Pallone.

The 6th district covers portions of Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset and Union counties.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Middletown Mayor Supports Governor’s Toolkit

MIDDLETOWN -- Middletown Mayor Gerry Scharfenberger is putting out the call for more local officials to support proposed gubernatorial reforms that promise to give towns tools needed to control costs without sacrificing services.

Scharfenberger was the first mayor in Monmouth County to officially pledge his support for the governor’s tool kit of reforms. He was joined by other Monmouth County mayors following a meeting last week with Lt. Governor Kim Guadagno about the 33-bill package of legislative reforms.

“For too long municipalities have been at the mercy of collective bargaining rules and civil service constraints that have pushed property taxes steadily higher,” said Scharfenberger. “The governor’s proposals will finally give mayors something that has been severely lacking in the past – the ability to control costs at the local level,” Scharfenberger added.

The Municipal Tool Kit is a key component of the governor’s legislative reform package. More than half of the proposed reforms are aimed at helping local governments manage their budgets more effectively by reforming collective bargaining, pensions and benefits, civil services and unfunded mandates, Scharfenberger said.

Scharfenberger, a member of the governor’s transition team and the state League of Municipalities Legislative Committee, has been a vocal opponent of unfunded state mandates. Unfunded state mandates are orders given to municipalities like Middletown by the state with no funding to pay for their implementation. Examples of unfunded mandates that affect Middletown range from state-ordered certification for township employees, to the construction of a truck wash at the Department of Public Works, to the construction of low-income housing as ordered by COAH.