Republican Senate Budget Officer Anthony Bucco says he was disappointed, but not surprised by reports that Governor Corzine is considering eliminating property tax relief as one of his first choices for dealing with next year's expected budget shortfall:"Governor Corzine won office in 2005 with a campaign centered on raising rebates by 40 percent in four years. In 2006, he even raised sales taxes and agreed to use the money for higher rebates. For many of us, those rebates disappeared. Only the tax hike remains."Before Governor Corzine cuts property tax relief again, he should finally consider Republican proposals for eliminating hundreds of millions of dollars of unnecessary and unjustifiable spending that were proposed in the Common Sense Plan last May. Before reducing rebates, cut out every unnecessary patronage position. Stop padding a few city budgets with "Special Municipal Aid," which diverts money to politically powerful leaders with little or no oversight."For this governor, raising taxes and cutting programs to aid the middle class always seems preferable to reining in waste and exercising fiscal discipline. It's time to reopen the budget today so that spending can reflect New Jersey's priorities, not Trenton's."Web: www.senatenj.com Twitter: twitter.com/senatenj YouTube: youtube.com/senatenj Facebook: senatenj.com/facebook
Christie vetoes 5 service contracts approved by Turnpike Authority Governor Christie on Thursday vetoed five professional services contracts that were approved by the New Jersey Turnpike Authority a month ago. The governor’s office said Christie exercised his eighth veto because the contract fees ranged from...
“She has already chosen the interests of the insurance industry over the health care needs of working people, she took millions from Wall Street as the economy went into a meltdown, and now she wants to purchase a job in Congress at a time when so many have lost their jobs because of the actions of big bankers and others." -- Monmouth County Democrats spokesman Mike Mangan, on Republican Diane Gooch, who is challenging U.S. Rep. Frank Pallone.
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