Want access to post press releases? To sign up, use this form. You must be logged in.
TRENTON – A bill sponsored by Senator Nicholas P. Scutari which would establish campaign finance and disclosure standards and debate rules for New Jersey’s new Lieutenant Governor position was approved by the Assembly today by a vote of 66-12, with one abstention, receiving final legislative approval.
“This November, voters in New Jersey will go to the polls for the first time to vote for a leadership team, not just a Governor,” said Senator Scutari, D-Union, Middlesex and Somerset. “While past acting Governors have done an exemplary job to serve the people of New Jersey, the new Lieutenant Governor position will ensure consistency and predictability in the path of succession, and whoever’s elected will hopefully play a major role in shaping the direction of the State. We need to ensure that the candidates running under the Governor, this November and into the future, are subject to the same reporting, spending and contribution limits as other candidates for office in the Garden State.”
The bill, S-2829, would set the framework for the application of campaign finance and disclosure laws as they apply to candidates running for the position of Lieutenant Governor this November and moving forward. Under the bill, candidates running for Governor and Lieutenant Governor would be treated as one candidate for the purposes of campaign contribution and expenditure limits and public financing eligibility, ensuring that gubernatorial candidates cannot skirt existing spending and contribution limits through their running mates. The bill would also clarify that candidates running for Lieutenant Governor would be subject to the same financial disclosure requirements, issue advocacy disclosure requirements, and anti-pay-to-play laws that apply to gubernatorial candidates in New Jersey.
“When New Jersey established the position of Lieutenant Governor, we didn’t spell out the mechanics as to how the current disclosure and reporting laws would apply,” said Senator Scutari. “This bill puts the proper framework in place, ensuring that candidates for Lieutenant Governor must abide by the same rules for other candidates in the State. And it ensures that gubernatorial candidates cannot use their Lieutenant Governor candidates as an avenue for wheeling or for getting around existing spending and contribution limits.”
The bill would also require that any Lieutenant Governor candidate receiving public financing to participate in one debate during the course of the election. Senator Scutari noted that as part of a leadership team with the Governor, the Lieutenant Governor’s political philosophy and perspective on State policies should receive proper vetting by the electorate.
“With the inclusion of the Lieutenant Governor on the ticket, future Governors will not be elected in a vacuum,” said Senator Scutari. “The voting public has a right to know the political philosophies and policy views of the men and women who would be a heartbeat away from leading the State. Through a public debate, voters will have the opportunity to get answers to the questions that we all have a responsibility to ask our elected leaders in a democracy.”
The bill was also approved earlier today by the Senate by a vote of 39-0. It now heads to the Governor to be signed into law.
Michael Doherty. a West Point graduate and one of the state's most conservative legislators, will take his seat in the State Senate today. A ... >
Everybody needs to start a new job with a list of priorities and Chris Christie is no exception. There might be a thousand things that need to get ... >
Political discourse in America contains much in the way of intellect or intellectual honesty. One considers the Federalist Papers with wistful awe: ... >
As pundits and party leaders look to next year’s Congressional elections in NJ, it appears that freshman Democrat John Adler is the most vulnerable ... >
When will NJ Republicans start acting like Republicans rather than Democrats. Time to stand up for your principles, assuming they have any left. >
As in any transition, speculation is rampant as to whom Governor-elect Chris Christie will appoint as Chief of Staff, State Treasurer, and Attorney ... >
Now that the dust has finally settled after the grueling campaign for governor, there are a number of lessons that we can draw from this ... >
When he was growing up, Chris Christie's folks must have taught him that when he went to a new playground, he should pick a fight with the ... >
Back in 1974, when NYC was facing a mounting financial crisis, then-Mayor Abe Beame went to then-President Ford and asked for financial help from ... >
New Jersey voters repudiated Governor Jon Corzine's policies of the past four years on November 3rd. Republican Chris Christie and Independent ... >