More movement in Governor Jon Corzine’s office: Lilo Stainton, the former Gannett statehouse reporter who has served as Corzine’s press secretary since last June, is leaving for another state post. She’ll be the Communications Director for the Meadowlands Commission. Stainton took over for Anthony Coley (now Senator Ted Kennedy’s press secretary) when Coley moved up to Communications Director following the departure (under not-so-great terms) of Ivette Mendez. When Coley left earlier this year, Corzine (after taking some time to mull his options) hired a reporter who covered him for the Star-Ledger, Deborah Howlett.
6 comments Anthony Coley, who served as Jon Corzine’s Communications Director, first in Washington and then in Trenton, is the new Communications Director for U.S. Senator Edward Kennedy
Joe Ferriero vs. Loretta Weinberg; Brian Stack vs. Sal Vega; Glenn Paulsen vs. Diane Allen; Glenn Paulsen vs. Mike Warner; Vivian Stringer vs. Don Imus; James E. McGreevey vs. Dina Matos McGreevey; Anthony Coley vs. Ivette Mendez; Dick Codey vs. Ken Zimmerman; Dick Codey vs. George Zoffinger; Kevin O’Toole vs. Kevin Collins; Upendra Chivukula vs. Seema Singh; Karen Kominsky vs. Christie Davis Jackson; Bill Gormley vs. Sonny McCollough; Bill Pascoe vs. Maryannie Harper; Skip Hidlay vs.Ellen Karcher; Izod vs. Prudential; Guy Talarico vs. everybody.
Anthony Coley, who serves as Communications Director for Governor Jon Corzine, will be leaving his post within the next month to explore new opportunities. Coley worked for U.S. Senator Zell Miller and Rep. Harold Ford before joining Corzine’s U.S. Senate staff. Corzine has not announced a successor.
Lilo Stainton, a former Gannett statehouse reporter, will be Governor Jon Corzine's new Press Secretary. She will replace Anthony Coley, who became the Governor’s Communications Director in April.
Jon Corzine is back as Governor, and the feuding between Richard Codey and two key Corzine aides -- Chief of Staff Thomas Shea and Counsel Kenneth Zimmernan -- has essentially been put aside. Both parties reportedly agreed that the days following the Governor's accident were stressful for everyone and that it was time for all involved to move on.
But Codey has not forgiven one top gubernatorial staffer whom he battled during his short tenure as Acting Governor: Anthony Coley, Corzine's Communications Director. Codey views Coley as a habitual liar, and perceives that it was Coley who pushed much of the anti-Codey rhetoric over the past few weeks -- far more than anyone else from Corzine's staff.
Corzine Statement on Judge Samuel Alito Jr.’s Nomination to the Supreme Court
Lt. Gov. Guadagno takes on red tape in N.J. Gov. Christie Whitman declared New Jersey "open for business" in 1994 and appointed an ombudsman to lead entrepreneurs through "the expanding maze of regulation." Before her, an environmental commissioner under Gov. James Florio urged permit applicants to call him directly...
"Never forget, some of those shouting the loudest are the architects of the disaster we are now suffering. Do we really want another decade of economic failure? No, this spring it is time to clear away the underbrush to make room for growth. So, today, we stop sweeping problems under the rug. We will not hide our problems until
another day. And we are certainly not increasing the tax burden we place upon our people. Today, we are taking necessary and decisive action to reduce state spending and reform state government. The problems we have hidden for twenty years are evident for all to see. The day of reckoning has arrived. Some are saying, by their choice of policies, that we should descend further into debt and deficit, and risk driving more people out of the state with “temporary” tax increases that always turn out to be permanent. I say we must face up to our responsibility." -- Gov. Christopher Christie
Press releases are submitted by PolitickerNJ users, not by staff. They do not represent the viewpoint of PolitickerNJ.com.