Carl Bergmanson

June 3, 2009 - 12:33am
INSIDE EDGE

Corzine held to 78% in non-competitive Democratic primary

In an attempt to send a message, nearly one out of four Democrats who voted in Tuesday's Democratic primary (23%) did not vote for the incumbent Governor, Jon Corzine.  None of Corzine's three primary opponents, former Glen Ridge Mayor Carl Bergmanson (9%), 9/11 conspiracy theorist Jeff Boss (8%) and factory worker Roger Bacon (6%) spent more than couple of thousand dollars and had no organizational or interest group endorsements. 

Among the most significant political stories of the day was a Star-Ledger report that the Communications Workers of America (CWA), the state's largest public employee union, threatened to picket Corzine's campaign kickoff rally tonight - a move that might have led to Vice President Joseph Biden cancelling his appearance.  In order to avoid the controversy, Corzine agreed to a deal with the union on furloughs, according to the published report.

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June 2, 2009 - 8:38am
INSIDE EDGE

For public employee unions, a vote for Bergmanson sends a message to Corzine during budget time

Gov. Jon Corzine faces just token opposition in the Democratic primary, although some pundits are watching to see if a significant number of Democrats - perhaps more than twenty percent of them - vote against him anyway.  In what is more of a race for second place, three other Democrats are running for Governor: Carl Bergmanson, a former Mayor of Glen Ridge; Roger Bacon, a factory worker who runs a customized ceramic mug business; and Jeff Boss, who claims to have witnessed the U.S. government planning the 9/11 terrorist attack. 

There are reports that some public employee unions are, very quietly, suggesting that their members vote for Bergmanson.  Their hope is that the vote totals of today's primary could influence Corzine over the next 28 days. 

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June 2, 2009 - 5:00am

Primary '09: the polls are open

Republicans will nominate a candidate for Governor today, with former U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie, former Bogota Mayor Steven Lonegan, and Assemblyman Rick Merkt (R-Mendham) seeking the chance to run against Democratic Gov. Jon Corzine.

Corzine has three primary opponents: former Glen Ridge Mayor Carl Bergmanson, Roger Bacon, and Jeff Boss, who claims to have witnessed the U.S. government planning the 9/11 terrorist attack.

In District 23, Assemblywoman Marcia Karrow (R-Raritan) faces a GOP primary challenge from Assemblyman Michael Doherty (R-Oxford).  Three candidates are seeking two Assembly seats: incumbent John DiMaio (R-Hackettstown), Hunterdon County Freeholder Erik Peterson, and Edward Smith, Doherty's Chief of Staff.

In the Morris County-based 25th district, where Merkt is giving up his seat to run for Governor, three candidates are seeking the Republican nod for a pair of Assembly seats: incumbent Michael Patrick Carroll (R-Morris Twp.), Morris County Freeholder Douglas Cabana,  and Anthony Bucco, Jr., the son of four-term State Sen. Anthony Bucco (R-Boonton).

Former Assemblyman Craig Stanley (D-Irvington), who lost his seat by 127 votes in the 2007 Democratic primary, is seeking a comeback in the Essex County-based 28th district.  He is challenging incumbents Ralph Caputo (D-Belleville) and Cleopatra Tucker (D-Newark).

In District 40, which includes parts of Bergen, Essex and Passaic counties, incumbents David Russo (R-Ridgewood) and Scott Rumana (R-Wayne) face primary challenges from Joseph Caruso and Anthony Rottino. 

In the 3rd district, which includes parts of Gloucester, Cumberland and Salem counties, Republicans will pick two candidates to challenge Democratic incumbents John Burzichelli (D-Paulsboro) and Celeste Riley (D-Bridgeton).

Democratic mayors face primary challenges in Edison, , Morristown,  Atlantic City, Plainfield, and East Orange. 

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June 1, 2009 - 7:45am

Bergmanson wants to decriminalize marijuana

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Carl Bergmanson chided Gov. Corzine for not using his political muscle to force passage of the medical marijuana bill and went on to call for the government to stop enforcing laws against use of the substance for any purpose.

The Compassionate Use Medical Marijuana Act, which passed the state Senate in March, has not been posted for a vote in the Assembly.  It is on the agenda for Thursday's meeting of the Assembly Heath and Senior Services Committee, however.  

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May 31, 2009 - 4:00pm
PRESS RELEASE

BERGMANSON: DECRIMINALIZE MARIJUANA USE

Glen Ridge, NJ – Mayor Carl Bergmanson, Jon Corzine’s opponent for Governor in the upcoming Democratic Primary this Tuesday, says the Governor should be doing more to push the Assembly to pass the Medical Marijuana bill that he has promised to sign, and that New Jersey should join other states and decriminalize recreational use of Marijuana.

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May 30, 2009 - 8:44pm

Two Republicans, a Democrat, a Libertarian and a columnist

Former Glen Ridge Mayor Carl Bergmanson, left, and Assemblyman Richard Merkt (R-Mendham)

EAST BRUNSWICK - Abbott, COAH, global warming response, stem cell research, the Transportation Trust Fund, it doesn't matter. If it comes from Trenton, drive a stake through it. That was the message coming out of a gubernatorial forum here sponsored by Americans for Prosperity.

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May 29, 2009 - 12:58pm

Bergmanson commits to winning primary, would vote for Uncle Floyd sooner than Corzine

Carl Bergmanson

Dragging the twin perils of no name ID and no money into Tuesday’s gubernatorial primary, anti-establishment Democrat Carl Bergmanson nonetheless says he believes he’ll put a dent in Gov. Jon Corzine.

He won’t concede defeat four days before Tuesday.

“Never,” the former mayor of Glen Ridge told PolitickerNJ.com in a phone conversation this afternoon. “Anybody who’s ever played chess with me knows I wouldn’t do that.”

But the fact that Bergmanson was laid off at his job as a computer engineer at right around the time he tried to launch his gubernatorial campaign deprived him of what he now says would have been the seed money necessary to get traction in his unlikely effort to take down Corzine.

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May 20, 2009 - 7:08am
INSIDE EDGE

In Democratic gubernatorial primary, 20% remain undecided

Today's Quinnipiac University poll is bad news for Carl Bergmanson, who is challenging Gov. Jon Corzine in the Democratic primary.  The former Mayor of Glen Ridge was never expected to beat Corzine, but now he's running fourth, trailing Jeff "Tin Foil" Boss and Roger Bacon, who designs coffee mugs.   Boss and Bacon are at 5%, while Bergmanson is at 4%.

The bad news for Corzine is that he's only polling at 65% in the Democratic primary (60% among Democratic women).   The Governor was at 70% among Democratic primary voters in an April 22 Quinnipiac poll.

One-third of Democrats are not yet ready to commit to vote for him as their party's nominee for Governor, and 20% of Democrats told Quinnipiac that they are undecided.  Most of those undecideds -- if they vote - will probably break for Corzine on June 2.

Corzine's job approvals among Democrats are at 63%-27% and his favorable are at 62%-24%.

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May 20, 2009 - 5:29am

Corzine approvals upside-down, 20% of Democratic primary voters undecided

Gov. Jon Corzine continues to struggle for the approval of New Jersey voters.

Gov. Jon Corzine has an upside-down 38%-53% approval rating and upside-down favorable of 37%-51%, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released this morning.  Among likely Democratic primary voters, Corzine is winning just 65% of the vote against three minor candidates, with 20% of voters still undecided about voting for Corzine in the Democratic primary.

"The good news for Gov. Jon Corzine is that he may have hit bottom and stopped his slide.  Once the primary is over, Corzine will put on his million-dollar golden gloves and start to fight," Richards added.  "Independent voters are the key to this race and by a 2-1 margin they don't like the job Corzine is doing. But all Corzine has to do is win back half the Democrats now voting for Christie and he is back in the race."

Jeff Boss, who claims to have witnessed the federal government planning the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and Phillipsburg businessman Roger Bacon, who designs coffee mugs, are at 5%.  Former Glen Ridge Mayor Carl Bergmanson is at 4%.

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May 13, 2009 - 11:04am
INSIDE EDGE

RGA will play in N.J. primary

While the Democratic Governors Association (DGA) has not yet entered the fray in New Jersey, the Republican Governors Association (RGA) announced today that they would launch television and radio ads they believe highlights Gov. Jon Corzine's "failed economic record."  The ads come just a few days after one Republican gubernatorial candidate, Christopher Christie, criticized reports that the DGA would attempt to influence the GOP primary. 

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