Charles Bell

November 3, 2009 - 11:34am

Bell and Osborne united for Dem ticket, but Bell v. Osborne created more local energy

Central Ward Councilman Charles Bell last year on the campaign trail.

NEWARK- A year ago they were fighting each other, but their local rivalry in the Central Ward created sparks from below that ignited  Barack Obama fervor from above to create an excellent environment for high Democratic Party turnout in New Jersey's biggest city.

This year, Central Ward Councilman Charles Bell and the man he defeated, labor leader Eddie Osborne, are on the same team and both seeing the battle develop from the same forward position.

"It's moderate turnout compared to last year, nothing like Obama," Bell said of Election Day turnout. "I will say this, though: compared to most gubernatorial years, turnout is pretty good."

Bell admitted that the Central Ward has been an organizational trouble spot in Newark for the Corzine campaign.

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November 1, 2009 - 2:11pm

Obama comes in by air, where mechanical problems hardly ideal on the ground

NEWARK - As inspirational as President Barack Obama remains in Newark, politics in this city still hinges on local mechanics - and there are undeniably several factors contributing to a lack of good structural pre-conditions for this governor's race.

Take the Central Ward.

Last year at this time the city was blanketed with foot soldiers selling the local candidacies of Eddie Osborne and Charles Bell.

Each campaign had octopus arms around the presidential candidacy of Obama who, by the way, was on the ballot - for real.

Other Central Ward contenders were in the race, each one anxious to prove why he or she actually best encapsulated change in the mold of the presidential candidate, and each one embodying a key voter demographic.

That battle at the grassroots and ward level created the perfect atmospherics for top-down, bottom-up fusion and symbiosis.

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August 13, 2009 - 1:14pm

With Booker's blessing, White poised to lead Bell's staff in Booker-Bell alliance

Central Ward Councilman Charles Bell

City Hall sources confirmed today that not only is Central Ward Councilman Charles Bell a done deal as Mayor Cory Booker's Central Ward candidate, but that Booker protege Nakia J. White will serve as Bell's chief-of-staff.

A victor in a special 2008 election to fill the unexpired term of ousted Councilwoman Dana Rone, Bell is telling his allies he's ready to run for a full, four-year term, and now he has Booker in his corner.

After losing her Central Ward bid to Bell last year, White ran for a School Board seat this spring and won. 

The death of Dwight Brown, Bell's chief of staff, earlier this summer created the key opening at his soffice which sources say White is poised to fill.

As late as this week, White was pondering her options and considering challenging Bell for the Central Ward council seat. Her name remains on the Booker Team's state Elections Law Enforcement Commission (ELEC) filing as the mayor's Central Ward candidate, but Booker put her there simply as a placeholder while he and his operatives hammered out the deal with Bell, sources say.

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August 12, 2009 - 2:26pm

Adubato opens school with Corzine, Booker blessings after hard Central Ward fight

North Ward Democratic leader Steve Adubato, left, and Gov. Jon Corzine last year.

NEWARK - It was a day of celebration in the Central Ward for North Ward stalwart Steve Adubato, who personally cut the ribbon on the Robert Treat Academy-Central on William Street for kindergarteners and first graders.

Adubato nearly a year ago read in Barack Obama's presidential victory a macrocosm of his own efforts citywide.

The way the North Warder figured, if Obama as an African American could secure entire white voter towns, then why should Adubato as a white feel trepidatious about going full bore in areas where black voters dominate; areas like the Central Ward, for example, where the end of the Mayor Sharpe James era left a political crater that both Adubato and James successor Mayor Cory Booker both eagerly tried to fill.

Newark is composed of five wards, and although a phys ed teacher by trade, James knew math well enough to know that if he controlled three wards, he could maintain control of his domain, and he did: the West, the South and the Central.

His departure from the scene two years ago tilted more South Ward power into the hands of Payne family, and enabled state Sen. Ronald Rice (D-Newark) to consolidate power in the West.

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August 12, 2009 - 1:27pm

Sources: Booker close to sealing deal with Bell for Central Ward run

Booker today in the Central Ward.

NEWARK - Many a cupped hand over the phone conversation has gone on in the Central Ward about who Mayor Cory Booker plans to run next year in that sprawling fifth of the city where he once served as councilman.

Today, at a ribbon cutting ceremony in the Central Ward for Steve Adubato's new Robert Treat Academy-Central on William Street, Booker all but affixed his imprimatur to the reelection of Councilman Charles Bell.

"The stars have aligned from Charlie Bell all the way to Barack Obama," crooned Booker.

Decked in a gold suit and matching hat, Bell beamed in the front row of a packed auditorium.

"Like Councilman Bell said, 'It's just about getting it done,'" Booker added to the issue of education.

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August 10, 2009 - 11:56am

Newark's Central Ward again a battleground

Council President Mildred Crump, left, with her ally, School Board member Nakea White.

NEWARK- Along with the South Ward, where organizer Ras Baraka is building to mount an aggressive challenge of South Ward Councilman Oscar James II, the central ward again looms as a battleground in the Newark 2010 municipal race, with one candidate a definite go and two others hovering near the starting gate.

The Booker Team's filing report shows the mayor listing freshman School Board member Nakea White as his ticket mate for central ward council, but White won't comment about whether that means she's a lock to run next year.

That may be in no small part because Central Ward Councilman Charles Bell says he's ready to run to secure a full term after defeating Booker's candidate last year in a special election war.

His decision is not definitive, but very close.

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  • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2009
    Winners:
    Jerome Jewell, , JON CORZINE, , Charles Bell, , Rick Merkt, , Eric Scott, , , , , , , , , , ,
    Losers:
    Fred Butler, JAMES PERRY, John Inglesino, ANTHONY BUCCO JR., Maurice Gallipoli
  • May 28, 2009 - 8:43am
    INSIDE EDGE

    Bell expected to run on Booker ticket next year

    Sources close to Newark Mayor Cory Booker say that Central Ward Councilman Charlie Bell - who bested Booker-backed Eddie Osborne in a November 2008 special election to replace ousted Councilwoman Dana Rone - has cut a deal to run on the Booker Team's ticket in next year's municipal elections.  The deal was reportedly negotiated a few days ago over golf between Bell, Booker's former law partner and (ex-Pittsburgh Steeler) Elnardo Webster, and campaign manager Pablo Fonseca.

    This leaves only one real race in Newark next year, between South Ward Councilman Oscar James and former Councilman Ras Baraka.  Sources say Booker expects to have between $5 and $7 million by the end of the year and is committed to spend as much as necessary to ensure a South Ward victory.  James is a favorite of Booker and Webster.

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    February 9, 2009 - 5:06pm

    The guru, the star, and Oprah

    Newark Mayor Cory Booker

    NEWARK – Television star Oprah Winfrey’s decision this month to drop a $500,000 gift on Steve Adubato’s North Ward Center effectively stamps out the fuse on a standoff between the North Ward Democratic leader and Winfrey confidante Mayor Cory Booker, in a resolution that underscores the political strengths of the two main combatants.

    If Adubato, native Newarker and a grizzled guru now in his seventies, proved his relevance by waging a war in the streets and alleys he has known since childhood, Booker the Bergen County outsider turned Newark activist and statewide star, proved his manna from Heaven connections. 

    And the community won in the end, according to sources from both camps, as Adubato’s Blue Ribbon charter school, the Robert Treat Academy - whose students consistently rate higher math and science test scores than students in schools in all of urban New Jersey and all of Essex County - stands to get an unprecedented infusion of funds.

    The contribution came with a back story.  

    For almost as long as Booker’s been in office, Adubato poked, prodded, cajoled, and chest-thumped in the face of the young star’s particular power, and now sources close to the North Ward leader say he intends to endorse the first term mayor for reelection next year.

    It’s been an odd relationship.

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    November 18, 2008 - 9:48am

    Bell assumes office in Central Ward, delivers message to Booker

    Taking a shot at the campaign run against him by the Laborers and the allies of Mayor Cory Booker, Central Ward Councilman Charles Bell at his swearing-on ceremony in City Hall last night noted gratefully that money and turkeys don’t vote.

    The crack was a reference to Eddie Osborne campaign’s massive GOTV operation, which included the coordinated distribution to of hundreds of early Thanksgiving turkeys.

    Officially assuming the seat left occupied by former Central Ward Councilwoman Dana Rone, Bell seized the opportunity to instruct the mayor, who was not in attendance.

    The new councilman disapproved of the tone of the campaign, expressed in hand and pole signs with the words: “Charles Bell equals corruption and waste.”

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