
Senate President Richard Codey (D-Roseland) took the preemptive step today of announcing that he is the target of an opposition researcher.
Christopher Lyon, who typically works for Republican candidates, filed an OPRA request for Codey's financial disclosure forms going back to 1974 - his first year in the legislature. In a press release, Codey - while not naming anyone - insinuated that Lyon is connected to rival Democrats who are challenging him for the senate presidency.
Senate Majority Leader Stephen Sweeney (D-West Deptford), who is backed by South Jersey power broker George Norcross, is taking on Codey in an intra-party battle that has played out in the media for the last month.
"This is typical of what you go through when you oppose certain people in New Jersey. It's despicable," said Codey. "I'm not a candidate for public office, so who would have a motive to do this? It also begs the question of whether anyone who would choose to associate themselves with such a morally reprehensible figure is cut from the same cloth."
Codey has in the past explicitly charged Norcross with being behind opposition research against him. After attorney Mark Sheridan - who is general counsel to the Republican State Committee - filed dozens of OPRA requests regarding Codey's former insurance company's contract with various municipalities, Codey told the Star-Ledger that he suspected Sheridan was working at the behest of Norcross. Sheridan denied it, telling the paper they were made on behalf of an unrelated client.
Lyon's last known foray into New Jersey politics was on behalf of state Sen. Tom Kean, Jr.'s (R-Westfield) 2006 U.S. Senate campaign against Bob Menendez (D-Hoboken), when he tracked down a taped recording of Menendez ally Donald Scarinci asking a Hudson County contractor to hire someone as a "favor" to Menendez.
Reached by phone, Lyon responded generally to Codey's release and would not say who hired him.
"I'm not going to dignify it with a comment other than it's just plain silly," he said.
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"The history of failed attempts at health care reform reaches back decades. But more important than the historical achievement is what the reformed system will do for everyday Americans. We aren't just making history, we are making a better health care system." -- U.S. Rep. Frank Pallone (D-Long Branch), on the passage of health care reform legislation.
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