Jack Gibson

August 26, 2008 - 12:48pm

Even with Biden, Van Drew says no

Jeff Van Drew insists he won’t be a late entrant into the second district House race against Republican U.S. Rep. Frank LoBiondo, a district where Democrats think Joe Biden’s presence at the top of the ticket could help a congressional candidate in Cape May, Cumberland, and Salem counties – where some residents watch Delaware TV.  

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July 2, 2008 - 8:15am

Van Drew '08?

South Jersey Republican leaders seem to think that by the time the general election ballots are printed, Cape May City Councilman David Kurkowski won’t be the Democratic candidate for Congress against Frank LoBiondo in the second district.  And LoBiondo, insiders say, seems almost obsessed with the idea that State Sen. Jeff Van Drew will enter the race against him. 

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August 22, 2006 - 11:50am

Cape May GOP wants both Assembly seats in District 1

GOP insiders say that Cape May County Republicans want to nominate two Assembly candidates to run against Democratic incumbents Jefferson Van Drew and Nelson Albano in 2007. Cumberland County has the Senate seat and Republican Nicholas Asselta of Vineland will head the legislative ticket. Trenton Republicans had been pushing a slate of Cape Mayor County Freeholder (and Sea Isle Mayor) Leonard Desiderio and former Cumberland County Freeholder James Sauro.

In a district the George W. Bush carried in 2004, Van Drew won a massive landslide in his bid for a third term last year: he finished almost 9,000 votes ahead of his running mate, nearly 16,000 votes ahead of the Republican incumbent, and more than 24,000 votes in front of the other GOP candidate. Helped by Van Drew's coattails, state Democratic money and numerous mistakes by the state GOP, Albano, a Vineland labor official and advocate for tough drunk driving laws, defeated six-term Republican Jack Gibson by 6,749 votes. Gibson trailed Albano in Cape May County by 107 votes (running more than 2,000 votes behind the GOP Sheriff and County Clerk candidates). Gibson, who lost to Van Drew in 2001 and returned in 2003, is possibly the only Assemblyman in modern New Jersey history to lose the same seat twice.

Republicans were in trouble in April 2005 when their candidate for the second, seat, Upper Township Committeeman Andrew McCrosson, forgot to file his nominating petitions. That left a perennial gadfly, George Cecola, unopposed. State Republicans tried to mount a write-in campaign to nominate Sauro, but without the support of Cape May Republicans, they failed, allowing Cecola to take the second slot.

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November 9, 2005 - 12:20pm

1st District

In a district the George W. Bush carried one year ago, Democrat Jefferson Van Drew won a massive landslide in his bid for a third term: he finished almost 9,000 votes ahead of his running mate, nearly 16,000 votes ahead of the Republican incumbent, and more than 24,000 votes in front of the other GOP candidate. Helped by Van Drew's coattails, state Democratic money and numerous mistakes by the state GOP, Democrat Nelson Albano, a Vineland labor official and advocate for tough drunk driving laws, defeated six-term Republican Jack Gibson by 6,749 votes. Gibson trailed Albano in Cape May County by 107 votes (running more than 2,000 votes behind the GOP Sheriff and County Clerk candidates). Gibson, who lost to Van Drew in 2001 and returned in 2003, is possibly the only Assemblyman in modern New Jersey history to lose the same seat twice.

Republicans were in trouble back in April when their candidate for the second, seat, Upper Township Committeeman Andrew McCrosson, forgot to file his nominating petitions. That left a perennial gadfly, George Cecola, unopposed. State Republicans tried to mount a write-in campaign to nominate former Cumberland County Freeholder James Sauro, but without the support of Cape May Republicans, they failed, allowing Cecola to take the second slot.

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