Mark Alexander

February 15, 2008 - 3:05pm

Korzine’s Kumbaya

Governor Jon Corzine hosted a meeting of key Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama supporters at Drumthwacket this morning in an attempt to seek some unity among New Jersey Democrats as they seek to put together delegate slots.  Joining Corzine were Democratic State Chairman Joseph Cryan, Reps. Rob Andrews and Frank Pallone, Assembly Majority Leader Bonnie Watson Coleman from the  Clinton camp, and Newark Mayor Cory Booker, Jersey City  Mayor Jerramiah Healy, Congressman Steven Rothman, and State Senator Loretta Weinberg from the Obama camp.  Clinton state director Karen Kominsky and Obama state director Mark Alexander were also in the meeting.  The bottom line: not much happened at the cordial meeting, which was dominated mostly be small talk – something slightly typical of a Corzine-led session.

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February 5, 2008 - 9:46pm

Obama supporters try to fight off their disappointment

As news stations projected Sen. Hillary Clinton beating Sen. Barack Obama in New Jersey, Obama supporters at the Wilshire Grand Hotel in West Orange tried to fight off their disappointment.

U.S. Rep. Steve Rothman praised Obama's gutsy performance and reminded the candidate's supporters that few gave the Illinois senator a chance when he began his campaign.

"We had a huge turnout in Jersey City," said Jersey City Mayor Jerramiah Healy, who questioned the performance of new voting machines in his city.

February 4, 2008 - 4:56pm

Obama joins forces with Kennedy in Giants country

On the eve of the New Jersey presidential primary and with most polls showing his rival trying to maintain a slight lead here, Sen. Barack Obama made a last stop in the Garden State today, telling voters that his message of hope is not one of naivete but of common purpose.

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February 2, 2008 - 7:40pm

Obama campaign releases details of Monday rally

Sen. Barack Obama is scheduled to headline a rally at noon on Monday, Feb. 4, one day before New Jersey's presidential primary, according to Mark Alexander, state director of the Obama for president campaign.

The free event will be held at the Izod Center - the arena at the Meadowlands. Doors will open at 10 a.m. 

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February 1, 2008 - 4:27am

The battle beneath the Clinton-Obama battle

Lionel Leach and Jackie Teel, working the phones in Clinton HQ in NewarkLionel Leach and Jackie Teel, working the phones in Clinton HQ in NewarkWhen Sen. Ronald Rice and North Ward Democratic Party boss Steve Adubato find themselves in the same political foxhole, something is either amiss, or it’s a presidential election year.

In certain company, the lead-up to Tuesday’s historic Democratic Primary contest looks like some incidental skirmish in Newark with here-today, gone-tomorrow alliances, played out as a backdrop to that more fervent chess war between local rivals angling for the real epic of some area city council and freeholder races later this year.

Lionel Leach, Rice’s former campaign field director, serves as spokesman for Sen. Hillary Clinton in her campaign’s week-and-a-half old Broad Street headquarters, even as North Ward Democratic Organization campaign firebrand Sen. M. Teresa Ruiz continues to steel the Latino vote for Clinton in rallies statewide. On the heels of his own family fight with Adubato, U.S. Rep. Donald Payne also intends to do some campaigning for Clinton this weekend.

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January 26, 2008 - 10:32pm

Obama student field coordinator celebrates South Carolina win

Naomi Michaelis grew up in Codey country, but it was her immersion in the West Wing TV show, more than West Orange politics, that taught her about the hazards of celebrating a campaign victory too early.

"I was in eighth grade and I was hooked after the teacher mentioned it on the first day of class," said Michaelis. "I would watch that show and continuously hit pause just to pick up on the details."

For more Rutgers University student reaction to the Democratic Party primary results in South Carolina, please see Max Pizarro's video blog.

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January 10, 2008 - 2:46am

Obama energizes Jersey City

Barack Obama at a Jersey City campaign rallyBarack Obama at a Jersey City campaign rally
More than 3,000 people packed a gym at St. Peter’s College in Jersey City on Wednesday to hear Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama.

"My voice is a little hoarse, my eyes are a little bleary, my back is a little sore, but my spirit is strong," he told the crowd. "And I am ready to bring about change in America, how about you?"

Obama reveled in his Jersey City audience, and his campaign staff urged the impassioned crowd to take a more active role in the February 5 primary in a state where Hillary Clinton has won most of the party establishment endorsements and maintains a double digit lead in independent polls.

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January 9, 2008 - 1:53am

Clinton's New Jersey team fights on

John F.X. GrahamJohn F.X. GrahamIt looked like the second coming of Edmund Muskie in New Hampshire as an emotionally glistening-eyed Sen. Hillary Clinton experienced what John Graham said was a "minor meltdown" Monday on her way into the New Hampshire primary.

But in what a redeemed and jubilant Graham a day later called "the greatest comeback in American primary history," Clinton beat Sen. Barack Obama by two percentage points.

"She was down by double digits and written off," said the New Jersey Clinton fund-raising co-chair who stormed New Hampshire over the weekend with a contingent of New Jerseyans that included U.S. representatives Frank Pallone and Bill Pascrell Jr.

At the end of his efforts, Graham was for 48 hours left exhausted and morose over Clinton’s prospects for victory only to rebound in euphoria with the presidential candidate on Tuesday night.

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January 6, 2008 - 5:23am

In Edison, Choi identifies "spirit of innovation" in Obama

Edison Mayor Jun Choi, Assemblyman Neil Cohen, Susan Weir, Vanessa Delago, Lakshmi Sankar, Gail Jones, Julie DiazEdison Mayor Jun Choi, Assemblyman Neil Cohen, Susan Weir, Vanessa Delago, Lakshmi Sankar, Gail Jones, Julie Diaz 

Catapulted by the news out of Iowa, Sen. Barack Obama’s supporters rallied across the state of New Jersey on Saturday, from Trenton to Newark and points in between, bolstering troops and adding new numbers to their ranks.

Speaking to a juked crowd packed into the Edison Family Restaurant, Mayor Jun Choi used the proximity of his town’s Menlo Park section to draw a link between Obama and the ultimate Jersey tech-head, Thomas Alva Edison.

"For seven years, he patented more than 400 technologies that revolutionized the world," the mayor said of the Menlo Park wizard. "We can honestly say this township is the birthplace of the technological revolution because he started the technological revolution."

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January 4, 2008 - 6:49am

Alexander steers Jersey's Obama campaign toward Feb. 5th

Obama Campaign State Director Mark AlexanderObama Campaign State Director Mark Alexander

On the day of the Iowa caucuses, the New Jersey state director of Sen. Barack Obama’s presidential campaign has one immediate strategy, win or lose: on the next morning he’s going to stand up volunteers at different locales: the George Washington Bridge in Fort Lee, Newark Penn Station, Jersey City. They will be out there waving "Obama" signs, staying visible, shouting, working.

"We were always the candidate talking about change, that message hasn’t changed," says Mark Alexander, 41, seated in his West Orange office on Thursday, composed - given the stakes. Obama’s wife said if they didn’t win Iowa, the campaign would be finished.

"Fundamentally," says Alexander, "we are content that we are offering something the American people really want."

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