In a city that Jon Corzine carried 74%-22% four years ago, eight of the nine elected members of the Elizabeth Board of Education today endorsed Republican Christopher Christie for Governor.
"Many of the Board members endorsing Chris today are Democrats, but we all know that when it comes to providing a quality education and a hopeful future for our children, party and politics aren't a factor," said school board president Francisco Gonzalez. "Governor Corzine has failed our kids in the last four years when it comes to education policy in our state and it is time for a change in leadership if we're going to ensure our children receive the quality education they deserve."
Joining Gonzalez in backing the Republican candidate are Carlos Trujillo Raul Burgos, Armando DaSilva, Rafael Fajardo, Marie Lynn Munn, Fernando Nazco and Elcy Castill-Ospina. Joining the elected officials were former Union County Freeholder Donald Goncalves, former Elizabeth City Councilman Robert Jaspan, and former Board of Education member Tony Monteiro. All three are Democrats.
In 2005, Corzine defeated Republican Douglas Forrester by 8,014 votes in Elizabeth, one of the state's largest Democratic strongholds.
The Christie campaign says the mostly Democratic school board members are frustrated with Corzine's failure to assure funding for critical education programs as their reason for supporting the GOP candidate.
"Corzine heavily favored stop-gap measures to fill the gaping holes in his FY 2010 budget, including funding roughly 10 percent of the education budget with one-time federal stimulus funds. This reckless accounting puts New Jersey children's education at risk by funding the education budget with $1 billion that will not be there next year," the Christie campaign said in a statement.
State Sen. Raymond Lesniak (D-Elizabeth) says that Christie's new supporters are the "same Board Members were recently slapped around by the New Jersey Appellate Division for spending over $80,000 of tax dollars for political purposes"
"If they cared about education instead of politics, they wouldn't be supporting Christie who would turn down $2 billion of federal funds for education," Lesniak told PolitickerNJ.com.
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“To their credit, public officials today are very sensitive to concerns among the citizenry toward their accepting gifts. They want to avoid even the appearance of being influenced.” -- ELEC Executive Director Jeffrey Brindle, who announced yesterday that benefit spending by lobbyists on legislatros has dropped from $163,375 in 1992 to $9,728 in 2009.
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