The Tale of Two
Mayors
On Wednesday October 16, 2013, a special election for the United States
Senator from New Jersey will be held.
The election pits conservative Republican Mayor Steve Lonegan, the
former Mayor of Bogota, against ultra-liberal Mayor Cory Booker of Newark. Mayor Booker has been Mayor of Newark from
July 1, 2006 to the present. He
inherited a bad situation after 20 years of Sharpe James, and, as we shall see,
made it worse. During his first six
months in office while the economy was still strong, the unemployment rate in
Newark varied but trended down from 9.4% in July to 7.4% in December 2006,
while New Jersey’s unemployment rate also dropped from 5.3% to 3.9%. Newark’s unemployment rate climbed to 14.2%
at the bottom of the recession in June of 2009.
However, while the Nations’ economy slowly improved, under Cory Booker’s
policies Newark’s unemployment rate continued to climb, hitting 16.2% in
January 2010, 16.4% in July 2011, 16.4% in July 2012, as well as hitting 15% or
above for 24 months during the Nations’ economic recovery, before coming down
to 14.4% in June of 2013. (1) The number
of persons unemployed in Newark increased during Booker’s stewardship from
8,892 to 15,744 - an atrocious 77% increase! (2) Booker’s economic policies were clearly a
failure for the people of Newark, New Jersey, and now Cory Booker wants to take
these failed policies to the whole country.
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie stated in a speech at Harvard’s
Graduate School of Education that students entering the ninth grade in the
Newark School System in 2011 have only a 29% chance of graduating from high
school in four years, and that the taxpayers are spending on average $24,500
per student. (3) While the calculation
of the cost per student in the Newark Schools, under Booker, may vary between
$23,000 and $24,500 depending on what is included in calculating the cost, the
facts remain that Newark is spending almost twice as much per student as the
suburban schools in New Jersey. Newark may
try to reduce the appearance of the dropout rate by only calculating from those
who enter twelfth grade, but by any measure the dropout rates in Newark Schools
are among the highest in the State and the nation. In addition, the reading levels of those who
do graduate from high school in Newark are, on average, at about the eighth
grade level.
In September 2010, Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook, agreed to donate $100
million in a matching grant to establish a foundation to help the failed Newark
schools. However, a survey of parents of Newark school
children indicated that there has been no noticeable improvement at the
classroom level almost three years later. (4)
The Washington Post reported that among the emails that the Booker
administration was forced to disclose, due to an OPRA request by the ACLU-New
Jersey, was one sent by Booker aide Sharon Macklin on September 19, 2010 that said,
“MZ’s money is not going to the classroom.” (5) What happened to the $100 million, Cory? While some of the money is apparently
earmarked for teachers’ merit pay, which should help out in the classroom, and
some is earmarked for expansion of charter schools, which might relieve some of
the pressure in the classroom, at least two million dollars was spent on
polling, focus groups, mailing and consultants. (6) Was that two million dollars of Zuckerberg’s
money for polling, focus groups, mailing and consultants really to help you get
elected to the Senate, Cory? In any case,
the public school classrooms do not seem to be improving.
Recently, under Cory Booker, the crime rate in Newark has
soared and is running at about twice the national average. Cory Booker should be held responsible for
the surge in crime, since in November 2010, Cory Booker laid off 167 police
officers. (7) These layoffs have been
blamed for the 24% jump in violent crime from 2009 to 2012. (8) Booker laid off those police officers even
after he increased taxes by 20% over the past three years, and he also laid off
some 930 other city workers. (9) Finally,
starting on August 26, 2013 there were ten murders in ten days in Newark. Booker’s rival for the U.S. Senate, Steve
Lonegan, criticized Booker for campaigning while the crime wave was going on. (10) Lonegan said, “While Cory Booker is traveling
the state and taking in money from Hollywood celebrities, the people of Newark
are besieged. Newark needs leadership,
not a mayor who is looking to be promoted to the U.S. Senate for his failed
policies.” Lonegan also said, “Cory Booker should be setting up a command center
to combat the unconscionable amount of violence in his city. (11) Cory Booker now wants to take his failed
policies in Newark and spread them to the whole country.
Cory Booker claims credit for
bringing large corporations to Newark, but he usually leaves out that he did it
at taxpayers’ expense by granting huge tax incentives. For example, the New Jersey Economic
Development Authority has announced that it will grant $250.8 million from the
state’s taxpayers to help Prudential Financial move 2,000 of its employees, who
now work in the Gateway Center in Newark, because the lease is expiring. The move will be just a few blocks to a new
headquarters that, according to its amended application to the EDA, Prudential
proposes to build between Broad Street and Halsey Street in Newark. To qualify for the grant Prudential does have
to agree to add 400 workers, for about $627,000 in taxpayer-funded subsidy per
new employee. (12) Then there is the
controversy that in addition to tax abatements, Panasonic received a $102.4
million grant from the EDA for Panasonic to move its headquarters and 800
employees from Secaucus ten miles to Newark without creating any new jobs. The Panasonic taxpayer-funded incentives have
been called a zero sum game. Newark
gains, while Secaucus and the taxpayers of New Jersey lose. (13) In addition, Pitney-Bowes will receive
“Business Relocation and Economic Assistance” as well as “Business Employment
Incentive Program” grants to move 180 jobs to Newark and a promise to add 25
more jobs. The controversy stems from
the fact that Pitney-Bowes is moving an international mail sorting operation
that had to be near an international airport, such as Newark Liberty
International Airport, and didn’t need all of the taxpayer grants to pick a location
near that airport. (14) When Cory
Booker brags about “economic development,” he is really talking about
“corporate welfare” and “crony capitalism.”
While Booker was arranging
taxpayer-funded grants and tax abatements for big corporations, he was imposing
huge tax increases on small businesses in Newark, because tax abatements for
the likes of Panasonic amount to tax increases for small business owners. For example, Ivo Fernandes had the tax
appraised value on his mechanic’s shop more than double to $1.1 million. Pedro Nogueira’s restaurant, Taste of
Portugal, had its value raised from $400,000 to $1.3 million. Mr. Breda, who had his six-unit apartment’s
appraisal more than double, said, “They are robbing the people.” (15)
Cory Booker’s policies are not good for the people of Newark, and they certainly
would not be good for the people of America.
Steve Lonegan served as Mayor of Bogota, New Jersey from
1995 to 2007. Upon taking office, he immediately
cut municipal spending, by prioritizing, downsizing, and eliminating wasteful
and duplicative spending. He privatized
some functions and instituted a more cost-efficient, user-friendly government. As a result, Bogota's municipal spending
remained below the rate of inflation for the entire 12 years that Steve served
as the Mayor of Bogota. He also froze the town’s debt and kept tax increases
far below inflation, despite massive state mandates and aid reductions to
suburban towns like Bogota. Under Steve,
the City Council pushed back when each branch of the town government naturally
claimed they needed more money. However,
Steve, a former businessman, had them submit three budgets showing various
levels of savings. Then he used his
skill as a businessman and those budgets to find ways to save the taxpayers’
money. Although he was constantly
challenged by his municipal employees and their unions, who, as usual, wanted
bigger government and more spending of taxpayers’ money on themselves, Steve
was re-elected twice by double-digit margins in a town that is two-to-one
Democrat. Steve Lonegan obtained these
results at the polls by spending a substantial amount of time communicating
with voters of both parties about his proposals and the reasons for his proposals. He was therefore able to build a consensus. (16)
Steve
Lonegan has always put the taxpayer first.
Steve even wrote a book entitled “Putting Taxpayers First.” But Steve doesn’t just talk and write about
putting the taxpayers first, he has practiced it. Steve Lonegan led the fight to stop Gov. Jon
Corzine from selling off New Jersey’s toll roads to a public benefit corporation
that would then sell bonds backed by the toll revenue, along with substantial
rights to increase tolls to protect the corporation’s Wall Street investors,
but hurt New Jersey residents paying the tolls.
Corzine’s Wall Street friends
would have been able to profit by selling the bonds. (17)
Steve
also led the fight to take New Jersey out of Jon Corzine’s Regional Greenhouse
Gas Initiative (RGGI) that really amounted to a tax on the use of carbon fuels
by requiring electric and industrial companies to buy carbon credits at secret
auctions. Then, the companies passed the
cost of the carbon credits on to customers buried in the cost of electricity
and industrial products without the customer even knowing it. (18) Some companies were even considering leaving
New Jersey, and among reasons cited were the higher utility costs caused by
RGGI. For example, Ocean Spray
Cranberries, Inc. announced that it was moving its Bordentown, New Jersey
cranberry concentrate processing plant to Pennsylvania, stating that
Pennsylvania had lower utility costs as one of the reasons. You see, Pennsylvania did not join RGGI and
was keeping its utility costs down. (19)
Assemblywoman Alison McHose (R, LD 24) introduced the first legislation
to take New Jersey out of RGGI. Steve
Lonegan worked statewide to obtain support for the legislation from both
parties. Finally, as momentum built to
get New Jersey out of this carbon tax scheme, Governor Chris Christie took New
Jersey out of RGGI. (20)
Steve
fought for taxpayers again when New Jersey passed the Offshore Wind Development
Act, which would amount to a $100 million taxpayer-subsidized offshore wind
scheme for just the first phase. It was
rated as one of the most expensive wind projects in the nation. The project would produce electricity at the
highest rate by far of any method of producing electricity. (21) This offshore wind project would have
substantially increased the cost of electricity to New Jersey residents and
businesses. Once again, Steve Lonegan
put the taxpayers and rate payers of New Jersey first and fought the offshore
wind project. His efforts included
holding a rally on the beach in Asbury Park New Jersey to oppose the $100
million cost just to start the project. (22)
The highly expensive project appears to be stalled out at this time and
may not be completed. (23)
When
New Jersey started the practice of issuing bonds without the voter approval required
by the New Jersey State Constitution, Steve brought various lawsuits against the
State to stop the State from committing such violations of the State
Constitution. Mayor Steve Lonegan was a
co-plaintiff in the lawsuit of Lance, et al. v. McGreevey et al., in
which the New Jersey Supreme Court held that the State could not issue bonds to
fund general expenses in order to balance an annual budget.
Steve
Lonegan is running on the positive messages of Liberty, the Free Market System,
The Constitution and the Rule of Law. He
has always put the taxpayer first over special interest groups, high taxes and
big government. He has led multiple statewide
campaigns on behalf of all New Jersey taxpayers and had twelve highly
successful years as Mayor of Bogota, keeping the tax burden on the residents of
Bogota under control, so that businesses and the town could prosper. One could say that the twelve years that
Steve Lonegan was the Mayor of Bogota were among the best of times for Bogota.
Cory Booker has had about seven years as Mayor of Newark during which his policies increased taxes, increased unemployment, increased the crime rate, increased the failure rate of the schools and hurt local businesses and the local economy, while the rest of the State and the country have continued to slowly recover from the last recession. It appears that Cory Booker always puts special interest groups and the Liberal policies of the Democrat Party and of President Obama first, even though these special interests and policies hurt the residents of Newark. Aside from the riots of 1967, one could say that the seven years that Cory Booker has been the Mayor of Newark were among the worst of times for Newark.
(1) Homefacts.com/unemployment/New-Jersey,
years 2008-2013.
(2) Phil
Kerpen, “Cory Booker’s Record of Economic Failure,” Townhall.com,
8/8/13.
(3) “Newark
High Schools Have a 29% Graduation Rate—Gov. Christie,” By GardenStateGossip,
gardenstategossip.wordpress.com, 6/15/11.
(4) Video,
“Cory Booker: A Record 0f Failure,” posted by Phil Kerpen, 8/17/13.
(5) Valerie
Strauss, “The secret e-mails about Mark Zuckerberg’s $100 million donation to
Newark schools,” The Washington Post, 1/6/13.
(6) Lisa
Fleisher, “Booker, Facebook Emails About $100 Million School Gift Released,” The
Wall Street Journal, blogs.wsj.com/metropolis, 12/25/12.
(7) “Newark
to Lay Off 167 Police Officers November 30,” by WNYC News, wnyc.org,
11/23/10.
(8) Phil
Kerpen, “Cory Booker’s Record of Economic Failure,” Id.
(9) Kate
Zernike, “Promise vs. Reality in Newark on Mayor’s Watch,” The New York
Times, 12/13/12.
(10)
James Queally and David Giambusso, “Ten days, 10 dead: Shooting deaths plague
Newark,” The Star-Ledger, 9/5/13.
(11) Steve Lonegan, “Lonegan Responds to Newark
Murder Spree,” LONEGAN FOR SENATE NEWS, loneganforsenate.com,
9/4/13.
(12) Sarah Portlock, “Prudential plans to build
new, $444M skyscraper in downtown Newark,” nj.com, 3/16/12, update 3/20/13.
(13) Naomi Bressler, “Panasonic’s move to Newark
would be a zero sum game,” New Jersey Policy Perspective, njpp.org,
2/17/11.
(14) David Jones, “Booker to announce move of
Pitney Bowes international mail center to Newark,” The Real Deal, therealdeal.com,
2/9/10.
(15) Nate Schweber, “Jump in Land Assessments
Shocks Newark Business Owners,” The New York Times, 3/25/13, nytimes.com,
3/26/13.
(16) “Steve Lonegan,” Wikipedia, Last modified
9/13/13; “About Steve Lonegan,” Loneganforsenate.com .
(17) Id.
(18) Press Release: Americans For Prosperity: “RGGI, The $1 Billion Failure,” 12/9/11.
(19) Joseph N. DiStefano, “Ocean Spray moving to
PA, says NJ too expensive.” Philly.com, 5/5/11.
(20) Steven Reilly, “Christie dumps ‘green’
program,” New Jersey Herald, 5/27/11.
(21) Mike Proto, “End subsidies for green energy
boondoggles,” nj.com, 9/18/12.
(22) “Windmills: is Chris Christie kidding?” conservativenewsandviews.com,
6/15/12.
(23) Tom Johnson, “STATE LETS $100M TAX CREDIT FOR
OFFSHORE WIND EXPIRE,” NJSPOTLIGHT, njspotlight.com, 3/17/13.