PLAINFIELD CELEBRATES
DEMOCRATIC WINS
Plainfield Democrats celebrated an excellent election
yesterday, and I want to acknowledge and thank each and every one of the
individuals whose hard work made it possible. In Plainfield City,
we brought in high numbers for our Candidates for U.S. Senate and Congress. Our
unofficial count shows that 6,797 Plainfield
voters supported Cory Booker, where 456 supported his opponent Jeff Bell. 6,179
Plainfield
voters approved Bonnie Watson Coleman for Congress, where Alieta Eck received
675 votes. Column “A” Democrats Gloria
Taylor, Rebecca Williams and Diane Toliver all won their races for seats in
Plainfield City Council, with similar high margins. I hope that our city is
able to respond to the positive energy that our Democratic voters brought with
them to the polls, and work together to move this city forward.
How should we move forward? Plainfield
Democratic voters made it abundantly clear last Tuesday: voters care about good
policy more than petty politics, both in our city and in Washington. They have chosen to support Booker
and Watson Coleman, candidates for National office that will prioritize working
for concrete results on behalf of the hard-working citizens of New Jersey over the
cynical politics of government shutdown and negativity that have become
hallmarks of the Republican Party. I hope that our Plainfield elected officials
remember that they won their seats because the voters in Plainfield remain
dedicated to the values of our Democratic Party: the belief that our
communities only prosper if we share opportunity equitably; a commitment to
investing in education, infrastructure and healthcare; and that every human
being, regardless of the conditions of their birth, is a worthy investment in
our shared future.
For my part, I plan to
continue to fight hard in Trenton on behalf of Plainfield voters and all
voters in the 22nd District in my role as Speaker Pro Tempore of the
General Assembly, member of the Health and Senior Services Committee, and Chair
of the Housing and Community Development Committee. I challenge our local Plainfield representative
to move away from the negativity that has surfaced in some of their blogs, and
bring the conversation back to policy. If any local citizen or elected official
wants to talk about policy that they believe will benefit our community, I
encourage you to call my office and we will see if we can make it happen.
I would like to clarify something. I am a man that balances
several distinct roles. I am an elected official, and I am Chairman of the
Union County Democratic Committee. I am also an individual, private citizen who
lives in and cares about Plainfield
who is devoted to the Democratic values that make our Country great. As an
individual citizen, I chose to support a team of candidates for the recent Plainfield
Board of Education race who I felt share in my personal values: Michael Horn,
Norman Ortega, and Tania
Center. I did this as an
individual who believes that our children deserve more than the pettiness that often
emerges in political campaigns. For that reason, I insisted upon supporting these
candidates only as an individual, and kept politics totally out of it: obviously,
absolutely no funds from the Plainfield City Democratic Committee were used for
any Board of Education candidate. Horn, Ortega and Center organized their own
campaigns, raised their own funds, and printed their own, independent
literature. As a citizen of Plainfield,
I am sad to see that candidates who I believe care deeply for our children lost
narrowly. As an individual citizen, however, I only had one vote to cast, not
the 61 votes that would have flipped the Board of Education election the other
way.
In closing, I look forward to seeing Plainfield move forward, and I truly believe
that we should turn toward out voters and away from petty, negative politics.
Let’s listen closely to the rational voices of our Citizens and let the petty
negativity of the blogs fade into the background as we move together toward our
shared future.