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MLive Subscriber Exclusive

 Mike Scott | NJ Advance Media

Thursday, March 27, 2025 

by Brent Johnson, NJ Advance Media

 

We rate the candidates for governor

Didn’t we just go through a hellish election year? Well, buckle up again.

 

Every year in Jersey is an election year, and this is a big one. One of the biggest in decades. We’re talking Taylor Swift big. Shohei Ohtani big. "Severance" big.

 

It’s the race for New Jersey's next governor, a job that packs power and patronage unmatched by any state capital in America. And everyone with a name — and some whose names I hardly knew before — are lining up for it.

 

With Phil Murphy in his last year, we have primary scraps between Democrats of all shapes and sizes, Republicans who hate Donald Trump and those who worship him, big-city mayors, lawmakers from Trenton and Washington, a union leader, a shock jock, and even a standup comic.  

All bets are off. Almost everyone has a path to victory. Party bosses are sidelined (a little bit, at least) because the infamous county line is gone and they can no longer relegate candidates they don’t like to “Siberia” on primary ballots.
Republicans are banking on both Murphy fatigue and history. No party has held the governor's office here for three straight terms since just before The Beatles arrived on our shores (that's 1961). But the daily Trump-filled drama from D.C. and still-shaky economy are keeping everyone on their toes and making Democrats feel less anxious. Just a little.

Jersey has a big national spotlight shining on all of it because only one other state — Virginia — is holding a governor's contest this year. That means we're a a litmus test for how voters view the first 10 months of Trump's second term. 

The massive field for the June 10 primary was finalized Monday. Republican truck driver turned former lawmaker Ed Durr was the only one to drop out. Eleven others — six Democrats, five Republicans — will battle it out over the next 10 weeks. 

With TV ads starting to spread, here's my breakdown of 2025: New Jersey Gubernatorial Madness, based on what I'm hearing from sources ...

 

DEMOCRATS

 

RAS BARAKA,Newark mayor

Superpowers: Leads Jersey's largest city and is vying to become the first Black governor in a diverse state ... Has left-leaning policies that appeal to progressive primary voters and aggressively attacked Trump — especially on immigration — at a time polls show Democrats want to fight back harder ... Proved in the first debate he's good with words (after all, he's the son of poet Amiri Baraka) ... It's all helped him unexpectedly emerge as one of the primary's top two contenders. 

Kryptonite: Another Essex County candidate, Mikie Sherrill, has the backing — and money — of establishment Democrats ... While Democrats privately see Baraka as the one who could draw the most votes away from her, their fear is Baraka is too far-left to win a largely moderate state in November.

 

STEVE FULOP,  Jersey City mayor

Superpowers: First candidate out of the gate and running an anti-establishment campaign in the vein of Andy Kim's Senate victory last year ... Active on social media and the town hall circuit ... Has rolled out a string of detailed policy positions and fielded his own slate of Assembly candidates, who have a real shot now that the line is kaput ... Has raised $3 million so far ... Would be Jersey's first Jewish governor ... Considered a real surprise not to be counted out in rage-against-the-machine era of politics.

Kryptonite: Can he steal enough of the progressive lane to box out Baraka, or will they split the vote? ... Has also made enough enemies among top Democrats who could work overtime to stunt him. And some view his outsider stances as a cynical ploy from a career politician ... Social media excitement doesn't always equal votes.

 

JOSH GOTTHEIMER, U.S. Representative from Bergen County

Superpowers: Raises more money than God ($3 million so far and counting), which he's using to plaster the region with TV ads. That means a lot in a state sandwiched between New York and Philly, with no media market of its own ... He's a Democrat promising to cut your taxes in a tough economy ... Would  be Jersey's first Jewish governor.

Kryptonite: Insiders were expecting this to be a Congress-colored race between him and Sherrill, but Gottheimer hasn't taken off in polls ... Many progressives don't like him, which could be a dagger in the primary ... Critics doubt the validity of his tax-cut plan. 

 

MIKIE SHERRILL, U.S. Representative from Essex County

Superpowers: The lone woman in the race, aiming to become only the second female to become Jersey's governor … Has the biggest array of the state's powerful Dems supporting her and won the majority of county party endorsements ... Insiders like her bullet points in a general election: former Navy helicopter pilot, former federal prosecutor, mother of four ... Beginning to go after Trump more and hasn't even started putting out TV ads yet.

Kryptonite: As we learned from Tammy Murphy last year, being the establishment pick can backfire badly in this climate. And how much do those endorsements even matter without the line? ... Some insiders fear GOP critics could attack her as Murphy administration part 2, noting players in the governor's orbit support her ... Some worry she's too moderate or even too stilted to truly catch fire.

 

SEAN SPILLER, president of the New Jersey Education Association teacher’s union, ex Montclair mayor

Superpowers: Money. Lots of it (at least $35 million worth) because he has the support of super PAC of his employer, the state's largest teacher's union. That has funded the many billboards, mailers, and TV ads you have may seen and helped him show up higher than expected in polls .... Born in Jamaica, he would be the state’s first Black governor ... Vows to focus on education.

Kryptonite: He still has low name ID, which is why you're seeing all those ads ... A number of teachers and good-government advocates aren't happy he is running a campaign funded by union dues. ... Didn't qualify for the primary debate stage under the state's matching funds program because outside groups and not his campaign are raising the money.

 

STEVE SWEENEY, former state Senate president

Superpowers: Once one of state’s most powerful elected officials until he was unexpectedly toppled by Ed Durr, then an unknown truck driver, four years ago. Ironically may have gotten more name ID because of it ... Running as a moderate, even conservative-leaning Democrat on immigration and taxes, and some Republicans see him as the toughest general-election opponent ... Lone Democrat from South Jersey in the race, with the most county party endorsements below Trenton, which could make him a threat in a splintered primary ... Top ally and benefactor, powerbroker George Norcross, is no longer under indictment.

Kryptonite: His 2021 loss was historic and stripped him of his power … Still disliked by many public-worker unions and progressive Democrats after reworking pensions and other policies in collaboration with Chris Christie … The only Dem in the race with net-negative favorability marks in a recent poll ... South Jersey's voter rolls aren't as robust as the north's.

 

REPUBLICANS

 

JUSTIN BARBERA,contractor

Superpowers: Impressively managed to file 2,817 petition signatures to run, even after the state upped the requirement this year from 1,000 to 2,500.

Kryptonite: Nobody knows who he is, other than that he's a contractor from Burlington County who ran unsuccessfully as an independent last year for Andy Kim's old seat in the House ... We get a pie-in-the-sky candidate like this every cycle. 

 

JON BRAMNICK,state senator from Union County

Superpowers: Centrist who criticizes Trump in a blue-leaning state. Gov. Murphy recently told me Bramnick is a vintage Jersey Republican that Democrats would least want to face this fall ... His law firm’s billboard dot Jersey highways and he’s spent years moonlighting as a standup comic (no joke) ... Would be Jersey's first Jewish governor.

Kryptonite: Likely a tough go getting to the general election as a moderate with the growing, Trump-loving Republican base these days. The GOP primary has become a knife fight over loyalty to the president, especially after his surprising showing in Jersey last year ... So far, hasn't registered high up in public-opinion polls.

 

JACK CIATTARELLI, ex-Assemblyman from Somerset County

Superpowers: Has spent years building name recognition. A third time running for gov could be the charm after coming just 3 points away from unseating Murphy in 2021 … A moderate, fiscally focused lawmaker during his time in Trenton, he's upped his praise of Trump in recent years, which could help him with the GOP base. Even posed for a photo with Trump during a meeting in Bedminster last weekend ... Has led easily in most polls so far. Many Republican insiders (and Democrats) say this is his primary — and maybe even general election — to lose.

Kryptonite: Already been bashed by the right as an establishment pick who called Trump a "charlatan" 10 years ago. They also note he has already lost twice ...  If Trump endorses his closest opponent, Bill Spadea, it could end his frontrunner status ... Recent embrace and photo-op with Trump could come back to haunt him in the general if the president keeps slipping in polls here.

MARIO KRANJAC, former mayor of Englewood Cliffs

Superpowers: A conservative who casts himself as the one most aligned with the president. Though The Star-Ledger once derided him as a "Trumpy mayor," he now wears that badge with pride.

Kryptonite: Little name ID. He also filed only 35 more signatures than the 2,500 required to get on the ballot. That means it's possible Spadea, another Trump-centric candidate, could challenge his petitions. Kranjac's team said it's still waiting for more signatures to be approved. Spadea's camp sees Kranjac as a an attempt to siphon votes away from Spadea.

 

BILL SPADEA, former radio host for NJ 101.5-FM

Superpowers: A one-time congressional candidate and TV personality who spent a decade hosting a morning drive-time show on the state's largest radio station. Gave him a mighty big megaphone to attract conservative primary voters  ... Pitching himself as an unapologetic Trump backer and grassroots outsider who'd upend the system. The president was a guest on his show last year and thanked Spadea for his support while chiding chief rival Ciattarelli ... Has polled a distant second so far, but a Trump endorsement could catapult him.

Kryptonite: Left his radio show in January ... Also criticized Trump in the past, calling his first term a failure. I'm told Ciattarelli allies have let the president know that ... Many Republican insiders say he’d be kiss of death for the general election, say his controversial views on issues such as COVID-19 and the 2020 election are too far-right.

 

NJ Advance Media

 

There will be someone new in the governor's office in Trenton come January. Jersey voters choose a new leader this year.

 

Hot takes

  • Trump's Bedminster club was ground zero this weekend for the Republican side of the governor's race. The president met with the top two contenders, Jack Ciattarelli and Bill Spadea — and the backstory is high drama. I recently reported about the backroom brawl over Trump's endorsement, with Spadea jockeying for it and Ciattarelli hoping at least Trump stays neutral. Ciattarelli allies had been working on a meeting with the president, and they jumped when they learned Trump would be at his club Friday for the first time since returning to office. Issue was: Ciattarelli was scheduled to be at the NJ GOP Summit in Atlantic City that day. And have you ever seen the rush-hour traffic on 287? So the campaign, sources say, chartered a helicopter to ferry Ciattarelli from A.C. He met briefly with Trump (and Elon Musk) over dinner, snapped a photo with him, and the president gave him the green light to post it on social media, I'm told. Jersey Twitter caught fire. Two days later, word broke that Spadea also met with Trump, on Saturday in a restaurant at the club. So far, no pictures of that. Spadea's camp said they want to keep that conversation private. Ciattarelli's camp also declined comment. Whether an endorsement will come for either side? "Who knows," one GOP operative said. The line I keep hearing: Those who claim to know Trump's plans really don't know Trump.

     

  • The Trump intrigue didn't stop there. Spadea nabbed the endorsement of Gen. Michael Flynn, Trump's former national security adviser. Ciattarelli got the backing of state Sens. Joe Pennachio and Mike Testa, who co-ran Trump's 2020 campaign in Jersey. Also, one of Spadea's former colleagues at New Jersey 101.5 radio, host Jeff Deminski,said on air Ciattarelli "would be my choice," with Jon Bramnick coming in second. Then there's Ed Durr, who said in a statement he ended his campaign in part so Spadea could have the resources to "carry a conservative message to November.” Durr later denied endorsing Spadea. Two days later, he appeared at Spadea's birthday bash. 

  • Trump made more Jersey news this week, naming his former defense attorney and White House counselor Alina Habba as the state's interim U.S. attorney (or top federal prosecutor). Trump fans celebrated, while Democrats were uneasy because Habba — a Summit native with a law office near Trump's Bedminster club — has promised revenge on Trump's enemies. Critics also pointed to allegations she tried to silence a sexual harassment victim and her praise of the controversial Andrew Tate. Another Jersey Republican was interested in the job: Mike Testa. But I've heard the a pro-Trump state senator was hurt by the fact he worked last year on the U.S. Senate campaign of Curtis Bashaw, who beat Trump-backed candidate — and now White House employee — Christine Serrano Glassner in the GOP primary. Testa told me U.S. attorney is a "Godfather" job — one you "can't refuse." Still, he said he's "thrilled" for Habba. "I think she's a solid pick."

  • "Affordability" continues to be a catchword for Democratic candidates for governor after last year's dour election results. Mikie Sherrill rolled out her campaign's first major policy plan,  aiming to make housing, energy, health care, taxes, child care, and food less costly in the state. "For far too long, career politicians have promised to do something about it, but nothing seems to change in New Jersey," Sherrill said. At the same time, Josh Gottheimer told me and my colleague Steven Rodas that he would bring back paper bags if elected governor, helping save people money and trouble. And Steve Sweeney is pledging no new taxes.

  • Two of Jersey's three Republican congressmen, Jeff Van Drew and Tom Kean Jr., were put "On Notice" by EMILY's List, a national group that aims to elect women candidates and protect abortion rights. Their seats are among the 46 the group has targeted to flip in next year's mid-term elections, when Democrats will try to take back the House. Meanwhile, Kean hosted a closely watched telephone town hall just as Republican members of Congress have been avoiding public forums because of early Trump backlash. Kean talked several topics — including the fear of Medicaid cuts — but there were no live questions. And thus no real fireworks.

  • The state's voter turnout last year was its lowest-ever for a presidential election. Just ask any Democrat about the apathy's affect on Kamala Harris. In steps the Million Voters Project, a nonpartisan group of advocates aiming to figure out what happened and draw more voters to the polls. "We actually have an opportunity to change corruption and makes sure politics works or us and not for special interests," spokesman Anthony Campisi said. They're launching canvassing efforts this week in Newark.

  • Happy Opening Day! LGM ...

The Associated Press

Alina Habba, who was born in Summit, is President Trump's pick to be New Jersey's interim U.S. attorney.

NJ.com's Politics Page
 
 

WHATTAYA THINK? Our weekly reader poll

Which of Gov. Phil Murphy’s proposed tax hikes bothers you?

⌾ Batting cages, laser tag, bowling, other activities
⌾ Cigarettes, alcohol, vapes
⌾ Drones
⌾ Luxury homes
⌾ Internet gaming and sports betting
⌾ Marijuana license holders
⌾ Truck traffic
⌾ Guns and ammunition
⌾ None of them bother me
⌾ All of them bother me
⌾ I don't know
⌾ I don't care
 

Results from last week's poll

Which Democrat would you vote for governor if the primary was held today?

● 43.1% U.S. Rep. Mikie Sherrill
● 12.5% Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop
● 9.7% Undecided
● 9.0% Former state Senate President Steve Sweeney
● 8.3% U.S. Rep. Josh Gottheimer
● 8.3% Newark Mayor Ras Baraka
● 5.6% None of them
● 3.5% NJEA President Sean Spiller
 

What others are saying

Some Jersey stories in the news: 

 

  • Congrats to my NJ Advance Media colleagues and friends Spencer Kent and Riley Yates for winning the Toner Prize, a national political reporting award, for their "Project Extreme" series on far-right politics seeping into blue Jersey.

  • A majority of Jerseyans aren't thrilled with Trump's performance so far and Democrats aren't happy with their members in Congress, according to a new Stockton poll.
  • U.S. Sen. Andy Kim and Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman, a fellow Democrat, recently hosted packed town halls in districts represented by Republicans. See more from NJ Spotlight.
  • Protests against Musk and Teslas have been popping up, including in South Jersey, as NJ.com reported.
  • It's not just the governor's office up for grabs this year — all 120 seats in the state Assembly are on the ballot. And 209 candidates are running, the most since 1977. The New Jersey Globe broke it down in detail.
  • The New York Post reported that Democratic gubernatorial hopeful Ras Baraka appeared alongside controversial Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan at an event in 2018. In response, Baraka told Jewish Insider he is "not antisemitic." 

  • Politico's Daniel Han examined how some of the top Democratic candidates for governor want to write abortion protections into the state constitution.
  • Where do the gubernatorial contenders stand on allowing Jerseyans to grow their own cannabis at home? My colleague Jelani Gibson asked them over at NJ.com.
  • ELEC announced that spending on lobbying in Jersey last year was more than $100 million for the first time since 2020. 
  • My colleague Karin Price Mueller explored on NJ.com what Jersey businesses think about Trump so far — and how some don't want to talk about it.
  • NJ Monitor editor Terence McDonald wrote that Gov. Murphy's new state budget plan is bad for local news. Speaking of Terrence ...

 

Tweet of the week

 

Did you know?

There's only one U.S. president born in New Jersey — and only buried here. They happen to be the same person. Grover Cleveland, the 22nd and 24th commander-in-chief, was born in Caldwell in 1837. You can still visit his birthplace, which doubles as a museum. His political career actually blossomed in New York, where he was mayor of Buffalo before his time in the White House. But after his presidency, he went back to Jersey, where he was a trustee of Princeton University. He died in Princeton in 1907 and has been buried there since.  Another fun fact: Former Vice President Aaron Burr — yes, that guy — also rests at Princeton Cemetery. But his grave is less ornate. 

 

About this newsletter

Welcome to What Makes Jersey Run, a weekly newsletter for anyone interested in the always-lively world of Jersey politics and America’s most important governor’s race in 2025. Join NJ.com’s award-winning political reporter Brent Johnson as he gives you the inside look at what really happens behind the scenes in a state rife with scandal, controversy, and power players (some of whom wind up in jail). Brent, who has been covering the craziness in Trenton for more than a decade and knows who pulls the strings, will deliver his exclusive insights on the state of politics and the big campaign right to your inbox.

 

Brent Johnson

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About the author 

 

Brent Johnson is a Central Jersey (yes, it’s real) native who has spent the last 12 years covering politics for NJ.com, winning multiple journalism awards along the way. Before that, he covered local news and sports, including a stint writing about James Madison University athletics in Virginia. He graduated from Rutgers University and sings in a Jersey alt-rock band, The Clydes.

Here's a bit more about him. You can follow him on X at @johnsb01 and email him at [email protected].

Brent Johnson

X iconInstagram iconFacebook icon LinkedIn iconEmail icon

About the author 

 

Brent Johnson is a Central Jersey (yes, it’s real) native who has spent the last 12 years covering politics for NJ.com, winning multiple journalism awards along the way. Before that, he covered local news and sports, including a stint writing about James Madison University athletics in Virginia. He graduated from Rutgers University and sings in a Jersey alt-rock band, The Clydes. You can follow him on X at @johnsb01 and email him at [email protected].

 
 
 

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