1993 New Jersey gubernatorial election

The 1993 New Jersey gubernatorial election was held on November 2, 1993. Incumbent Democratic governor James Florio was narrowly defeated by Republican former Freeholder and 1990 U.S. Senate nominee Christine Todd Whitman following backlash from voters regarding tax increases that had occurred during Florio's tenure. Whitman became the first, and to date, only female governor of New Jersey.[1]

1993 New Jersey gubernatorial election

November 2, 1993
 
Nominee Christine Todd Whitman James Florio
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 1,236,124 1,210,031
Percentage 49.3% 48.3%

County results
Whitman:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%
Florio:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%

Governor before election

James Florio
Democratic

Elected Governor

Christine Todd Whitman
Republican

Primary elections were held on June 8. In the Democratic primary, Governor Florio's only challenger, anti-tax activist John Budzash, was disqualified from the ballot after his signatures were alleged to be invalid. In the Republican primary, Whitman defeated W. Cary Edwards and James Wallwork in a three-way race. This was the first gubernatorial election in the state's history where an incumbent governor lost re-election.

As of 2023, this is the last gubernatorial election in which Passaic and Mercer counties voted more Republican than the state overall. This is also the most recent occasion that Cape May County voted Democratic in a gubernatorial election, as those counties, and others statewide, started trending toward largely voting either Democratic (Bergen; Mercer; Middlesex; Passaic; Union; etc.) or Republican (Atlantic; Cape May; Monmouth; Ocean; etc.) in the new millennium.

Background

1989 election

In 1989, Jim Florio defeated Jim Courter in a landslide. It was Florio's third campaign for Governor; he lost the Democratic nomination to incumbent Governor Brendan Byrne in 1977 and lost the general election to Thomas Kean in 1981.

During the 1989 campaign, Florio said that a tax increase was highly unlikely.

Florio administration

The centerpiece of the Florio administration's legislative agenda was a $2.8 billion increase in tax revenues, which one consultant identified "the largest single tax increase in the history of the finances of the 50 states" and "a national test case on both political and economic grounds."[2] The tax increase was highly unpopular, leading to non-partisan protests throughout the state. The Florio administration adopted a wait-and-see approach, hoping that protests would desist once the legislative package delivered benefits in the form of rebate checks, lower auto insurance rates, and increased funding for education.[2] A similar dynamic had been seen in 1977, when Governor Byrne recovered from the passage of an unpopular state income tax to win re-election.

Two other major legislative achievements were a popular gun control measure targeted at "assault-style weapons"[3][4][5] and the Quality Education Act, which set new standards for public schools and set strict spending caps on local school boards.[6][7]

1990 United States Senate election

By fall 1990, Florio's approval rating sank to 18 percent; it would not exceed the low twenties until 1992.[8]

The political impact of the anti-Florio "tax revolt" manifested in November 1990, when incumbent United States Senator Bill Bradley was nearly unseated by Christine Todd Whitman. During her campaign, Whitman repeatedly asked Bradley for his position on the increase, but he demurred, calling it a state issue.[9][8] Whitman's underdog near-victory endeared her to the Republican voter base and made her a symbol of opposition to Florio.[10]

1991 midterm elections

Republicans centered their 1991 legislative campaign on opposition to the Florio tax increase, as did even some incumbent Democrats, such as Senator Paul Contillo.[4] Florio also faced backlash from the National Rifle Association, which spent nearly $250,000 targeting candidates in both parties who had voted in favor of the bill and supporting those who pledged to repeal it,[3][11] and the New Jersey Education Association, which had supported Florio in 1989 but endorsed almost exclusively Republican candidates in response to the education spending caps.[6][7]

The result was a resounding Republican victory; the party gained ten seats in the Senate (controlling the chamber for the first time since 1978) and 21 seats in the General Assembly. Both houses had a veto-proof Republican majority, which may have drawn political pressure off Florio for the remainder of his term. His approval ratings began to rebound as the Republican legislature was given a share of blame for the state's budgetary dysfunction.

Democratic primary

Candidates

  • Jim Florio, incumbent Governor

Disqualified

  • John Budzash, anti-tax protestor

Florio was unopposed in the June primary election. Former Howell Township postal worker, John Budzash, originally filed to run against Florio in the primary. Budzash, who switched his party registration from Republican to Democratic one day before the filing deadline, led Hands Across New Jersey, a citizens group that protested the state tax increases.[12] He was removed following a complaint from then-state party chair Raymond Lesniak alleging that many of his petition signatures were invalid.[13]

Results

Democratic primary results[14]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic James Florio (incumbent) 200,420 100.00
Total votes 200,420 100.00

Republican primary

Background

Following W. Cary Edwards's loss to Jim Courter in the 1989 primary, Edwards was seen as the natural favorite for the 1993 nomination. He was a key member of the popular Thomas Kean administration, first as general counsel and then as state Attorney General. However, his path to the nomination became complicated by Christine Todd Whitman's 1990 campaign for United States Senate. Her underdog two-point loss endeared her to the party base and made her the leading public advocate of the anti-tax cause.[10]

Whitman continued to build her profile by founding a political action committee, the Committee for an Affordable New Jersey, through which she campaigned for Republican candidates in the 1991 midterm elections.[15] Whitman took on a full campaign speaking schedule through October 1992 and worked to distance herself from veteran consultant Roger Stone after Stone facilitated a primary challenge to State Senator William Gormley, a potential 1993 opponent.[16]

Candidates

Withdrew

  • Charles P. Hoffman, business consultant[17] (withdrew May 6, endorsed Wallwork)[18]

Declined

  • William Gormley, State Senator from Mays Landing and candidate for Governor in 1989[16]
  • Thomas Kean, former Governor of New Jersey

Campaign

The primary campaign was marked by negative exchanges between the three strongest candidates and Whitman's clear status as the front-runner throughout.[19][10]

Illegal alien hiring controversy

The campaign began as a two-candidate race between Christine Whitman and Cary Edwards. Polling suggested that either would beat Governor Florio but that Whitman was generally the stronger of the two. In February, responding to national controversy over nominee for U.S. Attorney General Zoë Baird's hiring of illegal aliens in violation of federal law, both candidates voluntarily disclosed that they had done so too and failed to required taxes or fines. The revelation dramatically weakened both campaigns; seventy percent of voters said the admission was very or somewhat serious.[20][21]

Soon after, former State Senator James Wallwork declared his candidacy as a conservative alternative to Whitman and Edwards,[22][10] tapping into populist unrest. Like H. Ross Perot and Jerry Brown had during the 1992 presidential campaign, Wallwork offered voters a toll-free number they could call to directly propose positions. Wallwork, who had last cut a political figure in a 1981 campaign for governor, said his campaign would be about "people taking back their government."[23]

In the final weeks of the campaign, Whitman ran advertisements presenting herself as a candidate for change but not mentioning her opponents or Governor Florio by name.[24] Edwards attacked both Whitman in Florio in his advertisements, while Wallwork focused on painting Whitman as "liberal" and ran an ad stating that she had voted to raise taxes 17 times as Somerset Freeholder.[24] In the final week of the campaign, Whitman began running negative advertisements as well.[10]

A large portion of the campaign was focused on winning over the 522,000 New Jerseyans who had voted for H. Ross Perot in the 1992 presidential campaign. Perot remained popular in the state; on the final weekend of the campaign, he hosted a get-out-the-vote rally which all three candidates attended.[10]

Debates

The three major candidates participated in at least six debates[24] and two mandatory televised debates.[19]

By May 11, Whitman was the heavy favorite entering the first televised debate in Whippany; her campaign claimed no less than a double-digit lead over both opponents.[19] At the debate, all three candidates agreed in their opposition to the Florio tax increase but disagreed over how to repeal it. Edwards called for a new popularly elected office of Auditor to evaluate potential budget cuts, while Wallwork and Whitman argued that the powerful line-item veto allowed the Governor to do so immediately.[19] Whitman also attacked Edwards for a nine percent increase in crime during his tenure as Attorney General, a preemptive rebuttal to Edwards's accusation that she was soft on crime.[19]

The second televised debate on May 26 was focused on business issues and was less contentious; the candidates mostly agreed on automobile insurance reform, managed health care, unemployment, pollution legislation and sports betting.[24] At one point, during an exchange on unemployment, Edwards accused Whitman of not understanding the plight of the unemployed, saying "At least I have had a job in my life." Whitman demanded an apology for this and an earlier comment in which Edwards, during a two-person debate with Wallwork, said he "resented" running against a woman.[24] Edwards declined to apologize and later accused Whitman of "setting him up."[24] Another disagreement came over private school vouchers; Whitman supported them while Edwards was opposed and Wallwork deferred to a public referendum.[24]

Two non-televised debates were hosted by Perot supporters under the banner of "United We Stand." All three candidates attended the first but only Edwards and Wallwork attended the second.[10]

Endorsements

List of W. Cary Edwards endorsements
List of James Wallwork endorsements
List of Christine Todd Whitman endorsements
Individuals
Did not endorse
Governors

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
W. Cary
Edwards
Christine
Todd Whitman
James
Wallwork
Other/Undecided
The Record[27] March 9–19, 1993 227 LV ±6.5% 8% 28% 2% 62%
Asbury Park Press/Courier-Post[28] April 2–4, 1993 630 A ±3.9% 14% 30% 4% 52%
The Record[29] April 25–May 3, 1993 208 LV ±7.0% 14% 41% 5% 37%
KYW-TV[30] May 28–June 1, 1993 245 LV ±6.7% 23% 37% 18% 22%

Results

Republican primary results by county
  Todd Whitman
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  Edwards
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  Wallwork
  •   30–40%
Republican Party primary results[14]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Christine Todd Whitman 159,765 39.96%
Republican W. Cary Edwards 131,578 32.91%
Republican James Wallwork 96,034 24.02%
Republican Charles P. Hoffman (withdrawn) 6,695 1.67%
Republican J. Patrick Gilligan 5,753 1.44%
Total votes 399,825 100.00

Results by county

The following partial results by county were reported in the Morristown Daily Record for June 10, 1993.[31] The overall totals differ only slightly from the certified primary results, by about one hundred votes per candidate throughout the state.

County Whitman % Edwards % Wallwork %
Atlantic 3,532 29% 3,425 28% 4,234 35%
Bergen 15,609 35% 19,679 44% 7,987 18%
Burlington 8,614 36% 9,087 38% 5,299 22%
Camden 5,615 40% 4,192 30% 3,885 28%
Cape May 2,976 34% 2,468 28% 2,809 32%
Cumberland 1,674 35% 1,682 35% 1,233 26%
Essex 9,152 38% 7,559 32% 6,401 27%
Gloucester 3,664 38% 3,401 35% 2,175 22%
Hudson 3,666 40% 3,126 34% 1,301 14%
Hunterdon 5,377 51% 2,248 21% 2,732 26%
Mercer 6,435 46% 4,383 32% 2,722 20%
Middlesex 9,059 48% 4,640 25% 4,624 25%
Monmouth 13,306 42% 9,626 30% 8,255 26%
Morris 16,332 36% 17,407 38% 10,733 23%
Ocean 15,570 41% 10,465 28% 10,505 28%
Passaic 8,901 43% 7,338 35% 4,313 21%
Salem 1,016 40% 699 28% 731 29%
Somerset 11,452 53% 4,501 21% 5,255 24%
Sussex 5,891 36% 6,379 39% 3,392 21%
Union 9,286 42% 6,365 29% 5,604 25%
Warren 2,539 37% 2,347 34% 1,769 26%

General election

Candidates

Campaign

Florio had become unpopular following a 1990 $2.8-billion tax increase though he promised not to raise taxes in his successful 1989 campaign.[33] As a result of the tax increase, Republicans were swept into both houses of the Legislature in 1991. A 1990 bill that was signed into law banning assault weapons was used against Florio in advertisements by the National Rifle Association.[33] A proposal by Whitman to cut income taxes by 30% over three years were met with skepticism from voters.[34]

Polling

Polling for the election mostly showed that Florio would be reelected. Polls conducted within a few weeks of the election by The Star-Ledger, The New York Times, the Record of Hackensack, and Rutgers-Eagleton showed Florio besting Whitman by at least eight points.[34] The final poll released before the election, however was conducted by the Asbury Park Press and showed a 38-38 tie with 22% undecided,[35] and undecided and independent voters tended towards Whitman at the time of the election.[34]

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Jim
Florio (D)
Christine Todd
Whitman (R)
Undecided
The Record[36] August 26–29, 1991 526 LV ±4.5% 27% 52% 21%
Asbury Park Press[37] January 1993 672 A ±4.4% 30% 36% 34%
The Record[27] March 9–19, 1993 610 LV ±4.0% 39% 30% 31%
Asbury Park Press[28] April 2–4, 1993 630 A ±3.9% 36% 45% 19%
The Record[29] April 25–May 3, 1993 802 LV ±3.5% 38% 34% 28%
KYW-TV[30] May 28–June 1, 1993 811 RV ±3.5% 37% 43% 20%
Rutgers-Eagleton June 10–16, 1993 642 RV ±3.5% 48% 43% 9%
The Record[38] June 27–July 1, 1993 889 LV ±3.5% 39% 38% 23%
Asbury Park Press/[39] August 12–14, 1993 683 LV ±3.8% 37% 38% 25%
The Record[40] September 7–12, 1993 606 LV ±4.5% 43% 43% 14%
Asbury Park Press[41] September 9–12, 1993 652 LV ±3.8% 42% 36% 22%
Rutgers-Eagleton September 10–15, 1993 584 LV ±4.0% 47% 38% 15%
The New York Times/WCBS-TV[42] September 20–26, 1993 804 RV ±4.0% 51% 30% 19%
Asbury Park Press[43] Sep. 30–Oct. 2, 1993 545 LV ±4.3% 47% 34% 19%
The Record[44] Sep. 30–Oct. 3, 1993 754 RV ±4.0% 50% 37% 13%
The New York Times/WCBS-TV October 9–11, 1993 925 RV ±3.0% 49% 34% 17%
Rutgers-Eagleton October 11–14, 1993 577 LV ±4.0% 52% 40% 8%
Asbury Park Press[45] October 21–23, 1993 810 RV ±3.8% 45% 40% 15%
The Record[46] October 24–27, 1993 703 LV ±4.0% 51% 41% 8%
Rutgers-Eagleton October 27–29, 1993 601 LV ±3.5% 48% 39% 13%
Asbury Park Press[47] October 28–30, 1993 1,072 RV ±3.0% 38% 38% 22%
Hypothetical polling
with Edwards
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Jim
Florio (D)
W. Cary
Edwards (R)
Undecided
Asbury Park Press/Courier-Post[37] January 1993 672 A ±4.4% 31% 32% 37%
The Record[27] March 9–19, 1993 610 LV ±4.0% 40% 25% 35%
Asbury Park Press[28] April 2–4, 1993 630 A ±3.9% 31% 40% 29%
KYW-TV[30] May 28–June 1, 1993 811 RV ±3.5% 34% 38% 28%
with Wallwork
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Jim
Florio (D)
James
Wallwork (R)
Undecided
Asbury Park Press[28] April 2–4, 1993 630 A ±3.9% 33% 36% 31%
KYW-TV[30] May 28–June 1, 1993 811 RV ±3.5% 35% 37% 28%

Results

1993 New Jersey gubernatorial election[48][49]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Christine Todd Whitman 1,236,124 49.33% Increase12.12
Democratic James Florio (incumbent) 1,210,031 48.29% Decrease12.94
Independent Pat Daly 10,071 0.40% N/A
Libertarian Kenneth R. Kaplan 7,935 0.32% Decrease 0.26
Conservative Tom Blomquist 5,164 0.21% N/A
Independent Joseph Marion 4,311 0.17% N/A
Independent Richary J. Lynch 4,030 0.16% N/A
Independent Alene S. Ammond 3,330 0.13% N/A
Independent Tim Feeney 3,306 0.13% N/A
Independent Michael R. Scully 3,209 0.13% N/A
Independent Pete DiLauro 3,009 0.12% N/A
Independent Marilyn Arons 2,884 0.12% N/A
Populist John L. Kucek 2,822 0.11% N/A
Independent Tom Fuscaldo 2,314 0.09% Decrease 0.22
Independent Michael Ziruolo 2,127 0.08% Decrease 0.37
Independent Andrew J. Zemel 1,530 0.06% N/A
Independent Andrea Lippi 1,294 0.05% N/A
Socialist Workers Mark J. Rahn 1,242 0.05% Decrease 0.23
Independent Jerry T. Grant 1,231 0.05% N/A
Plurality 26,093 1.04%
Turnout 2,505,964
Republican gain from Democratic Swing

References

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  2. King, Wayne (23 July 1990). "Florio Faces Growing Anti-Tax Storm in New Jersey". The New York Times. pp. B1. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  3. Gray, Jerry (28 Feb 1993). "N.R.A. Makes Beating Florio Its Prime Issue". The New York Times. p. 33. Retrieved 4 Jul 2022.
  4. Sullivan, Joseph F. (1 Nov 1991). "Focus Is on a Few Close Races for New Jersey Legislature". The New York Times. pp. B1. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  5. King, Wayne (23 Aug 1992). "N.R.A. Is Politically Armed and, to Florio, Dangerous". The New York Times. p. 43. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  6. King, Wayne (1 Sep 1991). "Teachers Flunk Democrats (And Vice Versa) in Jersey". The New York Times. pp. R5. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  7. Weisman, Jonathan (23 Oct 1991). "Shift in Education Politics Seen in N.J. Election Battle". Education Week. Retrieved 5 July 2022.
  8. Russakoff, Dale (12 Apr 1993). "THE GOV WHOSE TIME HAS COME". The Washington Post. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  9. Sullivan, Joseph F. (3 June 1991). "New Jersey Primary Offers Outlet for Voter Tax Anger". The New York Times. pp. B2. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  10. Gray, Jerry (5 June 1993). "In New Jersey Governor's Primary, Candidates Court Perot's Backers". The New York Times. p. 1. Retrieved 4 Oct 2021.
  11. King, Wayne (23 Aug 1992). "N.R.A. Is Politically Armed and, to Florio, Dangerous". The New York Times.
  12. Enda, Jodi (April 16, 1993). "Florio Gets An Opponent For Primary John L. Budzash Co-founded Hands Across New Jersey. He Had Just Registered As A Democrat". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved June 12, 2015.
  13. Gray, Jerry (April 22, 1993). "Ruling Is Likely to Take Florio Rival Off Ballot". The New York Times. Retrieved June 12, 2015.
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  15. Pieretti, Fred (14 Mar 1991). "GOP'S Christine Whitman helps party, herself with new group". The Vineland Daily Journal. p. 3. Retrieved 2 Sep 2022.
  16. Conohan, Sherry (11 Aug 1991). "Whitman helps get GOP's, and her own, message out". Asbury Park Press. p. 3. Retrieved 2 Sep 2022.
  17. Enda, Jodi (June 8, 1993). "Judgment Day For Gop As Voters Pick An Opponent For Gov. Florio In Camden, There Is A Primary For Mayor And Council. Counties Are Picking Freeholder Nominees. And Every Senate And Assembly Seat Is Up For Grabs". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved June 12, 2015.
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  23. Kiely, Eugene (24 Feb 1993). "Using telephone to shape campaign". The Record. Retrieved 6 Sep 2022.
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  25. Howard Gets a Highway Rest Stop Named After Him (1995), retrieved 2022-07-02
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  31. "Results of the GOP gubernatorial primary". Morristown Daily Record. 10 Jun 1993. p. 6. Retrieved 7 Sep 2022.
  32. Preston, David Lee (October 29, 1993). "Now, For Someone Completely Different Hearing The Many Other Voices For Governor: Ammond To Ziruolo". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved June 12, 2015.
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  34. Mondics, Chris (November 4, 1993). "N.J. Pollsters Regroup And Try To Figure Out What Went Wrong". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved June 13, 2015.
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  39. McGowan, John T. (22 Aug 1993). "Poll: New Jersey governor's race is statistical dead heat". Courier-Post. p. 3. Retrieved 7 Sep 2022.
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  46. "Florio up 10 points in home stretch". The Record. 31 Oct 1993. p. 1. Retrieved 7 Sep 2022.
  47. De Masters, Karen (31 Oct 1993). "Whitman, Florio tied, poll shows". Asbury Park Press. p. 1. Retrieved 7 Sep 2022.
  48. "Official List – Gubernatorial General Election Returns for Election Held November 2, 1993" (PDF). Secretary of State of New Jersey. 1993. Retrieved June 12, 2015.
  49. Manual of the Legislature of New Jersey (2004 ed.). 1900. p. 493. ISBN 9781577411871. Retrieved June 12, 2015.
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