Neha Patil (Editor)

New Jersey gubernatorial election, 1989

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1,379,937
  
838,553

Start date
  
November 7, 1989

61.23%
  
37.21%

New Jersey gubernatorial election, 1989 httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Winner
  
James Florio

The New Jersey gubernatorial election of 1989 was a race for Governor of New Jersey held on November 7, 1989. Incumbent Republican Governor Thomas Kean was term-limited having been elected to served two consecutive terms. Democrat James Florio, a U.S. Representative from the 1st district and a two-time unsuccessful candidate for Governor, defeated 12th district Republican Representative Jim Courter in a 24-point landslide.

Contents

Primary elections

Primary elections for the Republican and Democratic parties were held on Tuesday June 6, 1989.

Candidates

  • Tom Blomquist, retired Coast Guard captain
  • Gerald Cardinale, State Senator
  • Jim Courter, U.S. Representative
  • W. Cary Edwards, New Jersey Attorney General
  • William Gormley, State Senator
  • Chuck Hardwick, Speaker of the General Assembly
  • James A. Kolyer, industrial arts teacher
  • Lois Rand, former head of the New Jersey Small Business Administration
  • Candidates

  • James Florio, U.S. Representative
  • Alan Karcher, former Speaker of the New Jersey General Assembly
  • Barbara Boggs Sigmund, Mayor of Princeton and former Mercer County Freeholder
  • Candidates

    Major party candidates

  • Jim Courter, Republican, U.S. Representative
  • James Florio, Democratic, U.S. Representative
  • Other independent candidates

  • Tom Fuscaldo, One Eye On, owner of a television antenna business
  • Daniel M. Karlan, Libertarian, computer programmer
  • Catherine Renee Sedwick, Socialist Workers
  • Michael Ziruolo, Better Affordable Government, trucking consultant
  • Campaign

    Florio, who had run in the Democratic primary for Governor in 1977 and lost in an extremely close general election in 1981 to outgoing Governor Thomas Kean, stressed in this campaign that he would govern closer to Kean than the conservative Congressman Courter and that despite the economic growth under Kean and the Reagan administrations, he would lead an active government to combat potential overdevelopment and pollution. Following a Supreme Court ruling that would allow states to impose regulations on abortions, the pro-choice Florio won the votes of those in favor of abortion rights while Courter who comprised an anti-abortion voting record in Congress sought to moderate his views which led to distrust among voters. To moderate his positions, Florio promised a wider use of the state death penalty for drug crimes and not to raise taxes (the latter promise would be broken in 1990 when he signed a $2.8-billion tax increase which would lead to his 1993 defeat).

    References

    New Jersey gubernatorial election, 1989 Wikipedia