Posted on 11/07/2017 10:49:24 AM PST by TangledUpInBlue
I predict it’s going to be much closer than 14 points, and I wouldn’t consider it outside the realm of possibility for Guadagno to win. Even though it is a deep “blue” state, New Jersey frequently elects GOP governors because the turnout is so low in these off-year elections.
Jack Ciattarelli.
Jack.
Assembly Jack Ciattarelli of Somerset County should have been the NJ GOP gubernatorial nominee. Period.
Dead people don't care about rain. Especially in the PRNJ (People's Republic of New Jersey).
Summit’s Union County should go for Guadagno.
Union County, N.J. has some conservative havens:
Westfield
Cranford
Summit
Springfield
Look I know New Jersey quite well it is a great state except in the surrounding Newark area. It is painful to watch New Jersey die economically. It is following in the footsteps of California going down hill. And MS-13 gangbangers are having a ball. They think they died an went to heaven. they are jumping for joy today as a brother Democrat Governor is at hand!!!
Anyone with half a functioning brain wants to get out of New Jersey as fast as they can. The problem is, they have made their own bed and now they must lie it.
As far as their bitching relative their taxes...they should have learned a basic long ago...”there is no such thing as a free lunch”. Casting your vote for the Democrat buffoon running for governor is chaining you into economic slavery...I love the state...but there are tons of idiot voters, always looking for a government freebie. You...Joe and Jane taxpayer are the fools!!! Sad, sad, sad!!!
Wait! Did you actually think the Rep had a chance? Seriously?
Its the other way around: high tax states like NY, NJ, CA, CT, and others subsidize low tax states. You can look at the Federal revenue charts if you like - be my guest. I posted a thread yesterday from the Weekly Standard titles Kill The Bill. Go read it. It has hyperlinks too. And, high tax states like NJ get back 68 cents or so back in every dollar they pay to Washington. Some states get back $7 or $8 from Washington for every dollar they pay. And since when is expressing an opinion around here whining. Oh, I know: when you want that opinion shut down.
Sorry New Jersey. You are toast.
You left Jon Corzine out of your timeline, between McGreevey and Christie.
Except being a founding member of ADP
I agree. The undecideds are significant in those polls. If they go red and/or some blue don’t bother to vote, she can win.
Deductions, whether you like them or not, are the cards we are dealt with from our masters in Washington. What do you think tax accountants and tax lawyers do? What do you think businesses do by itemizing? Also, if you had massive medical expenses, and the GOP wrote the bill to eliminate that deduction (which by the way, the House bill just did), then I imagine you would not like that very much. The current GOP bill is a huge tax INCREASE for millions of Americans. Let me ask you: since when did Conservatives believe that raising taxes on the middle class was a good thing?
could secede and join Pennsylvania.....BITE YOUR BALLS!!! We are trying to give you misfits Philadelphia!
I know what you are saying but it doesn’t change the dynamic - there are too many votes in Northeast NJ that want more government spending and too few votes in the counties that I enumerated that can block them from making them pay for it. That is and sadly will be the ruin of the State, 80 percent of which is still one of the greatest places in the US in which to live.
Oops. I blame post traumatic stress causing me to black those years out.
Since taxes tied to income have become the primary source of revenue for the Federal government, densely-populated areas where the cost of living is high have inevitably become the biggest "donor" areas when it comes to comparing Federal taxes paid with Federal spending.
It's a simple function of a progressive income tax system, where middle-class people in places like New Jersey, New York City, Connecticut, California and most of New England get pushed into upper-class tax brackets because of the high cost of living and higher wages paid to people in these areas.
There's no reason to feel sorry for them, though. The easiest way to fix this imbalance is to move to a more flat income tax structure, and these are areas of the country where voters are pathologically opposed to such a thing.
We’ll see. But polling can’t be wrong every time.
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