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To: RightOnline
You pay for these assholes, New Jersey. You vote those who keep this slime in business into office.

You're half right. We do pay for them.

We don't vote for them, however -- not those of us who live in northwest New Jersey, where West Milford is. Northwest NJ is solidly Republican.

Problem is, our votes can't stack up against all the dead people voting Democrat in Newark and Camden.

29 posted on 08/07/2007 9:45:02 PM PDT by shhrubbery! (Max Boot: Joe Wilson has sold more whoppers than Burger King)
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To: shhrubbery!

I used to live in West Milford, grew up there, graduated from high school there. I was curious about whether Passaic County was republican or democrat, having thought it leaned democrat. I looked it up, seems a bit of both:

The state’s Democratic strongholds include Mercer County around Trenton and Princeton; Essex County and Hudson County, the state’s two most urban counties, around the state’s two largest cities, Newark and Jersey City; Camden County and most of the other urban communities just outside of Philadelphia and New York; and more suburban northern counties in New York’s orbit, such as Union County and Middlesex County.

The more suburban northwestern and southeastern counties of the state are reliably Republican: Republicans have backing along the coast in Ocean County and in the mountainous northwestern part of the state, especially Sussex County, Morris County, and Warren County. Somerset County and Hunterdon County, other suburban counties in the region, are also Republican in local elections but can be competitive in national races. In the 2004 General Election, President Bush received about 52% in Somerset and 60% in Hunterdon, while up in rural Republican Sussex County, Bush won with 64% of the vote.

****About half of the counties in New Jersey, however, are considered swing counties, but some go more one way than others. For an example, Bergen County, which leans Republican in the northern half of the county, is mostly Democratic in the more populated southern parts, causing it to usually vote slightly Democratic (same with Passaic County, with a highly populated Hispanic Democratic south and a rural, Republican north), other “swing” counties like Cape May County tend to go Republican, as they also have population in conservative areas.****


38 posted on 08/07/2007 10:41:29 PM PDT by tina07 (In Memory of my Father - WWII Army Air Force Veteran)
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To: shhrubbery!

oh, and I live in Sussex County for 19 yrs. now..more to my liking politically, but planning to exit NJ in the next 6 months due to the highest taxes in the land!


39 posted on 08/07/2007 10:44:53 PM PDT by tina07 (In Memory of my Father - WWII Army Air Force Veteran)
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