(Welcome, Patch readers!)
I’m like reasonably civic-minded and well-informed and stuff. (I have a blog, you know.) I called the GOP presidential contest way back in January. By the time I started my blog in July 2008, the presidential contenders were already set. But if I’d started a few months earlier, I know I would have had a lot of snarky stuff to say about New Jersey’s meaningless June primary election.
Except this year there’s actually something going on. Not at the top of the ticket, of course. But a Congressional seat opened up this year in the only way it was going to happen: The incumbent died.
Here’s what I had to say about Donald Payne Sr. after voting in the general election four years ago:
I voted straight Republican. Aside from the Presidential race, I was voting in the interests of divided government, not because I prefer the positions of whoever the GOP Freeholder candidate was over the positions of whoever the Democratic Freeholder candidate was. The Republicans did not field a candidate for Congress, so I couldn’t vote against Donald Payne, short of writing someone in. I’ve got nothing against Payne other than the fact that he’s a product of the Newark Democratic machine who has served 10 terms in Congress already.
The Web Goddess and I voted at 6 a.m. that day, but I’ve already missed that window today. I’ll vote after I get off work. In the meantime, I’m hereby asking my blog and Facebook friends for input on my important vote for Congress. Should it be Donald Payne Jr., who sits on his father’s old chair on the Newark City Council and now seeks to turn the Congressional seat into a hereditary peerage? Or should it be fellow Newark City Councilman Ron C. Rice, son of former Newark City Councilman Ronald L. Rice? Or there are four other candidates, one of them is the mayor of Irvington, the next town over from me.
Wait a minute! I’m a Republican!
Anybody know if New Jersey is one of the states where any voter can vote in either primary? And if not, anybody have any thoughts on the GOP primary for the U.S. Senate? The polls close at 8 p.m.
Update: They handed me a Republican ballot when I signed in, because that’s how I’m registered. If I were independent, I think I could have voted in either primary. Just about the only contested GOP race was for U.S. Senate, and I voted for State Sen. Joe Kyrillos, rather than any of the three Tea Party-ish candidates running against him. Kyrillos won in a walk. Despite the fact that it’s frustrating and feels somewhat useless to vote in really lop-sided races, I’d still rather have that than a Florida 2000 kind of scenario.