2008 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey explained

Election Name:2008 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey
Country:New Jersey
Type:legislative
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2006 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey
Previous Year:2006
Next Election:2010 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey
Next Year:2010
Seats For Election:All 13 New Jersey seats to the United States House of Representatives
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Last Election1:7
Seats1:8
Seat Change1: 1
Popular Vote1:1,911,827
Percentage1:55.61%
Swing1: 0.91%
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Last Election2:6
Seats2:5
Seat Change2: 1
Popular Vote2:1,461,820
Percentage2:42.52%
Swing2: 0.25%
Map Size:160px

The 2008 congressional elections in New Jersey were held on November 4, 2008 to determine who would represent the state of New Jersey in the United States House of Representatives. New Jersey has thirteen seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States census. Representatives are elected for two-year terms; those elected serve din the 111th Congress from January 4, 2009 until January 3, 2011. The election coincided with the 2008 U.S. presidential election.

The statewide party primary elections were held June 3, 2008.

District 3 was the only seat which changed party (from open Republican to Democratic), although CQ Politics had forecasted districts 3, 5 and 7 to be at some risk for the incumbent party. This is the last time that any district saw one party run uncontested, in this case, the 10th.

Overview

United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, 2008[1]
PartyVotesPercentageSeats+/–
Democratic1,911,82755.61%8 1
Republican1,461,82042.52%5 1
Green12,5540.37%0
Libertarian1,6000.05%0
Constitution1,5510.05%0
Independents48,6281.41%0
Totals3,437,980100.00%13

District 1

See also: New Jersey's 1st congressional district. This district contains all or parts of Burlington, Camden and Gloucester counties.

Candidates

Election

Incumbent Democrat Rob Andrews, in a surprise move on April 2, 2008, announced that he would be challenging incumbent Sen. Frank Lautenberg in the Democratic primary in June.[2] His House seat, which is reliably Democratic (CPVI: D+14), thus became an open seat. The filing deadline for primary candidates was April 7, leaving only a few days for candidates to declare.

Andrews' wife, Camille Andrews, won the Democratic primary for his seat in the House, while Andrews himself was beaten by Lautenberg in the Senate primary. After this defeat, Rob Andrews decided to run for re-election to his House seat; Camille withdrew her candidacy on September 3, and Rob Andrews announced that on September 4 that he would take her place as the Democratic candidate. He maintained that his wife had not been merely a placeholder candidate and said that he had only decided to run for re-election a week before he announced it; according to Andrews, his change of heart was a result of personal reflection.[3]

Results

District 2

See also: New Jersey's 2nd congressional district. This district lies in the southern part of the state, containing all or portions of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May: Cumberland, Gloucester and Salem counties.

Candidates

Results

Campaign contributions from OpenSecrets

District 3

See also: New Jersey's 3rd congressional district. This district contains all or portions of Burlington, Camden and Ocean counties.

Candidates

Election

Incumbent Republican Jim Saxton announced that he would retire at the end of his term.[4] A mid-September internal poll by McLaughlin & Associates showed Myers defeating Adler by a margin of 33% to 29%, with a plurality of voters - 37% - undecided.[5] The poll attributed Myers' lead to a general dissatisfaction among voters towards Adler's negative ads and negative mailers from various political committees supporting the Democrat. It also indicated that Adler's low approval ratings were partially due to the perception that he is a "career politician" and the fact that he is an Ivy League-educated lawyer. Adler's association with unpopular Democratic Gov. Jon Corzine also hurt him, while Myers was helped from his endorsement by incumbent Rep. Jim Saxton, who held a 53 percent favorable rating.[6] However, later polls indicated that the race was too close to call.

Results

Campaign contributions from OpenSecrets

District 4

See also: New Jersey's 4th congressional district. This district lies in the central part of the state, including all or portions of Burlington County, Mercer, Monmouth and Ocean counties.

Candidates

Results

District 5

See also: New Jersey's 5th congressional district. This district contains most of the Northern New Jersey Skylands Region of Sussex and Warren counties and stretches along the New York border into Northern Passaic and Bergen Counties, including the townships of Paramus and Ridgewood.

Candidates

Election

Republican incumbent Scott Garrett had been elected by safe margins in the past but in 2006 he only won by 10 points against Paul Aronsohn, the smallest margin of his career. Garrett was the only incumbent in the state thought to possibly be at risk.

Results

Campaign contributions from OpenSecrets

District 6

See also: New Jersey's 6th congressional district. This district lies in the east-central part of the state, including all or portions of Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset and Union counties.

Candidates

Results

District 7

See also: New Jersey's 7th congressional district. The incumbent, Republican Representative Mike Ferguson, announced on November 19, 2007, that he would not seek re-election, citing family obligations.[7]

Candidates

Eliminated in Republican primary

Election

The district was considered to lean Republican, but the 2008 election was expected to be highly competitive, considering the closeness of the previous election.

Lance and Stender debated each other twice during the campaign. In September, they met in Scotch Plains for a debate hosted at the Jewish Community Campus of Central New Jersey. The candidates met in October in Edison for a second debate, which was televised on News 12 New Jersey.

Both major-party candidates campaigned with prominent politicians of their party in the months before the election. Lance campaigned with then U.S. President George W. Bush and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney. Stender campaigned with former U.S. president Bill Clinton and U.S. House of Representatives majority leader Steny Hoyer.

District 8

See also: New Jersey's 8th congressional district. This district lies in the north-east part of the state, including all or portions of Essex and Passaic counties.

Candidates

Results

Campaign contributions from OpenSecrets

District 9

See also: New Jersey's 9th congressional district. This district lies in the north-east part of the state, including all or portions of Bergen and Hudson and Passaic counties.

Candidates

Results

Campaign contributions from OpenSecrets

District 10

See also: New Jersey's 10th congressional district. This district lies in the north-east part of the state, including all or portions of Essex, Hudson and Union counties. Republicans again failed to nominate a candidate to oppose Payne, but the Socialist Workers Party nominated Michael Taber, an editor.

Candidates

Results

Campaign contributions from OpenSecrets

District 11

See also: New Jersey's 11th congressional district. This district lies in the north-central part of the state, including all or portions of Essex, Morris, Passaic, Somerset and Sussex counties.

Candidates

Results

District 12

See also: New Jersey's 12th congressional district. This district lies in the central part of the state, including all or portions of Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth and Somerset counties.

Candidates

Results

Campaign Contributions from OpenSecrets.org

District 13

See also: New Jersey's 13th congressional district. This district lies in the north-east part of the state, including all or portions of Essex, Hudson, Middlesex and Union counties.

Candidates

Results

Campaign contributions from OpenSecrets

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://clerk.house.gov/member_info/electionInfo/2008/2008Stat.htm#21 2008 Election Statistics
  2. David W. Chen, Lautenberg to face Primary Challenge The New York Times, April 2, 2008
  3. http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2008/09/04/Wife_bows_out_so_Rep_Andrews_can_run/UPI-98351220585796/ "Wife bows out, so Rep. Andrews can run"
  4. http://www.philly.com/philly/hp/news_update/20071109_N_J_s_Congressman_Saxton_to_retire.html philly.com
  5. Web site: Poll: Myers, Adler in close race for 3rd District seat (phillyBurbs.com) Burlington County Times . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080918060946/http://www.phillyburbs.com/pb-dyn/news/112-09142008-1590572.html. 2008-09-18. 2008-09-16.
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20080918072115/http://thehill.com/campaign-2008/myers-leads-adler-in-internal-2008-09-15.html Campaign | The Hill
  7. Chebium, Raju. "Ferguson won't seek reelection to Congress", Home News Tribune, November 19, 2007. Accessed November 19, 2007. "Rep. Mike Ferguson, R-Warren Township, said today he won’t seek reelection next year to a fifth term… The next elections are in November 2008; Stender is again a Democratic candidate for the 7th district seat Ferguson currently occupies."