Brendan Byrne Explained

Brendan Byrne
Office:47th Governor of New Jersey
Term Start:January 15, 1974
Term End:January 19, 1982
Predecessor:William Cahill
Successor:Thomas Kean
Office1:Prosecutor of Essex County
Appointer1:Robert B. Meyner
Term Start1:February 16, 1959
Term End1:January 11, 1968
Predecessor1:Charles Webb
Successor1:Joseph P. Lordi
Birth Name:Brendan Thomas Byrne
Birth Date:1 April 1924
Birth Place:West Orange, New Jersey, U.S.
Death Place:Livingston, New Jersey, U.S.
Party:Democratic
Spouse:
    Children:7; including Barbara
    Education:Princeton University (BA)
    Harvard University (LLB)
    Allegiance: United States
    Rank: First Lieutenant
    Serviceyears:1943–1945
    Unit:United States Army Air Forces
    414th Bombardment Squadron, 97th Bombardment Group[1]
    Mawards:Distinguished Flying Cross
    Air Medal (4)

    Brendan Thomas Byrne (April 1, 1924 – January 4, 2018) was an American attorney and Democratic Party politician who served as the 47th Governor of New Jersey from 1974 to 1982.

    Byrne began his career as a private attorney in Newark and East Orange. In 1959, Governor Robert B. Meyner appointed Byrne to serve as Essex County Prosecutor; he served in that role until 1968. In the late 1960s, an FBI wiretap recorded local mobsters calling Byrne "the man who couldn't be bought" in reference to his high ethical standards. The publication of the comment propelled Byrne to popularity in an era when corruption was a major concern in state and national politics. He left his office as prosecutor to serve as President of the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities from 1968 to 1970, then as a Superior Court judge.

    In 1973, using "the man who couldn't be bought" as a campaign slogan,[2] Byrne ran for governor of New Jersey. He won the Democratic primary with support from the powerful Hudson County political machine and carried the general election. His landslide victory, until then the largest in the state's history, was seen as a reaction against a bribery scandal in state government and the Watergate scandal.

    During his first term, Byrne signed the state's first income tax, which broke a campaign promise and was initially highly unpopular across party lines. In 1977, he faced several prominent challengers for the party nomination but won the Democratic primary with a small plurality of the vote. Despite expectations he would lose the general election to Raymond Bateman, Byrne came from behind to win a second term.

    During his time as governor, Byrne oversaw the opening of the first gambling casinos in Atlantic City and established the New Jersey Department of the Public Advocate. He also preserved a large majority of woodlands and wildlife areas in the state by restricting development.

    Early life and education

    Byrne was born and raised in West Orange, New Jersey.[3] He was the fourth child among five of Irish American Catholic parents Francis A. Byrne (1886–1974), a local public safety commissioner,[4] and Genevieve Brennan Byrne (1888–1969).

    In 1942, Byrne graduated from West Orange High School in West Orange, New Jersey, where he as president of the debate club and senior class president. He briefly enrolled at Seton Hall University, but left the university in March of the following year to join the U.S. Army. During World War II, Byrne served in the U.S. Army Air Forces as a navigator on a B-17, and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and four Air Medals. By the time of his discharge from active service in 1945, he had achieved the rank of lieutenant.

    After the end of World War II, Byrne attended Princeton University for two years, where he studied at the university's School of Public and International Affairs.[5] Due to World War II, he spent only two years on campus, finishing his undergraduate thesis while enrolled at Harvard Law School.[5] He graduated from Princeton University's School of Public and International Affairs in 1949 after completing a 95-page long senior thesis titled, "Proportional Representation in Municipal Government". He then attended Harvard Law School, where he graduated with his LL.B. in 1951.[6]

    Career

    Private attorney

    Byrne then worked as a private attorney, first for the Newark-based law firm of John W. McGeehan, Jr., and later for the East Orange firm of Teltser and Greenberg.[7]

    New Jersey state government

    In October 1955, Byrne was appointed an assistant counsel to Governor Robert B. Meyner. The following year, he became the governor's acting executive secretary.[5] In 1958, Byrne was appointed the deputy attorney general responsible for the Essex County Prosecutor's Office.[8] The following year, Governor Meyner appointed him as the Essex County prosecutor.[8] Governor Hughes reappointed Byrne to this same office in 1964 following the end of his first five-year term. From 1968 to 1970, Byrne served as the president of the Board of Public Utilities Commissioners.

    New Jersey Superior Court

    In 1970, Byrne was appointed by Governor William T. Cahill to the Superior Court. He served as the assignment judge for Morris, Sussex, and Warren Counties starting in 1972.

    Governor of New Jersey (1974–1982)

    1973 election

    See main article: 1973 New Jersey gubernatorial election. In April 1973, Byrne resigned from the Superior court to run for governor.

    Byrne defeated Ann Klein and Ralph DeRose in the 1973 Democratic primary to win the party's nomination for governor. In the November general election, Byrne won by beating the Republican nominee Congressman Charles Sandman in a landslide. Sandman had defeated the incumbent Governor Cahill in the primary. Byrne's landslide margin of victory was so vast that it allowed Democrats to capture control both chambers of the state legislature with supermajorities.[9] [10] [11]

    First term

    On January 15, 1974, Byrne was sworn in as the 47th governor of New Jersey.

    Some of the policies enacted by the first Byrne administration include: the implementation of New Jersey's first state income tax, the establishment of spending limits on local governments, county governments, school districts, and the state, the establishment of both the Department of the Public Advocate and the Department of Energy, and the implementation of public financing for future gubernatorial general elections.[12] Although Byrne claimed during the 1973 campaign that a personal income tax would not be necessary for "the foreseeable future", he eventually "muscled through" the unpopular income tax, New Jersey's first, in 1976; it earned him the nickname "One-Term Byrne".

    1977 election

    See main article: 1977 New Jersey gubernatorial election. Byrne faced ten opponents in the 1977 Democratic primary, including future governor James Florio. However, Byrne obtained the party's nomination, and went on to defeat his Republican opponent, State Senator Raymond Bateman, in the general election on November 8, 1977.[5] This despite the fact that in early 1977, three-quarters of voters disapproved of his job performance and in polls taken in the summer, he trailed Bateman by 17 points.[13]

    Byrne and Bateman debated nine times and Byrne used the governorship to his advantage, signing bills and appearing with cabinet members all over the state, benefiting from a visit by President Carter and turning what was his biggest weakness, the income tax, into a strength.[8] Shortly before the 1977 gubernatorial election, New Jersey homeowners began receiving rebate checks (funded by state income tax revenues) to offset their property taxes, while Bateman's plan—replacing the state income tax with an increased sales tax—was widely criticized.[14]

    Until 2021, Byrne was the last Democrat to win re-election as Governor in New Jersey.

    Second term

    During his second term, Byrne focused on policies such as: the passage of the Pinelands Protection Act, expansion of major highways, including the Atlantic City Expressway and Interstate 287, upgrades to sewage systems, further development of the Meadowlands Sports Complex, and casino-hotel development in Atlantic City.[5] He is one of only two Democrats, also including incumbent Phil Murphy, to be elected governor twice in the past fifty years.[8] The other Governors elected to two terms (Thomas Kean, Christie Whitman, and Chris Christie) have all been Republicans.[15]

    Cabinet and administration

    Float:none
    Above:The Byrne Cabinet[16]
    Border Color1:
    1. 000
    Office1:Governor
    Name1a:Brendan Byrne
    Term1a:January 15, 1974 – January 19, 1982
    Border Color2:
    1. 000
    Office2:Secretary of Agriculture
    Name2a:Phillip Alampi
    Term2a:July 2, 1956 – June 30, 1982
    Office3:Attorney General
    Name3a:William F. Hyland
    Term3a:January 15, 1974 – January 17, 1978
    Name3b:John J. Degnan
    Term3b:January 17, 1978 – March 5, 1981
    Name3c:Judith J. A Yaskin
    Term3c:March 5, 1981 – March 26, 1981 (acting)
    Name3d:James R. Zazzali
    Term3d:March 26, 1981 – January 19, 1982
    Office4:Commissioner of Banking
    Name4a:Richard F. Schaub
    Term4a:February 26, 1973 – August 31, 1976
    Name4b:Robert F. Wagner
    Term4b:September 1976 – May 1977
    Name4c:Mary L. Parell
    Term4c:May 2, 1977 – February 22, 1978
    Name4d:Robert R. Bianchi
    Term4d:February 24, 1978 – February 8, 1982
    Office5:President of the
    Civil Service Commission
    Name5a:James A. Alloway
    Term5a:June 8, 1970 – September 23, 1976
    Name5b:S. Howard Woodson
    Term5b:September 23, 1976 – March 23, 1982
    Office6:Commissioner of Community Affairs
    Name6a:Sidney L. Willis
    Term6a:1974 (acting)
    Name6b:Patricia Q. Sheehan
    Term6b:January 17, 1974 – December 1, 1978
    Name6c:Joseph A. LeFante
    Term6c:December 15, 1978 – February 10, 1982
    Office7:Commissioner of Corrections
    Name7a:Robert Mulcahy
    Term7a:November 8, 1976 – January 17, 1978
    Name7b:William H. Fauver
    Term7b:June 15, 1978 – December 31, 1997
    (Acting: January 18, 1974 – June 15, 1978)
    Office8:Defense Adjutant General
    Name8a:Major General William R. Sharp
    Term8a:April 23, 1970 – March 20, 1974
    Name8b:Major General Wilfred C. Menard Jr.
    Term8b:March 20, 1974 – February 10, 1982
    Office9:Commissioner of Education
    Name9a:Fred G. Burke
    Term9a:July 1, 1974 – March 31, 1982
    Office10:Commissioner of Energy
    Name10a:Anthony J. Grossi, President (PUC)
    Term10a:1972 – 1975
    Name10b:Joel R. Jacobson, President (PUC)
    Term10b:1975 – July 20, 1977
    Name10c:Joel R. Jacobson, Commissioner (DOE)
    Term10c:July 21, 1977 – December 22, 1981
    Name10d:Charles A Richman
    Term10d:1981 – 1982 (acting)
    Office11:Commissioner of Environmental Protection
    Name11a:Richard J Sullivan
    Term11a:May 5, 1970 – May 6, 1974
    Name11b:Joseph T. Barber
    Term11b:1974 (acting)
    Term11c:May 9, 1974 – May 6, 1977
    Name11d:Rocco D. Ricci
    Term11d:July 10, 1977 – May 12, 1978
    (Acting: 1977)
    Name11e:Betty Wilson
    Term11e:1978 (acting)
    Name11f:Daniel Joseph O'Hern
    Term11f:May 12, 1978 – July 16, 1979
    Name11g:Betty Wilson
    Term11g:1979 (acting)
    Name11h:Jerry F. English
    Term11h:August 23, 1979-March 1, 1982
    Office12:Commissioner of Health
    Name12a:James R. Cowan
    Term12a:January 29, 1970 – May 13, 1974
    Name12b:Joanne E. Finley
    Term12b:June 17, 1974 – March 5, 1982
    Office13:Chancellor of Higher Education
    Name13a:Ralph A. Dungan
    Term13a:June 26, 1967 – August 9, 1977
    Name13b:T. Edward Hollinder
    Term13b:August 9, 1977 – June 30, 1990
    Office14:Commissioner of Human Services
    Name14a:Ann Klein, DIA
    Term14a:1974 – October 31, 1976
    Name14b:Ann Klein, DHS
    Term14b:November 1, 1976 – February 5, 1981
    Name14c:Timothy Carden
    Term14c:March 17, 1981 – February 25, 1982
    Office15:Commissioner of Insurance
    Name15a:Richard C. McDonough
    Term15a:February 14, 1972 – January 21, 1974
    Name15b:James J. Sheeran
    Term15b:January 21, 1974 – January 25, 1982
    Office16:Commissioner of Labor and Workforce
    Development
    Name16a:Joseph A. Hoffman
    Term16a:1974 – 1976
    Name16b:John J. Horn
    Term16b:1976 – 1982
    Office17:Public Advocate
    Name17a:Stanley Van Ness
    Term17a:May 21, 1974 – February 11, 1982
    Office18:Secretary of State
    Name18a:J. Edward Crabiel
    Term18a:January 15, 1974 – July 11, 1977
    Name18b:F. Joseph Carragher
    Term18b:1974 (acting)
    Term18c:1977 (acting)
    Term18d:July 11, 1977 – January 19, 1982
    Office19:Commissioner of Transportation
    Name19a:Alan Sagner
    Term19a:January 21, 1974 – August 15, 1977
    Name19b:Russell Mullen
    Term19b:August 15, 1977 – May 22, 1978
    Term19c:May 22, 1978 – September 25, 1981
    Name19d:Anne Canby
    Term19d:November 16, 1981 – April 16, 1982
    (Acting: August 13, 1981 – November 16, 1981)
    Office20:State Treasurer
    Name20a:Richard Leone
    Term20a:January 15, 1974 – December 10, 1976
    Name20b:Clifford A. Goldman
    Term20b:February 18, 1977 – January 19, 1982
    (Acting: 1976 – 1977)

    Law practice and columnist

    After leaving office in 1982, Governor Byrne became a senior partner at Carella, Byrne, Bain, Gilfillan, Cecchi, Stewart & Olstein in Roseland, New Jersey (now Carella, Byrne, Cecchi, Brody and Agnello, P.C.).[17] Additionally, Byrne and his successor as governor, Thomas Kean, co-wrote a weekly column in The Star-Ledger, containing their "dialogue" on state and national public affairs and politics. He has also taught courses at Princeton University and Rutgers University.[17]

    Despite not supporting all of his policies, Byrne said that Governor Chris Christie should run for president in 2016, calling Christie "the best candidate that the Republicans have" and complimented his "charm".[15]

    Personal life

    On June 27, 1953, he married Jean Featherly,[18] with whom he had seven children. Byrne's son, Tom Byrne, was the New Jersey Democratic State Committee chair in the 1990s and was a prospective candidate for the U.S. Senate race in 2000, before withdrawing in favor of eventual winner Jon Corzine, who later became governor. Brendan's oldest granddaughter, Meaghan, who also saved Brendan's life with the Heimlich at Nero's Grille in April 2016, worked as a legislative staffer in the U.S. House of Representatives before moving into NGO foreign policy work.[19]

    Jean and Brendan Byrne divorced in 1993 after 40 years of marriage. She died in 2015 of babesiosis, aged 88.[20]

    Byrne married Ruth Zinn, who was also divorced, in 1994.[21]

    2010 assault

    On February 16, 2010, while vacationing in London with his wife, Byrne was punched in the face by a mentally ill man near Waterloo tube station. The attacker was subsequently restrained by a London Underground station supervisor who came to Byrne's aid until the police arrived. Byrne, who had taken part in a staged charity boxing match with Muhammad Ali in 1979, joked, "At least I didn't fall down at Waterloo, as when I fought Ali."[22] [23]

    Death

    Byrne died on January 4, 2018, in Livingston, New Jersey, of a lung infection at the age of 93.[24] [25] [26] [27]

    His funeral was held on January 8 at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey.[28] Archbishop Joseph W. Tobin, then-Governor Chris Christie and Governor-elect Phil Murphy, former Governors Thomas Kean, Donald DiFrancesco, Jim McGreevey, Richard Codey and Jon Corzine and U. S. Representative Bill Pascrell were in attendance.[29] Byrne's remains were cremated and his ashes were interred in Princeton Cemetery.

    Legacy

    From 1981 to 1996, the Meadowlands Arena in East Rutherford was named Brendan Byrne Arena. It hosted the New Jersey Devils, New Jersey Nets, and Seton Hall Pirates men's basketball. The arena was then renamed Continental Airlines Arena, followed by IZOD Center.[30]

    The Brendan T. Byrne State Forest, formerly Lebanon State Forest, in New Lisbon is named for him.

    In 2006, Rutgers University's Center on the American Governor of the Eagleton Institute of Politics established the Brendan T. Byrne Archive, an online database containing various resources from the Byrne administration, including original documents and video interviews with Brendan Byrne and members of his administration.[31]

    In 2011, Byrne was inducted into the New Jersey Hall of Fame along with Queen Latifah, John Travolta, and ten others.[32]

    In 2014, Byrne's former chief counsel Donald Linky published a biography of Byrne, New Jersey Governor Brendan Byrne: The Man Who Couldn't Be Bought.[33] [34]

    Further reading

    Archival collections

    External links

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    Notes and References

    1. https://www.americanairmuseum.com/person/18579 Brendan T Byrne bio - American Air Museum in Britain
    2. Web site: Governor Brendan T. Byrne Timeline . 3 February 2018 . Rutgers University Center on the American Governor . Rutgers University.
    3. News: Golway. Terry. When Codey Talks, He Talks to Them. The New York Times. October 31, 2004.
    4. News: Brendan Byrne, two-term New Jersey governor in 1970s, dies at 93. The Washington Post. January 4, 2018. Portnoy, Jenna.
    5. Web site: Brendan Byrne, Governor Who Gave New Jersey Casinos, Dies at 93. Bloomberg. January 4, 2018. January 4, 2018.
    6. Byrne. Brendan Thomas. 1949. Proportional Representation in Municipal Government.
    7. Edward J. Mullin, Fitzgerald's New Jersey Legislative Manual, 1980, "Governor's Biography, p. 413-414"
    8. Web site: Former New Jersey Gov. Brendan Byrne Dies At 93. Laura Kidd . Furgerson. January 4, 2018. January 4, 2018. Hackensack Daily Voice.
    9. News: Sandman Routed — GOP Loses Control of State Legislature 3rd Time in Century . The New York Times . Ronald . Sullivan . November 7, 1973 . April 30, 2014 .
    10. News: Election Decimates the G.O.P.'s Ranks in Trenton. The New York Times . November 8, 1973 . January 16, 2018 .
    11. News: Jersey Republicans Urge Party Purge. The New York Times . Ronald . Sullivan . November 9, 1973 . January 16, 2018 .
    12. Edward J. Mullin, Fitzgerald's New Jersey Legislative Manual, 1980, "Governor's Biography, p.413"
    13. Web site: Blue Jersey:: Polls and the 1977 Democratic Comeback . May 26, 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140526035031/http://www.bluejersey.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=11022 . May 26, 2014 . mdy .
    14. Web site: Blue Jersey:: Byrne's strategy in the 1977 comeback . May 26, 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140526035643/http://www.bluejersey.com/diary/11060/ . May 26, 2014 . mdy-all .
    15. News: Haddon. Heather. Brendan Byrne, 90 Years Old and Still in the Mix . The Wall Street Journal. December 19, 2014.
    16. Web site: Governor Brendan T. Byrne Cabinet and Staff.
    17. Web site: Son: Former New Jersey Gov. Brendan Byrne, Democrat who mobsters said was too ethical to be bribed, dies at age 93. ABC News. January 4, 2018. January 4, 2018.
    18. Web site: Governor Brendan T. Byrne Biography. Center on the American Governor. Rutgers University. December 21, 2014. October 14, 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20141014082057/http://governors.rutgers.edu/on-governors/nj-governors/governor-brendan-t-byrne-administration/governor-brendan-t-byrne-biography. dead.
    19. Web site: meaghan byrne - LegiStorm Search Results . 2021-08-12 . www.legistorm.com.
    20. Web site: Former N.J. First Lady Jean Byrne dies at 88. The Star-Ledger. August 12, 2015. October 16, 2017.
    21. Book: Linky, Donald . New Jersey Governor Brendan Byrne: The Man Who Couldn't Be Bought . 2014-10-13 . Rowman & Littlefield . 9781611477436 . en.
    22. News: Ted. Sherman. Former N.J. Gov. Brendan Byrne is mugged, punched in face while in London . The Star-Ledger. February 16, 2010.
    23. News: Kirby. Terry. Jack Sparrow impersonator saves visitor from meeting his Waterloo. London Evening Standard. February 19, 2010.
    24. News: Son: Former New Jersey Gov. Brendan Byrne, Democrat who mobsters said was too ethical to be bribed, dies at age 93. https://web.archive.org/web/20180105123141/https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/son-former-new-jersey-gov-brendan-byrne-democrat-who-mobsters-said-was-too-ethical-to-be-bribed-dies-at-age-93/2018/01/04/1875d802-f1ad-11e7-95e3-eff284e71c8d_story.html. dead. January 5, 2018. The Washington Post. January 4, 2018. January 4, 2018.
    25. Web site: Ex-New Jersey Gov. Brendan Byrne, too ethical for mobsters, dies at 93. Chicago Tribune. January 4, 2018. January 4, 2018.
    26. Web site: Brendan Byrne, Former New Jersey Governor, Dies at 93. The Star-Ledger. January 4, 2018. January 8, 2018.
    27. News: Chris . Christie . Governor Chris Christie On The Passing Of Governor Brendan T. Byrne . Office of the Governor . January 4, 2018 . January 4, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180105233630/http://nj.gov/governor/news/news/552017/approved/20180104c.html . January 5, 2018 . dead . mdy-all .
    28. Web site: Hundreds gather to remember former N.J. Gov. Byrne. New Jersey.com. February 2, 2018. January 8, 2018.
    29. Web site: What they said about Brendan Byrne: Former governors salute their colleague. Daily Record. February 2, 2018. January 8, 2018.
    30. News: Sandomir . Richard . January 5, 1996 . Brendan Byrne Arena Goes Continental . The New York Times .
    31. Web site: Brendan T. Byrne Archive . December 21, 2014 . Center on the American Governor . Rutgers University.
    32. News: DeMarco . Megan . January 21, 2011 . Queen Latifah, Gov. Brendan Byrne announced as New Jersey Hall of Fame class of 2011 inductees . .
    33. Book: Linky . Donald . New Jersey Governor Brendan Byrne: The Man Who Couldn't Be Bought . 2014 . Fairleigh Dickinson . 978-1611477429.
    34. Web site: August 18, 2015 . Summer Reading 2015: Biography Takes Admiring Look at Popular Governor - NJ Spotlight . October 16, 2017 . NJSpotlight.com.