Glenn Cunningham (New Jersey politician) explained

Glenn Cunningham
State Senate:New Jersey
District:31st
Term Start:January 13, 2004
Term End:May 25, 2004
Predecessor:L. Harvey Smith
Successor:Joseph Doria
Office1:43rd Mayor of Jersey City
Term Start1:July 1, 2001
Term End1:May 25, 2004
Predecessor1:Bret Schundler
Successor1:L. Harvey Smith
Birth Name:Glenn Dale Cunningham
Birth Date:16 September 1943
Residence:Jersey City, New Jersey
Party:Democrat
Profession:United States Marine, Police Officer
Spouse:Sandra Bolden

Glenn Dale Cunningham (September 16, 1943 – May 25, 2004) was an American Democratic Party politician, who was the first African American Mayor of Jersey City, the state's second-largest city, winning the 2001 Jersey City mayoral election. Cunningham also served in the New Jersey Senate.

After Cunningham's death, L. Harvey Smith became the acting mayor of Jersey City. In a November 2004 special election, Judge Jerramiah T. Healy was elected to complete the remainder of Cunningham's term. Joseph Doria was selected to fill Cunningham's Senate vacancy on an interim basis, and won a special election to fill the balance of the term.

Biography

Raised in Jersey City, Cunningham attended Henry Snyder High School, and was inducted into the school's first hall of fame class in 2018.[1]

Before his election as mayor, Cunningham, a former Marine and member of the Jersey City Police Department for 25 years, had been appointed by President Bill Clinton as head of New Jersey's United States Marshals Service Office. He also served on the Hudson County Board of Chosen Freeholders, as Jersey City Council President, and as public safety director of Hudson County. Cunningham died at Greenville Hospital in Jersey City of a heart attack on May 25, 2004, aged 60.[2] [3] He was a Master Mason and full member of the Most Worshipful Oriental Grand Lodge of Free & Accepted Masons in Newark and was buried with Masonic honors in a funerary procession.

Cunningham's widow, Sandra Bolden Cunningham, has become a political leader in Jersey City in her own right. She reportedly considered a bid for her husband's State Senate seat in the 2004 special election[4] and a bid for the State Assembly in 2005. In March 2006 signs appeared around Jersey City touting Mrs. Cunningham as a candidate for the United States Senate either in a Democratic Party primary versus her husband's political rival, Sen. Bob Menendez or in the general election against Menendez and Republican State Sen. Thomas Kean Jr. Mrs. Cunningham defeated Assemblyman Louis Manzo in the June 2007 Democratic primary for State Senate and was elected to the Senate in November 2007.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Zeitlinger, Ron. "See who's in the first class of Snyder High School's Wall of Fame", The Jersey Journal, October 16, 2018. Accessed November 14, 2018. "Richie Glover (Class of '69), a college football Hall of Famer, Judge Shirley Tolentino and Mayor Glenn D. Cunningham will be joined by six others in the first class at the Jersey City school's auditorium on Oct. 26 at 6 p.m., the Parents Council of Henry Snyder High School announced."
  2. Died: Glenn D. Cunningham. Jet. June 14, 2004. 105. 24. 54. 24 March 2018. 0021-5996.
  3. News: Jersey City Mayor Glenn Cunningham: A life filled with firsts. March 24, 2018. NJ.com. April 24, 2017. February 19, 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190219130643/https://www.nj.com/jerseyjournal150/2017/04/jersey_city_mayor_glenn_cunningham_a_life_filled_w.html. live.
  4. http://politicsnj.com/kornacki060204_Hudson.htm Three candidates expected to seek Cunningham Senate seat; Manzo says he'll run for Mayor