Archive for the ‘Politics and Elections’ Category

Rear view mirror: The William Macchi vs. Robert Janiszewski race for County Executive

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

One jackanape who thought that history was being made actually kept a diary!
- – -
. . .
Wednesday 9/26/95
Dead, Dead, Dead. There was hardly any work here today. It did start to pick up around 4:00. Figures. Anyway, I worked more with Bill Macchi. I also did some letters for Bill. Until tomorrow.

. . .
Friday 9/28/95
The barbecue was great. I came up for lunch. I was working all day on Bill Macchi’s campaign. It seems that I am looked upon as a political junkie, I vehemently hate that title, and it is simply not me.

Friday 10/20/95
. . . I also created the college kids for Macchi flyer. I will distribute these along the corridors at St. Peter’s College. Maybe I could get more support with the kids, if I throw a party with acholic (sic) beverages. Who knows? I was granted the money now lets see about people.

. . .
Wednesday 10/25/95
Today was quiet except for the Democratic incumbent bashing Macchi for betrayal of the Democratic Party. I must say, even though I support Macchi and help him with some votes, this campaign is rather dirty. I cannot believe that each one is running an immature campaign. This is not the Macchi I know. I guess political turmoil could change one’s outlook on them.

. . .

Monday 10/30/95
Today I started to work on my project some more which is scheduled for this Thursday. I hope I get a good turnout. The mayor just came to me and told me that Bill Macchi and he will be stopping by. Oh great… added pressure.

Tuesday 10/31/95
Happy Halloween

Wednesday 11/1/95
Today was rather eventful. I did a lot of last minute preparations for tomorrow nights big event that I am holding. Hopefully it will be a big event. I called all the colleges and faxed them material. I also made some phone calls so that I do not look like a pompous ass.

Thursday 11/2/95
O.K. here we go. I did some more running around. Went up to the Macchi headquarters and picked up some signs and did a lot of final contacting. I hope I will have a great turnout. I plan to.

Friday 11/3/95
. . . The turnout was pretty good. I mean not everybody came for a long time till the end around 11 o’clock. However, Bill Macchi was happy and so was I. . . .

Monday 11/6/95
T – 1day. The office is going crazy. I tried to get everything done that I had to do for the campaign, but everyone seems to have their own agenda. Good Luck Bill!

Tuesday 11/7/95
Off Election Day…

Wednesday 11/8/95
We got demolished, annilated (sic), creamed. I can’t believe it. Bill’s own district didn’t even vote for him. What the hell happened? Today I did some clipping of the election and I wrote a letter to the Weehawken Reporter. Fun! . . . I finished up some extra homework I had as I played secretary. Very quiet day here in Jersey City. Everyone seems depressed.

Urban Times News: Earl the Hat Morgan is supporting Acting Mayor L. Harvey Smith

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Inside County Lines

Urban Times News
October 1, 2004 – October 7, 2004

According to the Jersey Journal editorial staff, the newspaper does not take a political position. Of course that is the furthest thing from the truth. Earl the Hat Morgan is supporting Acting Mayor L. Harvey Smith because he is allowed to sit in the meetings and give advice with Catfish Jones and Ed Cheat Cheatum. For example, he agreed with these two airheads about firing Willie Flood and then taking her back pay. The newspaper should be upfront about Earl the Hat and stop him now. Why not tell the truth Uncle Harvey? The Urban Times News has several New Jersey newspapers as well as the New York Times calling to find out why we refer to Acting Mayor L. Harvey Smith as “Uncle Harvey”. We want to clear the record once and for all.

When Glenn D. Cunningham resigned as the U.S. Marshall for New Jersey to run for the office of mayor of Jersey City, L. Harvey Smith was upset because he believed that he should have been asked to run and become the first African American mayor of Jersey City. The supporters of Glenn Cunningham knew that Smith did not have the qualities to be mayor, and from that point on, Smith was upset. When Smith decided to run for reelection as Councilman -atLarge, no one would put him on their ticket, mainly Council President at the time, Tom DeGise. DeGise told Smith there was no room on his ticket for him. Lou Manzo, who was also running for mayor in 2001, said he wouldn’t even talk to Smith because of Smith’s loyalty to
Republican Mayor Brett Schindler. Smith had nobody to call but Glenn Cunningham, so he called Cunningham who was reluctant to put him on the ticket.

Smith already had a reputation as a double-crosser. Smith had the Reverend Ralph Brower call Cunningham and Joe Cardwell to support him getting on the ticket. Cunningham finally said okay. During the campaign, the ungrateful Smith never showed up for meetings or walked with campaigners among the voters. After Cunningham won the election, Smith wanted to become Council President, but former Mayor Brett Schindler and the City Council of Tom DeGise and William Gaughan would never support Smith. They would not support Smith for Council President even though he had been Councilman-at-large for eight years. Again Glenn Cunningham against his better judgment made Smith Council President. As soon as he became Council President, DeGise and Gaughan told him that he should be the mayor not Cunningham. Smith immediately turned against the Cunningham administration.

L. Harvey voted against every important item the administration recommended. He even voted against the Rev. Ralph Brower’s appointment to the Jersey City Redevelopment Agency. When State Senator Joe Charles decided to become a Superior Court Judge, DeGise and Gaughan told Smith they wanted him to run him against the first African American Mayor of Jersey City for State Senator. Smith was happy to be supported by the Hudson County Democratic Organization led by Tom DeGise and William Gaughan. Cunningham won the State Senate race with a devastating 9-1 margin of victory. Since his election to the City Council and Council President on the Cunningham ticket, Smith has always been an Uncle Tom for Tom DeGise and Bill Gaughan. When Glenn Cunningham died from a massive heart attack, DeGise did it to Smith again. Now they support Jerry Healy for mayor over their boy, their own personal Uncle Tom, L, Harvey Smith. When these two scoundrels threw Smith under the bus and supported Healy, Smith spoke before the Ministerial Alliance, stating that DeGise and Gaughan were racist. Now he see: they’re racist. Smith, they were always racist. You just couldn’t see it because your head was down, carrying water for these two, That is why we call you Uncle Harvey. Next we tell everybody why his widow barred you from Glenn Cunningham’s funeral.

. . .

Read the complete Urban Times News article.

Lou Manzo ran five times for Mayor of Jersey City.

Friday, April 16th, 2010

The Lou Manzo follies

The first trip on the merry-go-round was in the ’92 special election held after Gerry McCann got the gong from Michael Chertoff. With the Hudson County Democratic Organization’s backing, Lou appeared poised to win. But, as luck would have it, Lou’s brother Allen decided to place his name on the ballot, too. Jersey City voters got the chance to view Smothers Brothersesque campaign commercials with Momma Manzo affirming that she liked Lou best. There was no brass ring for Lou.

In the 1993 regular election for Mayor of Jersey City, Lou Manzo was again the HCDO candidate. This time, brother Allen did not run. A bizarre theme of the Manzo campaign was to blame Bret Schundler for Apartheid in South Africa. Though Lou seemed to have missed it, the voters knew that Apartheid was abolished some years before the election. At least one audience walked out on him.

Losing by a two to one margin, Lou Manzo said that he felt like he’d been “hit by a refrigerator.”

Manzo ran again in 2001 in a three way race with Glenn Cunningham and Tom Degise. Knocked out in the first round, Manzo backed Glenn Cunningham in the run-off. An early City Hall meeting between Lou and the newly-elected Mayor didn’t turn out so well. Manzo complained that he’d been kept waiting in the reception area. As the weeks wore one, the lumps got kneaded out. Lou Manzo ran (and won) for Assembly in the 31st on the Cunningham reform ticket.

After the death of Glenn Cunningham, it was deja vu all over again with Manzo in the 2004 special election. That spectacle dwarfed anything that had been seen in Jersey City for generations. This time ’round, another brother, Ron, managed to cause trouble. Ron Manzo pleaded guilty to insider trading, involving McGreevey’s Chief-of-Staff. The Cunningham supporters backed Willy Flood and called Lou Manzo a “political charlatan and backstabber.” Lou Manzo wasted time and energy ousting Ron Buonocore from the race. And in yet another sideshow, a convicted sex offender accused another candidate of ordering a hit on Manzo.

Manzo managed to spend over two million dollars, plastering the town with signs — including huge picture banners strangely reminiscent of Citizen Kane — and filling mailboxes with gibberish printed in three colors on glossy paper. But, despite the extraneous motion spending spree, the Manzo campaign never developed a clear, coherent message. Plus, Manzo had no Get Out The Vote, the spearhead of Hudson County ground war politics (and the raison d’être of Machine politics). Manzo lost this time, too.

And that’s not all.

Post-election, Eyewitness News featured Frmr. Candidate Manzo for stiffing campaign workers.

Charged with taking bribes from Solomon Dwek in connection with the 2009 run for mayor, the curtain seems to have finally closed on the Manzo Follies.


LOUser Manzo Malarkey


From the Assemblyman Manzo Web Site:
Manzo was not afraid to take on powerful political figures and big developers. In the mid 1980′s, Manzo halted construction at the site of one of New Jersey’s largest developments, Newport, on the Jersey City waterfront. He challenged the world-renowned developer, Samuel LeFrak, when he discovered that the development was dumping contaminated soil on the site and into the Hudson River. Furthermore, Manzo shutdown portions of the Newport Mall when it became infested with rodents because of the developer’s failure to properly bait excavation sites.
. . .
In 1989 when a pro-development candidate was elected Jersey City’s Mayor, Manzo locked horns with politicians overattempts to stifle his Division’s efforts to have chromium sites excavated. The Mayor felt that Manzo’s efforts were scaring away potential developers from the city. Manzo was forced out of office and pursued a lengthy, unsuccessful battle in the courts to retain his job.

In 1990, Manzo became the first independent in Hudson County history to win election to the Hudson county Board of Freeholders, defeating the hand-picked candidate of the very Mayor who forced him out of his Health Division post.
# # #
Manzo’s “raids” on Newport were his version of “Oh WAITER, there’s a FLY in my soup!” For LOUnatic Manzo, being Health Officer meant one cheap publicity stunt after another, the public be damned.

That supposedly evil tool of developers Jersey City Mayor who “Manzo locked horns with” was Gerry McCann, Lou Manzo’s biggest backer.


The Lou Manzo follies

Bernard Kenny: The Urban Times has regularly printed personal attacks.

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

On NJN TV, State Senator Bernard Kenny blamed Hudson County’s problems on GET NJ and the Urban Times News.

State Senator Bernard Kenny: Mayor misled me on getting weekly to end its attacks

Thursday, September 25, 2003

Letters to the Editor

The Jersey Journal

The “In Our Opinion” column that appeared in the Saturday, Sept. 20 edition of The Jersey Journal calls upon the Hudson County Democratic Party to appoint Mayor Glenn D. Cunningham to the interim 31st District state Senate seat. So long as the cloud of the ELEC laws violations charges hang over his head, it would be wrong to appoint Glenn Cunningham to that position. His appointment would be disrespectful to the people of our county and to my colleagues on both sides of the aisle.

In the past few years, Hudson County’s reputation has sustained some very bad blows thanks to the illegal behavior of a few of its elected officials. During the recent court proceedings about the June 3 primary election, the improprieties and illegal actions used by Mayor Cunningham’s longtime political operatives and campaign funders were made public. Some have said the mayor did not know of the methods being employed on his behalf during his campaign. In his ruling, Judge D’Italia said it would be disingenuous for anyone to think that the mayor did not know what was going on. When Glenn Cunningham was most recently called upon to disassociate himself from these individuals who circumvented the laws of our state, he dismissed the allegations about their tactics as “minutiae.”

Many of your readers may not know that the chairman of the mayor’s PAC and his election committee is the publisher of the Urban Times. The Urban Times has regularly printed personal attacks on community leaders, families and elected officials who are not Cunningham supporters. They use untrue, inflammatory, vulgar and often racially offensive stories to do so. In spite of this, Mayor Cunningham continues his support for the publication through his continued authorship of a regular editorial column and by allowing a great deal of advertising of City of Jersey City agencies and his own state Senate campaign to be paid for with the taxpayers’ dollars.

Shortly after the June 3 primary election, in an effort to mend fences with Glenn Cunningham and his faction, I reached out and did meet with him. One of the ways I suggested that we could reconcile was for the mayor to end his support and stop using taxpayers’ money to fuel the Urban Times. The mayor assured me that this would happen. In fact, the attacks did not end, they escalated, and the characters of good people continued to be assailed as the paper labeled them pedophiles, Mafia and worse.

As the attacks continued and the mayor did not withdraw his support of the Urban Times, I went back to Glenn Cunningham and again tried to effect a reconciliation. Shortly after that meeting, the Urban Times attacked me and my family. The fact that Glenn Cunningham has not withdrawn his column and continues to allow the people of Jersey City’s money to go towards advertising in the Urban Times is a clear indication that he does not want to reconcile with my colleagues and other community leaders.

Leaders take the moral high ground at all times – even when it means distancing yourself from longtime associates who act unscrupulously. I have seen this in my colleagues in Hudson County and Trenton. To expect that we would send anyone less to Trenton would be wrong.

BERNARD KENNY, N.J. SENATOR AND CHAIRMAN OF THE HUDSON COUNTY DEMOCRATIC ORGANIZATION Hudson County

Cure for cancer discovered by prominent supporter of Jersey City Mayor Jerramiah Healy!

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

It’s therapeutic and yet it’s denied us

Dear Editor:

For more than 3,500 years, cannabis has been the most widely used plant for medicine.

Should it be decriminalized, it would replace 20 percent of all pharmaceutical drugs. It has been proven to be therapeutic for anorexia, tumors, epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease, muscular spasms, multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, depression, stress and migraine headaches.

Some of the greatest thinkers today and of yesterday believe that cannabis is the world’s best overall medicine.

In 1988, Judge Francis Young concluded that cannabis is one of the safest therapeutically active substances known to man.

In 1996, more Californians voted for medical cannabis than voted for Bill Clinton.

A CNN Internet Poll shows 96 percent of people “support the use of cannabis for medical purposes”

There are more than 60 therapeutic compounds in cannabis that are healing agents in medical and herbal treatment.

For the majority of people, cannabis has shown hundreds of therapeutic uses with perfect safety scores of illness for over 100 years. The Senate might want to consider the 14 million wasted years in jails and prisons as well as the millions of lives that have been and continue to be ruined because of it!

Thirty million people use cannabis relaxionally and responsibly without one single death from overdose-ever!

Hempseed foods make sure the human body gets enough essential amino acids and fatty acids to build strong immune systems, maintaining good health and vitality.

Cannabis is used in Asian nations as food. Apparently, it makes great oatmeal.

The senate might want to consider this too regarding hunger.

Cannabis is the plant kingdoms richest source of life and in various scholars opinion may well be the cure for cancer and heart disease.

Of the three million edible plants that grow on earth, no other single plant source can compare to the tremendous nutritional value of hemp seed.

It makes me wonder why it doesn’t make people angry that the #1 food of all time for most birds, fish, horses, humans and life in general is illegal to have naturally and healthfully in America.

James Francis Waddleton

Drunken Jamie

In Jersey City, Frank Hague climbed aboard the Progressive bandwagon.

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

From The Early Career of Mayor Frank Hague

By Mark S. Foster

Until recently, most studies of big city “bosses” have shown striking similarities in both approach and content. A number of monographs have erroneously stereotyped the Hagues, Tweeds, Crokers and Pendergasts as being basically alike, varying only in degree. Historians have oversimplified both the individuals concerned and their roles in the city. The most common belief is that a “boss” rises to the top through backroom deals, “stuffing” ballot boxes with fraudulent votes and herding bewildered immigrants into voting boots so they can vote the straight “machine” ticket. The stereotyped boss held power by various types of graft. He might reward his friends with soft jobs on the city payroll. Or he might arrange that a helpful business contact receive a lucrative city contract with no competitive bid. One might list types of graft endlessly. By no means do I wish to convey the impression that “bosses” and graft are not interrelated. The serious scholar should not, on the other hand, equate all city bosses with all types of graft.

Few individuals on the American scene possessed as much flamboyancy and magnetism as did Frank Hague during his political career. Though he died in 1956, he retains steadfast friends and bitter enemies to this day. Controversy surrounded almost everything he did; reporters made him the frequent object of savage attacks or lavish praise. Frank Hague was always good copy. As far back as his days as a young constable, he captured more newspaper “mentions” than many of his superiors. Given Hague’s dual nature, it is puzzling that few scholarly polemics about Hague and Jersey City Politics during his time have portrayed him as an unmitigated evil, a crass opportunist intent only upon lining his own pockets.

Every conceivable charge of graft and corruption has been leveled at Mayor Hague. According to a number of contemporary newspaper and periodical articles, the boodling of two of the most notorious bosses, William Tweed and Richard Croker, pale in comparison to Hague’s Additional evidence demonstrates that his use of Jersey City’s police force rivaled Hitler’s use of the Secret Service during the same period.

This thesis is not a biography of Frank Hague, nor is it a history of the life cycle of the Democratic organization in Jersey City. By no means is it intended as an expose of Frank Hague. Instead, it is a study of the means by which he rose to power as mayor. The thesis does not thoroughly examine the effects of such factors as size and stability of population and ethnic and economic breakdowns by ward upon local politics. Such factors, of vital importance in any complete study of a political organization, will receive considerable attention when this thesis is expanded into a dissertation.

My major thesis is that Frank Hague did not fit the stereotyped boss image during his rise to power; on the contrary, he actually assumed a progressive stance. His rise to power was greatly influenced by his observations of the success of Woodrow Wilson. By 1912, Hague’s reputation was tarnished by his connection with a number of unsavory scandals. He was badly in need of a new image.

Hague clearly recognized the enormous impact of the progressives on the American urban scene during the first two decades of the twentieth century. During Hague’s twenty year apprenticeship before he became mayor in 1917, Lincoln Steffens wrote a series of articles in McClure’s entitled “The Shame of the Cities” which exposed the corrupt alliances between big business and some municipal governments. Other muckrakers exposed malpractices of the insurance trust, patent medicine vendors and the beef trusts. On the national scene, Theodore Roosevelt declared war on “bad” trusts. At the state level, Robert M. LaFollette of Wisconsin and Hiram Johnson of California, as well as Woodrow Wilson in his own state, initiated significant political reforms. Good government leagues were formed in many towns and cities.

. . .
Read The Early Career of Mayor Frank Hague

Frank Hague Main Menu

The Jimmy King billboard in Jersey City

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

The Jimmy King billboard in Jersey City
For some years, the Jimmy King Civic Association billboard was a fixture at the corner of State Hwy and Summit Ave in Jersey City. When King became involved in local conflicts and controversies, the sign often was the target of vandalism.

Steve Lipski’s Create Charter School public school contracts law and open public meetings act violations

Friday, March 19th, 2010

REPORT OF EXAMINATION – OCTOBER 2004
CREATE BOARD OF TRUSTEES – PUBLIC SCHOOL CONTRACTS LAW AND OPEN PUBLIC MEETINGS ACT VIOLATIONS

The Department of Education, Office of Compliance Investigation, (OCI) conducted a review of the CREATE Charter School Board of Trustees\’ compliance with the Public School Contracts Law and Open Public Meetings Act.\’ At the time of the review, the following deficiencies were noted:

  1. The financial statements appear to improperly report a positive fund balance and have not been prepared in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principals (GAAP).
  2. The CREATE Charter High School violated provisions of N.J.S.A. 18A:18A-4 by failing to publicly advertise for competitive bids.
  3. CREATE violated provisions of the Public School Contracts Law by failing to obtain competitive quotations as required under N.J.S.A. 18A:18Á-37.
  4. The CREATE Board of Trustees violated N.J.S.A. 18A:17-9 when it failed to provide detailed financial summary reports to board members.
  5. The CREATE Board of Trustees violated N.J.S.A. 18A:19-2 when it made payments prior to board approval.
  6. The CREATE Board of Trustees violated N.J.S.A. 10:4-8 (d) when it failed to properly publicize the convening of public meetings with 48-hour notice and publicly announce that adequate notice had been given.
  7. The, CREATE Board of Trustees violated provisions of N.J.S.A. 10:4 when it failed to vote on-an action.
  8. The CREATE Board óf Trustees violated provisions of N.J.S.A. 10:4-13 when it failed to disclose the nature of the discussion of the executive session.
  9. The CREATE Board of Trustees violated provisions of N.J.S.A. 10:4-14 when it failed to record minutes of the executive discussion and release those minutes when the exemption from pubic discussion expired.
  10. CREATE Charter School does not properly record the activities of the Board meetings in the board minutes.
  11. CREATE Charter School failed to maintain adequate human resource and payroll functions.
  12. CREATE Charter School made inappropriate financial transactions.
  13. CREATE Charter School lacks adequate internal controls over financial transactions.
  14. CREATE Charter School does not maintain proper filing and record retention.
  15. CREATE Charter School may not be in compliance with the charter regarding the number of board members.

. . .
Click here to read the complete report.

Guy Catrillo meets Miss Universe.

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010


Guy Catrillo was ‘mongst the many arrested in the Dwek stings.

Cunningham Administration and Jersey Journal promoted McGreevey campaign through false charges.

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

Anthony Olszewski working in City Hall, Jersey City (circa 2000).
Anthony Olszewski working in City Hall, Jersey City (circa 2000).

To push McGreevey’s run in 2001 — and to hide incompetence in the City of Jersey City department of Information Technology (both in general and in particular), the Cunningham Administration, aided and abetted by the Jersey Journal, falsely accused a “former city employee” of a wide range of illegal behavior.

There was no campaign banner at the City’s Web Site. No equipment was missing. There were no codes. And, if “the Police Department’s Special Investigations Unit was searching” for me, they forgot to look at the corner of Grand and Center (just off of the New Jersey Turnpike) — the place with the dayglo orange van out front and the 18′ Schundler banner on the roof. None of the papers ever stopped by or made any other attempt to contact me for a statement.

COMPUTERCRAFT.com Van

In the watch out for what you wish for, as you just might get it department, not much more than a year later, James E. McGreevey was firmly in Trenton and Glenn Cunningham was firmly stabbed in the back by the (then) Governor. As a further illustration of the through the looking glass nature of political discourse, at this point in time the pro-Cunningham Urban Times News asked me to write an article criticizing McGreevey.