Lichtenberg, Erik re-elected
WEST MILFORD. Incumbent Republicans defeat Democratic and independent opponents for two Township Council seats.
Councilwomen Marilyn Lichtenberg and Ada Erik easily won re-election to the Township Council in the Tuesday, Nov. 5 election.
According to unofficial results compiled by the Passaic County Clerk’s Office, Lichtenberg received 8,112 votes and Erik had 7,863 compared with 5,007 for Karen Phelan and 4,992 for Brian Zlotkin, both Democrats. Stephen Jarvis, who ran as an independent, received 993 votes.
Erik and Lichtenberg were elected to the council in 2018 and re-elected in 2021.
Teresa Dwyer and Claire Lockwood were unopposed in their bids for re-election to the Board of Education.
A third seat on the board is open because Kate Romeo did not seek re-election.
Rep. Josh Gottheimer, D-5, was re-elected to Congress with 54 percent of the vote compared with 44 percent for Republican Mary Jo Guinchard. Beau Forte of West Milford received 3,204 votes as an independent in the race.
Senate seat
Rep. Andy Kim, D-3, was elected to the U.S. Senate, defeating Republican businessman Curtis Bashaw for the seat that opened when Bob Menendez resigned this year after his federal conviction on bribery charges.
Kim, a three-term congressman from central New Jersey, becomes the first Korean-American in the Senate. In a recent interview, he said that accomplishment would validate his parents’ decision 50 years ago to immigrate to the United States.
Kim is a former Obama administration national security aide, a Rhodes Scholar and has a doctorate from Oxford.
He’s presented himself as an unassuming, hard-working official and gained national attention in 2021 when he was spotted cleaning up the U.S. Capitol after the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, bagging trash.
“It pains me to my core to see the struggle we are going through,” Kim told supporters in a hotel ballroom after his victory. “The very foundation of our democracy is rendered fragile. We are at a moment of profound anxiety about what comes next for our country.”
Kim challenged people to see the upcoming 250th anniversary of America’s independence as “a reminder that the greatness of America is not what we take from this country but what we give back.”
“Let us use that extraordinary milestone as a moment of healing,” he said.
Kim’s victory keeps a reliably Democratic seat under his party’s control. He is also expected to take up the seat sooner than January because of Menendez’s resignation. Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy has said George Helmy, who is serving the remainder of Menendez’s term, will step down and the winner of Tuesday’s election would be appointed.
Kim, 42, was first elected to Congress in 2018 by defeating Republican Tom MacArthur, an ally of former President Donald Trump. He became the state’s first Asian-American to be elected to Congress.
During the Senate campaign, Kim said he would oppose tax breaks for the wealthy and support abortion rights.
Bashaw personally financed his campaign with at least $1 million, according to Federal Election Commission records. He gained the GOP nomination in June when he defeated a Trump-backed rival. A first-time candidate, he’s served on several boards including for Stockton University and a state tourism panel.
The Senate race began chaotically for Democrats. The party, which controls the Legislature and the governorship, found itself with an incumbent senator facing a second federal corruption trial. Menendez was convicted on bribery charges that he traded his office for cash, gold cars and a luxury car, and has resigned. But he’s denied the charges — as he did in his earlier trial, which ended in a hung jury.
This time, though, Democrats abandoned him. Kim launched his own race in defiance and rejection of Menendez the day after his indictment last fall.
But it wasn’t an easy path to the nomination. First lady Tammy Murphy launched a campaign that was well-funded and widely backed by insiders. Kim upended politics in New Jersey when he sued in federal court to stop a practice whereby party leaders were allowed to influence how ballots are drawn up, widely seen as helping preferred candidates. The judge, in an initial ruling, sided with Kim. Murphy dropped out and Kim won easily in June.
In another closely watched race,Rep. Tom Kean Jr., R-7, was re-elected in the 7th District, defeating Democratic challenger Sue Altman. Kean, who reached Congress by defeating a Democratic incumbent in 2022, won a second term in the sprawling district that spans the northwestern and central part of the state, with part reaching into New York suburbs in the east.
Democrats saw the contest as a possible pickup opportunity in part because the party had done well when Trump was atop the ticket for Republicans. In the 2018 midterm, they swept all but one House seat, including the 7th District. But during redistricting after the latest census, the district changed to include more GOP-leaning towns.
Altman, a former professional basketball player, previously led the progressive Working Families Alliance.
In the 10th District, which includes parts of Newark and Jersey City, Rep. LaMonica McIver, a Democrat, was re-elected to a full two-year term. She won a special election in September to fill the final months of the seat Democratic Rep. Donald Payne Jr. held before he died in May. McIver is the second Black woman to represent New Jersey in Congress, along with current Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman.