Essex
The Machine Factor
But Hudson and two other machine counties - Essex (Newark and environs) and Camden - will play no small role in what looks increasingly like a Menendez victory over Republic Tom Kean Jr. tomorrow.
Just consider the numbers:
In last year's governor's race, Hudson, Essex and Camden accounted for 25 percent of all ballots cast statewide - but 75 percent of Jon Corzine's victory margin over Republican Doug Forrester. Corzine won the race by 10 points, an unexpectedly lopsided tally. Forrester blamed Bush fatigue, but actually the Essex and Hudson election day machinery were key, producing relatively high turnout in their backyards while suburban participation ebbed to an all-time low. The overall effect inflated Corzine's statewide margin.
New Jersey now is considered among the bluest states in the country. No Republican has won a Senate seat in the Garden State in 34 years and it's now been nine years since the party triumphed in any statewide race - Christine Todd Whitman's one-point victory over Jim McGreevey for governor in 1997.
But without the Big Three Democratic counties, the state might be among the most competitive in the country. Just look at the state's 2003 legislative elections. With the outcome of every state Assembly and Senate race in the Big Three counties a foregone conclusion, the machines were barely active on Election Day and Republicans won the majority of all votes cast across the state (even though gerrymandering lost them seats in both chambers).
Yes, New Jersey's independent suburban voters have dramatically soured on the national Republican Party over the last decade, a trend that surely hasn't eased this year. But even if the Kean-Menendez polls were even now, most Republicans would probably still be writing off their standard-bearers chances. In a Democratic machine state, the Republican probably needs to be at least three points ahead going into Election Day to have a prayer.
In Search of the Elusive Bard: The Plays Are Still the Thing
Fernando, Tranquilo
Out on the corner of Essex and Delancey, Freddy could not have had better news than he heard from Cleveland Manley, a trim, balding man in an orange MTA vest who said he was once Al Sharpton's driver.
When Manley, 54, first heard of Freddy's Diallo remarks, he thought, "This guy is dead. I'm never going to vote for him."
But on Sunday, after Sharpton endorsed, Manley heard Freddy restate his regrets on the radio and thought again. "I inhaled, exhaled, and I said OK, you've got my vote."
Meanwhile, the Ferrer chant of choice seemed to match the candidate's relaxed demeanor: "Fernando, tranquilo, el pueblo esta con tigo," which translates roughly as, "Freddy, chill, the people are with you." read more »








