Get App
Download App Scanner
Scan to Download
Advertisement
This Article is From Nov 07, 2021

GOP’s Ciattarelli Digs In Despite Murphy’s 65,000-Vote N.J. Lead

Three days after New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy won re-election, Republican challenger Jack Ciattarelli has yet to concede. The Associated Press called the tight race for the Democratic incumbent on Wednesday night. Murphy now leads by 65,242 votes. 

“No one should be declaring victory or conceding the election until every legal vote is counted,” Ciattarelli said in a video message posted on Twitter on Thursday. 

Here's a look at where things stand:

Tight race:

  • The margin is 2.6 percentage points -- 50.9% for Murphy and 48.3% for Ciattarelli, according to the AP.
  • Murphy's lead has continued to widen since AP declared him the winner.

Turnout:

  • About 2.5 million votes are in AP's tally. That's about 38% of registered voters.
  • There are some 820,000 additional registered voters in New Jersey since 2017, when Murphy was first elected.
  • Some 450,000 additional Democrats and 265,000 Republicans have registered since 2017.
  • Murphy has about 118,000 additional votes since 2017. Ciattarelli has some 335,000 more votes  than the Republican candidate, Kim Guadagno, got in 2017.

County breakdown:

  • Murphy is leading in 10 of 21 counties, and Ciattarelli is leading in 11.
  • Murphy leads in seven of New Jersey's 10 most populous counties.
  • The county giving the most votes so far to Murphy is Bergen, with 140,654.
  • Ciattarelli has the most votes from Ocean County -- 143,148 -- garnering more support there that Guadagno did in 2017.
  • Ciattarelli has more support in GOP-leaning Monmouth and Hunterdon counties.

Murphy Support Slips:

  • Murphy won 13 counties in 2017. This year, he is winning in 10.
  • Atlantic County flipped from Democratic to Republican. Murphy's support there fell by more than 10 points. Cumberland and Gloucester counties also flipped to the GOP.
  • Support in New Jersey's largest county, Bergen, slid by 4.2 points. In the Democratic stronghold of Essex, support slipped by 5.9 points.

Early Voting and Mail-in Ballots:

  • New Jersey for the first time allowed in-person early voting. A number of snafus led to additional provisional ballots at certain voting sites.
  • New Jersey had more than 500,000 vote-by-mail ballots. Two-thirds of those ballots were from Democrats, according to analysis by the Rebovich Institute for New Jersey Politics.

What's Next:

  • Nov. 8: deadline for receipt of mail-in ballots.
  • Nov. 19: deadline for recount applications.
  • Nov. 20: deadline for county clerks to transmit official election results to state.
  • Dec. 2: deadline for meeting of Board of State Canvassers to certify general election results.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

Essential Business Intelligence, Continuous LIVE TV, Sharp Market Insights, Practical Personal Finance Advice and Latest Stories — On NDTV Profit.

Newsletters

Update Email
to get newsletters straight to your inbox
⚠️ Add your Email ID to receive Newsletters
Note: You will be signed up automatically after adding email

News for You

Set as Trusted Source
on Google Search