Democrat Cory Booker, Mayor of Newark, has defeated his Republican opponent, Steve Lonegan, in the New Jersey Senate special election and will take the late Sen. Frank Lautenberg’s seat.
“I heard it all over New Jersey – from north to south, urban, surburban to rural from Democrats to Independents to Republicans. I heard it from everybody,” Booker said in his victory speech. “They all said to me, ‘If I put you in Washington, don’t go down to score victories for a party or politics, go down there to work for people.”
Booker will fill the seat once held by longtime Democratic senator Frank Lautenberg, who died at age 89 in June. With 58 percent of the precincts reporting, The Associated Press called the race for Booker who had 56 percent of the vote with 44 percent going to Steve Lonegan, a former mayor of Bogota, N.J.
After the AP declared his win, the social media-savvy politician tweeted:
Thank you so much, New Jersey. I'm proud to be your senator-elect: https://t.co/vs9ew7iOkd
— Cory Booker (@CoryBooker) October 17, 2013
With Booker as an addition, the Democratic Caucus in the Senate will hold a 55-45 advantage over Senate Republicans. Booker is also New Jersey’s first ever black senator and the Senate chamber’s second black member after South Carolina Senator Tim Scott.
After easily winning an August primary, the general election quickly became personal with attack ads launched to mainly set the two candidates’ ideological differences apart. A favorite among New Jersey conservatives, Lonegan served as the New Jersey director of Americans for Prosperity, a political advocacy group funded by the conservative Koch brothers, before running. He also gained notoriety after attempting to set English as the official language of the town of Bogota while he was mayor.
“Unfortunately for whatever reason the message we delivered together … did not win the day,” the Republican candidate told his supporters Wednesday night.
The question on everyone’s mind: why leave behind your soaring popularity in a Democratic-leaning state to join a legislative body with record-low popularity and that has developed an unfortunate reputation for its gridlock than legislative successes. His arrival in Washignton as the newest Senate member will be met with the testy and frigid aftermath of the government shutdown and the nation potentially defaulting on its debt.
Booker’s campaign started out strong with the candidate’s record-high 66% approval rating in the state, social-media prowess, and fundraising stability.









