UPDATED – Cory Booker is one step closer to the Senate, cruising to the Democratic nomination in a low-turnout special primary election on Tuesday.
The Newark mayor rolled to an expected easy win over his three other competitors in the contest to succeed the late Sen. Frank Lautenberg. With most precincts reporting, the Associated Press called the race for Booker who was leading with almost 60% of the vote. Rep. Frank Pallone was second with just under 20% followed by Rep. Rush Holt at 16% and Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver with only 5%.
In his victory speech Tuesday night, Booker thanked and praised his Democratic opponents, and said he planned to bring a new style of politics to Washington.
“They say we are being naïve, to them I say have you ever met us, do you know where I’ve been working for the last seven years. This is Newark, New Jersey, and we don’t do naïve,” he said.
Now, the popular celebrity mayor has just over two months until he’s on the ballot next, where he’ll face Republican Steve Lonegan. The former Bogota mayor and conservative activist won the GOP nomination over physician and first time candidate Alieta Eck. Lonegan, who is legally blind, unsuccessfully challenged Christie in the 2009 gubernatorial primary.
Booker is the heavy favorite to defeat the newly-minted GOP nominee in the Oct. 16 special general election, and the latest Quinnipiac University poll released last week showed Booker topping Lonegan by 25 points.
After Booker’s win, Democrats praised their new nominee, while quickly painting Lonegan as outside the mainstream.
“Republicans have chosen to nominate an extreme, Tea Party candidate, and I am confident New Jersey will resoundingly elect Cory Booker to the U.S. Senate in October and again next November,” Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Chairman Michael Bennet said in a statement.
The GOP’s campaign arm, though, called Lonegan “just the type of commonsense conservative we need,” and slammed Booker more concerned with his own image than New Jersey voters.
“The last thing the Senate needs is another show horse who is more concerned with self promotion than governing,” National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman Jerry Moran said — echoing a refrain Pallone had picked up in the Democratic contest.









