New Jersey’s tight race for governor may be the most hotly contested and closely watched election being held Tuesday.
New Jersey is one of two states — along with Virginia — that hold gubernatorial elections one year after a presidential election. That makes political types eager to treat it as a tea leaf for next year’s midterms.
And while the state has voted for a Democrat in every presidential election since 1992, it has toggled between governors of both parties for decades.
This year, Democratic nominee Rep. Mikie Sherrill and Republican nominee Jack Ciattarelli have called in the big guns to gain a late edge: Sherrill stumped in recent days with former President Barack Obama and popular Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, while Ciattarelli has enjoyed loud backing from President Donald Trump since the primary.
Sherrill and Ciattarelli both campaigned on affordability, but with significantly different approaches.
Ciattarelli — a former state assemblyman and businessman who won the Republican nomination for governor in 2021 — promises to slash state spending using a state version of the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency, cap property taxes to a percentage of assessed home value and reduce taxes for corporations. (At 11.5%, New Jersey has the highest corporate tax rate in the country.)
Ciattarelli also wants to “mandate that all state employees return to an in-person, 5-day workweek immediately, and fully end remote work for public employees.” And he wants to bring back plastic bags.









