New Jersey
Campaign donations to Trump and Harris pour in from NJ donors. See who’s raising more
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Financial contributions to presidential campaigns poured in during July from New Jersey donors, new Federal Election Commission reports show.
The mid-August filings from the presidential candidates’ principal campaign committees show the total they raised from the Garden State this election cycle rose from $13.7 million to nearly $18 million during a tumultuous month that saw one candidate suffer an attempted assassination and another bow out to support his vice president. Both events respectively lit a fire under Republicans and Democrats.
Republicans, who had outraised Democrats by $8.1 million to $4.8 million through June, saw Trump’s campaign padded by nearly $880,000 from New Jersey donors in July, according to federal campaign finance data. Democrats, meanwhile, saw individual contributions out of New Jersey for their candidates rise by nearly $3.4 million. About $2.8 million of that total came between July 21, the day Biden dropped out, and the end of the month, records show.
Going into July, the Biden and Harris campaigns had combined to raise $4.7 million in individual contributions from New Jerseyans, while Trump had raised another $4 million. However, the GOP held an overall lead to start the month, as former Gov. Chris Christie and Nikki Haley, the former governor of South Carolina, combined to collect more than $3.1 million in contributions from New Jersey donors for their 2024 presidential campaigns, records show. The Vivek Ramaswamy, Tim Scott and Ron DeSantis campaigns also collected six figures from New Jersey donors.
The glut of July donations to Harris narrowed the gap considerably, though Republicans still held a total fundraising advantage of roughly $875,000 from Garden State donors to start August.
Retired donors go red
Federal Election Commission reports for the Trump campaign through July show the former president and GOP nominee has dominated in racking up small repeat contributions from New Jersey donors. One Roselle donor donated to Trump more than 1,100 times from July 2023 through July 2024, records show. Those contributions ranged from 59 cents to $70.27.
While that donor was self-described as a self-employed former account manager, repeat retired donors have been a driving force behind contributions to the GOP from New Jersey, records show.
Haley, who lasted the longest in the battle against Trump for the Republican nomination, took in nearly 10,500 separate donations totaling almost $1.3 million. More than half of those donations, roughly 5,600, came from donors self-classifying as “retired,” records show.
Haley’s donations from retirees outnumbered those for Harris and Biden combined through July by nearly 2-to-1 — it was 3-to-1 through June — but they still paled in comparison with Trump’s. By the end of July, retirees had made more than 67,000 individual donations to Trump’s campaign, including more than 1,800 from a single Bound Brook donor, records show. Retiree donations represented roughly two-thirds of New Jersey-based donations to the Trump campaign and more than one-third of all donations directly to presidential campaigns in the state through July.
The Biden and now Harris campaign, meanwhile, picked up roughly 23,000 separate donations from New Jerseyans self-described as “not employed,” records show. Fewer than 500 direct donations to Trump’s campaign came from people fitting that description. That total includes more than 100 donations from Trump’s regular Roselle donor.
NJ donors to presidential campaigns show trends
Other trends in the most recent campaign filings show that Harris and Biden have outpaced Trump in total donations from self-reported professors, lawyers and attorneys in New Jersey. Residents in general contracting, plumbing and some other aspects of the construction industry have conversely donated to Trump in larger numbers.
For the 2020 election, presidential campaigns directly raised more than $43.4 million from New Jersey contributors, with nearly $30.6 million of that total going to Democratic campaigns, federal records show. Biden’s campaign received almost $19.2 million from those Garden State donations, while Trump’s campaign raised $12.8 million. The totals through July for the two official Democratic and Republican nominees are $11.1 million and $7.9 million, respectively, below what was raised in New Jersey through the entire 2020 election cycle, records show.
During his run for the presidency this cycle, Newark-born Christie raised nearly $1.9 million in his home state from fewer than 1,900 direct individual donations to his campaign. The state-based contributions represented more than a quarter of his nationwide total. Christie’s fundraising in New Jersey benefited from large donations, though DeSantis had received the most donations of $5,000 or more in the Garden State through July, records show.
New Jersey
How to find food assistance across NJ using this one website
Emergency food distribution held in Camden County
Communities are continuing to offset the need increased by a pause in November SNAP funding with emergency food distributions.
Although the record-breaking government shutdown has ended, the effects are still being felt nationwide — especially in terms of food.
During the shutdown, recipients of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits lost access. Demand surged at food banks as result, leaving many pantries in a struggle to remain stocked.
Now, with the celebration-packed holiday season in full swing, the need for food remains high for some.
To combat this, New Jersey Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin, D-Middlesex, announced the launch of endinghungernj.com, an online resource that helps residents find and contribute to local food resources.
“As we approach the holiday season, we are reminded that while many of us are preparing to share meals with the people we love, far too many families are still unsure of how they will put food on the table,” Coughlin said in a press release. “That is not acceptable to me, it is not acceptable in New Jersey, and it is the reason why we’ve taken the position that hunger is not inevitable.
“It’s a problem we can solve when government, nonprofits, businesses, and neighbors all pull in the same direction.”
Endinghungernj.com is to serve as a one-stop resource for New Jersey families, containing a comprehensive directory of food assistance across the state.
The website provides county-by-county listings of food pantries and community food resources, as well as a directory of statewide advocates and information on state initiatives and legislation.
For those interested in supporting hunger-relief efforts, the website also provides ways to help both within your local community and on a wider scale.
“Simply put, New Jersey refuses to let families fall through the cracks and endinghungernj.com is another step in making that a reality,” Coughlin said.
“Whether it’s through impactful legislation, creating partnerships with food banks, or simply lending a helping hand, we’re committed to doing everything we can to make sure every resident has the dignity and the peace of mind that comes with a full plate.”
Risha Inaganti writes about trending topics across South Jersey for the Courier-Post. If you have a story she should tell, email her at rinaganti@usatodayco.com. Subscribe to stay up to date on the news you need.
New Jersey
Monument project in New Jersey seeks to reframe narrative about migrants and labor amid political rhetoric and debates – WHYY
New York–based artist Immanuel Oni is behind the South Jersey monument. The “space doula,” who helps people declutter and clear emotional or energetic patterns in an environment, says much of his work is rooted in bringing people together.
“For me, art making is not about what I’m making, it’s about who I’m making it for,” he said.
Oni praised the organizers of the project for hosting “a lot” of the community dialogue to build “a very solid foundation” of engagement.
“I found that their approach was very robust and that they did a lot of the heavy lifting because that’s something that I usually do from the ground up,” Oni added.
Betty Brown-Pitts, of Vineland, participated in the feedback sessions. Her father moved from Alabama to New Jersey in 1945 to work at Seabrook Farms, and her mother followed about seven years later.
When the monument is built, Brown-Pitts hopes people will be proud that their story will be preserved.
“I think it’s very important to preserve these stories and our contributions that my family and other African Americans made to Seabrook Farms,” she said.
During a second set of meetings in January, each artist will present their initial designs to stakeholders.
“They’ll bring those materials and sketches and activities that hopefully will allow them to get additional input,” Urban said.
There will be a third set of meetings where stakeholders will sign off on the final designs.
Fabrication is expected to take place from the end of March until the start of summer. Urban said that once the monuments have their formal debut, a series of “activation programming” will follow.
“We’re going to try to bring community members back out to gather at the completed monument installations and use it as another opportunity to reflect more on migration and labor and other histories from different communities that we might harvest in the future,” Urban said.
New Jersey
Neighbors stunned as teen charged in fatal stabbing of N.J. mom in condo complex
A South Jersey mother who was fatally stabbed by her teenage son was described as quiet, kind, and as a dedicated caregiver.
Julissa Serrano, 49, worked as a home health aide for Journey Hospice and lived in the Meadowbrook Condos off Route 40 in Mays Landing.
Police said they responded to her home around 6:05 p.m. Saturday after a 911 call reported a juvenile with a knife.
Officers found Serrano with multiple stab wounds, and she later died at AtlantiCare Regional Medical Center.
Neighbors said the normally quiet complex was suddenly filled with police activity.
Mehmet Cicekli, who lives two doors down, said he was at work when the killing happened. He learned what occurred after seeing television news vans outside.
“I’m really shocked,” said Cicekli, 24. “She was quiet, and she was nice.”
One neighbor, who asked not to be identified, said she believed she saw the teenager escorted from the apartment in handcuffs.
“We didn’t find out until the next day,” the neighbor said of Serrano’s death.
The circumstances surrounding the incident remain unclear, but The Atlantic City Prosecutor’s Office announced they charged Serrano’s 17-year-old son with murder, possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose and unlawful possession of a weapon.
He was taken to Harborfields Atlantic Youth Center pending his first court appearance.
Investigators have not said how he was identified as the suspect.
Serrano had worked for Journey Hospice for three years, regularly caring for patients facing death, said Denise Raymond, the company’s senior administrator.
“She was one of our home health aids,” Raymond told NJ Advance Media. “She was amazing — very loved by her coworkers, by her patients, by her patients’ families and we’re going to miss her.”
Serrano was named employee of the month at least once and earned positive feedback for her care, Raymond said.
“She was just a very positive, upbeat person to work with,” Raymond said. “You couldn’t be in a room with her without smiling.”
Journey Hospice is affiliated with Lutheran Social Ministries of New Jersey, a nonprofit organization under the Lutheran Christian Church that runs community outreach programs at 18 locations statewide.
The Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office declined to comment on the case Tuesday.
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