请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 New Jersey Republican State Committee
释义

  1. Membership

  2. Party financing

  3. Current leadership

  4. Current elected officials

     Federal officials  U.S. House of Representatives  State officials  New Jersey Senate  New Jersey Assembly 

  5. Past elected officials

     Vice President of the United States  U.S. Senators  U.S. Representatives  1856–1874  1875–1899  1900–1924  1925–1949  1950–1974  1975–present  Governors 

  6. Notable past party members

  7. See also

  8. References

  9. External links

{{Infobox political party
|name = Republican Party of New Jersey
|logo = New Jersey Republican Party logo.png
|logo_size = 200px
|colorcode = #BC2025
|chairperson = Doug Steinhardt
|leader2_title = Senate Minority Leader
|leader2_name = Thomas Kean, Jr.
|leader3_title = Assembly Minority Leader
|leader3_name = Jon Bramnick
|headquarters = 150 West State Street, Suite 230
Trenton, NJ 08608
|student_wing = College Republicans
|youth_wing = Young Republicans Teenage Republicans
|ideology = Conservatism
Fiscal conservatism
Centrism
Social conservatism
|blank1_title = Colors
|blank1 = Red
|seats1_title = United States Senate
|seats1 = {{Composition bar|0|2|hex=#BC2025}}
|seats2_title = United States House of Representatives
|seats2 = {{Composition bar|1|12|hex=#BC2025}}
|seats3_title = New Jersey State Senate
|seats3 = {{Composition bar|14|40|hex=#BC2025}}
|seats4_title = New Jersey General Assembly
|seats4 = {{Composition bar|26|80|hex=#BC2025}}
|seats5_title = County Executives
|seats5 = {{Composition bar|1|5|hex=#BC2025}}
|seats6_title = County Clerks
|seats6 = {{Composition bar|12|21|hex=#BC2025}}
|seats7_title = County Sheriffs
|seats7 = {{Composition bar|11|21|hex=#BC2025}}
|seats8_title = County Surrogates
|seats8 = {{Composition bar|10|21|hex=#BC2025}}
|seats9_title = County Freeholders
|seats9 = {{Composition bar|59|137|hex=#BC2025}}
|website = http://www.njgop.org
|country = New Jersey
}}

The New Jersey Republican State Committee (NJGOP) is the affiliate of the Republican Party in New Jersey. The Committee was founded in 1880. The party is currently led by Doug Steinhardt, who replaced Michael B. Lavery. Lavery replaced Sam Raia of Saddle River, New Jersey.[1]

Membership

According to the New Jersey Republican State Committee's Constitution and By-Laws the State Committee shall be composed of one male and one female registered Republican from each of the 21 counties of New Jersey elected at the primary election in the year in which the Governor is to be elected. Each elected member shall take office upon their election following the primary, and hold office for four years.

Party financing

On January 19, 2006 the Star-Ledger published the findings of quarterly reports by the New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission. The New Jersey Republican State Committee had raised about $2.2 million and spent $2.1 million. The organization representing Republican Assemblymen called the Assembly Republican Victory had raised $2.2 million and spent $2.4 million. The organization representing the Republican State Senators called the Senate Republican Majority had raised a little more than $700,000 and spent about $640,000. In total the three State Republican organizations had raised $5.2 million and spent around $5.2 million.

Current leadership

  • Doug Steinhardt, Chairman
  • Lynda A. Pagliughli, Vice Chairwoman
  • Irene Kim Asbury, Secretary
  • James Foerst, Treasurer
  • Bill Palatucci, National Committeeman
  • Virginia Haines, National Committeewoman
  • Rob Ortiz, Finance Chairman
  • Theresa Winegar, Executive Director

Current elected officials

The New Jersey Republican Party holds a minority in both the New Jersey General Assembly and the New Jersey Senate. Republicans hold five of the state's twelve U.S. seats, with only one remaining seat to be held after January 3, 2019.

Federal officials

U.S. House of Representatives

  • Chris Smith, 4th District (1981–present)

State officials

New Jersey Senate

  • Senate Minority Leader: Thomas Kean, Jr. of Westfield
{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
  • Christopher Bateman of Neshanic Station
  • Chris A. Brown of Ventnor City
  • Anthony Bucco of Boonton Township
  • Gerald Cardinale of Demarest
  • Christopher J. Connors of Lacey
  • Kristin Corrado of Totowa
  • Michael J. Doherty of Washington Township (Warren)
  • James W. Holzapfel of Toms River
  • Steve Oroho of Franklin (Sussex)
  • Declan O'Scanlon of Little Silver
  • Joseph Pennacchio of Montville
  • Robert Singer of Lakewood
  • Samuel D. Thompson of Old Bridge

}}

New Jersey Assembly

  • Assembly Minority Leader: Jon Bramnick of Westfield
{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
  • Robert Auth of Old Tappan
  • Tony Bucco of Boonton Township
  • Robert D. Clifton of Matawan
  • Michael Patrick Carroll of Morris Township
  • Ronald S. Dancer of Plumsted
  • BettyLou DeCroce of Parsippany
  • Christopher DePhillips of Wyckoff
  • John DiMaio of Hackettstown
  • Serena DiMaso of Holmdel
  • DiAnne Gove of Long Beach
  • Amy Handlin of Middletown
  • Joe Howarth of Evesham
  • Sean T. Kean of Wall
  • Gregory P. McGuckin of Toms River
  • Nancy Munoz of Summit
  • Ryan Peters of Hainesport
  • Erik Peterson of Franklin (Hunterdon)
  • Kevin J. Rooney of Wyckoff
  • Brian E. Rumpf of Little Egg Harbor
  • Holly Schepisi of River Vale
  • Parker Space of Wantage
  • Ned Thomson of Wall
  • Jay Webber of Morris Plains
  • Hal Wirths of Wantage
  • David W. Wolfe of Brick

}}

Past elected officials

Vice President of the United States

  • Garret Hobart (1897–99)

U.S. Senators

{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
  • John C. Ten Eyck (1859–65)
  • Richard Stockton Field (1862–63)
  • Alexander G. Cattell (1866–71)
  • Frederick T. Frelinghuysen (1866–69)
  • William Joyce Sewell (1881–87, 1895–1901)
  • John Kean (1899–1911)
  • John F. Dryden (1902–07)
  • Frank O. Briggs (1907–13)
  • Joseph S. Frelinghuysen (1917–23)
  • David Baird (1918–19)
  • Walter Evans Edge (1919–29)
  • Hamilton Fish Kean (1929–35)
  • David Baird, Jr. (1929–30)
  • Dwight Morrow (1930–31)
  • William Warren Barbour (1931–37, 1938–43)
  • Albert W. Hawkes (1943–49)
  • Howard Alexander Smith (1944–59)
  • Robert C. Hendrickson (1949–55)
  • Clifford P. Case (1955–79)
  • Nicholas F. Brady (1982)
  • Jeffrey Chiesa (2013)

}}

U.S. Representatives

1856–1874

{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
  • Isaiah D. Clawson (1857–59)
  • George R. Robbins (1857–59)
  • William Pennington (1859–61)
  • John T. Nixon (1859–63)
  • John L. N. Stratton (1859–63)
  • John F. Starr (1863–67)
  • William A. Newell (1865–67)
  • George A. Halsey (1867–73)
  • William Moore (1867–71)
  • John Hill (1867–73, 1881–83)
  • John W. Hazelton (1871–75)
  • Amos Clark, Jr. of Elizabeth (1873–75)
  • William W. Phelps (1873–75, 1883–89)
  • Isaac W. Scudder (1873–75)
  • Marcus L. Ward (1873–75)
  • Samuel A. Dobbins (1873–77)

}}

1875–1899

{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
  • Clement H. Sinnickson (1875–79)
  • Thomas B. Peddie (1877–79)
  • John H. Pugh (1877–79)
  • John L. Blake (1879–81)
  • Lewis A. Brigham (1879–81)
  • Charles H. Voorhis (1879–81)
  • George M. Robeson (1879–83)
  • Phineas Jones (1881–83)
  • John H. Brewer (1881–85)
  • Benjamin F. Howey (1883–85)
  • John Kean of Elizabeth (1883–85, 1887–89)
  • George Hires (1885–89)
  • Herman Lehlbach (1885–91)
  • James Buchanan of Trenton (1885–93)
  • Charles D. Beckwith (1889–91)
  • Christopher A. Bergen (1889–93)
  • Henry C. Loudenslager (1893–1911)
  • John J. Gardner (1893–1913)
  • Thomas McEwan, Jr. (1895–99)
  • Mahlon Pitney (1895–99)
  • Charles N. Fowler (1895–1911)
  • Richard W. Parker (1895–1911, 1914–19, 1921–23)
  • James F. Stewart (1895–1903)
  • Benjamin F. Howell (1895–1911)

}}

1900–1924

{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
  • William M. Lanning (1903–04)
  • William H. Wiley (1903–07, 1909–11)
  • Ira W. Wood (1904–13)
  • Henry C. Allen (1905–07)
  • Marshall Van Winkle (1905–07)
  • William J. Browning (1911–20)
  • Dow H. Drukker (1914–19)
  • John Henry Capstick (1915–18)
  • Edward W. Gray (1915–19)
  • Elijah C. Hutchinson (1915–23)
  • Frederick R. Lehlbach (1915–37)
  • Isaac Bacharach (1915–37)
  • John R. Ramsey (1917–21)
  • William F. Birch (1918–19)
  • Amos H. Radcliffe (1919–23)
  • Ernest R. Ackerman (1919–31)
  • Francis F. Patterson, Jr. (1920–27)
  • Theodore F. Appleby (1921–23)
  • Archibald E. Olpp (1921–23)
  • Herbert W. Taylor (1921–23, 1925–27)
  • Randolph Perkins (1921–36)
  • George N. Seger (1923–40)

}}

1925–1949

{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
  • Stewart H. Appleby of Asbury Park (1925–27)
  • Franklin W. Fort of East Orange (1925–31)
  • Charles A. Eaton of Plainfield (1925–53)
  • Harold G. Hoffman of South Amboy (1927–31)
  • Charles A. Wolverton of Camden (1927–59)
  • Fred A. Hartley, Jr. of Kearney (1929–49)
  • Peter A. Cavicchia of Newark (1931–37)
  • Donald H. McLean (1933–45)
  • D. Lane Powers of Trenton (1933–45)
  • J. Parnell Thomas of Allendale (1937–50)
  • Walter S. Jeffries (1939–41)
  • Frank C. Osmers, Jr. of Englewood (1939–43, 1951–65)
  • Albert L. Vreeland of East Orange (1939–43)
  • Robert W. Kean of Livingston (1939–59)
  • Gordon Canfield of Paterson (1941–61)
  • Frank L. Sundstrom of East Orange (1943–49)
  • Harry Lancaster Towe of Tenafly (1943–51)
  • James C. Auchincloss of Rumson (1943–65)
  • Frank A. Mathews, Jr. (1945–49)
  • Clifford P. Case of Rahway (1945–53)
  • Thomas M. Hand (1945–56)

}}

1950–1974

{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
  • William B. Widnall of Ridgewood (1950–74)
  • Peter Frelinghuysen, Jr. of Morristown (1953–75)
  • Milton W. Glenn of Margate City (1957–65)
  • Florence P. Dwyer of Elizabeth (1957–73)
  • George M. Wallhauser of Maplewood (1959–65)
  • William T. Cahill of Collingswood (1959–70)
  • John E. Hunt of Pitman (1967–75)
  • Charles W. Sandman, Jr. of Cape May Court House (1967–75)
  • Edwin B. Forsythe of Moorestown (1970–84)
  • Joseph J. Maraziti of Boonton (1973–75)
  • Matthew J. Rinaldo of Union (1973–83)

}}

1975–present

{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
  • Millicent H. Fenwick of Bernardsville (1975–83)
  • Harold C. Hollenbeck of East Rutherford (1977–83)
  • James A. Courter of Hackettstown (1979–91)
  • Marge Roukema of Ridgewood (1981–2003)
  • Jim Saxton of Mount Holly (1984–2009)
  • Dean A. Gallo of Morris Plains (1985–94)
  • Richard Zimmer of Flemington (1991–97)
  • Bob Franks of Union (1993–2001)
  • Rodney Frelinghuysen of Morristown (1995–2019)
  • Frank LoBiondo of Ventnor City (1995–2019)
  • William J. Martini of Clifton (1995–97)
  • Michael J. Pappas of Franklin Township (1997–99)
  • Michael A. Ferguson of Warren Township (2001–09)
  • Scott Garrett of Sussex (2003–17)
  • Leonard Lance of Lebanon (2009–19)
  • Jon Runyan of Mount Laurel (2011–15)
  • Tom MacArthur of Toms River (2015–19)

}}

Governors

{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
  • William A. Newell (1857–60)
  • Charles Smith Olden (1860–63)
  • Marcus Lawrence Ward (1866–69)
  • John W. Griggs (1896–98)
  • Foster McGowan Voorhees (1899–1902)
  • Franklin Murphy (1902–05)
  • Edward C. Stokes (1905–08)
  • John Franklin Fort (1908–11)
  • Walter Evans Edge (1917–19, 1944–47)
  • Morgan Foster Larson (1929–32)
  • Harold G. Hoffman (1935–38)
  • Alfred E. Driscoll (1947–54)
  • William T. Cahill (1970–74)
  • Thomas Kean (1982–90)
  • Christine Todd Whitman (1994–2001)
  • Donald DiFrancesco (2001–02)
  • Chris Christie (2010–18)

}}

Notable past party members

  • Garret Hobart: First party chairman serving from 1880 till 1891. Was the 24th Vice President of the United States. Sixth Vice President to die in office.
  • Nelson G. Gross: Party chairman from 1969 till 1970. Gross was arrested and sentenced to two years for five counts of tax fraud and perjury. Gross was kidnapped and murdered on September 17, 1997.

See also

  • Republican Party (United States)
  • New Jersey
  • New Jersey Democratic State Committee

References

1. ^{{cite news|last=Dinges|first=Tomas|title=N.J. Republican Party elects new state chairman|url=http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2011/01/nj_republican_party_elects_new_1.html|accessdate=February 9, 2011|newspaper=The Star-Ledger|date=January 11, 2011}}

External links

  • New Jersey Republican State Committee
{{State Republican Parties in the US}}{{NewJerseyPoliticalParties}}

3 : Political parties in New Jersey|New Jersey Republican State Committee|Republican Party (United States) by state

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/22 19:45:14