
After a negative flyer her campaign issued cost her the endorsement of the state's second largest newspaper, Assemblywoman Connie Wagner (D-Paramus) said she will change the way she campaigns.
"I think that I've matured as a candidate and as an assemblyperson, and if I choose to run again in the future, I will only do positive pieces," said Wagner, a freshman running for re-election with fellow incumbent Joan Voss (D-Fort Lee). "And you can hold me to that."
The now infamous "Porn and Guns" mailer - which accuses Republican opponents Nicholas Lonzisero and Judith Fisher of having ties to the pornography industry and of renting space to a gun shop located near a school (both charges are based in fact, but stretched to logical extreme) - had even Democrats scratching their heads as to why incumbents in a relatively safe district would engage in slash and burn campaigning.
Ultimately, it cost the two Democrats the otherwise wrapped up endorsement of The Record, which praised their legislative records and said the Republicans "offer mostly boilerplate Republican talking points." Nevertheless, the paper called the flyer a "deal-breaker" and, in its last line, endorsed the Republicans.
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Democrats went over the top negative in the race for State Assembly in District 38, and it cost them the endorsement of The Record. The re-election campaign of Assemblywomen Joan Voss (D-Fort Lee) and Connie Wagner (D-Paramus) sent out a "Porn and Guns" mailer attacking Judith Fisher for her connection to the pornography industry because she owns a company that sells accounting software to Playboy, and Nicholas Lonzisero for renting space in a building he owns to a gun shop.
"On the issues, we are more aligned with Wagner and Voss. They have an impressive body of legislative work already. But we, in good conscience, cannot ignore the negative tone of their campaign. For us, it is a deal-breaker," the editorial said.

When you get this close to Election Day, there is no shortage of dumb comments that come from people who are either in public office or likely to win one. But with Joseph Ferriero no longer in charge, what's coming out of Bergen county is sort of amazing.
The best line of the week came from Assemblyman Frederick Scalera (D-Nutley), who sought to lessen the effect of Ferriero's criminal conviction by noting that he also represents parts of Essex and Passaic counties: "We answer to three county chairs," Scalera said, not considering that some might think he actually answers to the voters.
The biggest stretch of the truth also came from two Democratic Assemblywomen, Connie Wagner (D-Paramus) and Joan Voss (D-Fort Lee). Their campaign put out a mailer attacking Republican Judith Fisher of being an Internet pornographer. Their evidence: Fisher and her husband own a firm that produces accounting software for intellectual property management. One of their customers is Playboy. Fisher's problem is that she's running in a Democratic district and doesn't have the money to respond - or talk about how Wagner and Voss were hand-picked for their seats by Ferriero, who liked candidates who didn't necessarily think entirely for themselves.
Democratic incumbents Julie O'Brien and Vernon Walton have seized on attacks against tobacco companies as a critical issue in a race for Bergen County Freeholder. They are blaming GOP challenger John Driscoll, who is a field sales representative for Lorillard Tobacco, for his role in enabling children to smoke cigarettes. "As a mother and a grandmother I know how hard it is to keep kids away from cigarettes. John Driscoll's efforts aren't helping. It takes your breath way," O'Brien said. Maybe it's smart politics that O'Brien has shifted the debate away from property taxes and Ferriero (by the way, he picked her too).
A Republican Council candidate in North Arlington taped a one-hour conversation with four Democratic leaders, including Mayor Peter Massa, where the Democrats outline a plan to give him "money, appointments and power" in exchange for dropping out the race. What remains to be seen is whether the bad guy is Republican Chris Johnson, who may have solicited a bribe, or the Democrats, who may have violated the same state law that sent the Mayor of Carney's Point to jail.

HACKENSACK – State Sen. Bob Gordon (D-Fair Lawn) says he does not “understand the logic” of his Democratic district-mates sending out a hard hitting campaign flyer against their out-funded, underdog Republican opponents.
“Had it been my campaign, I would not have authorized a piece of that kind,” he said. “It’s not a safe district, but [the Democrats] lead by a sizable margin, so there’s no reason to go negative.”
The mailer, issued by Assemblywomen Connie Wagner (D-Paramus) and Joan Voss (D-Teaneck), attacks their opponents over “porn and guns” – “porn” for Republican Judith Fisher accounting software to Playboy, and “guns” for Lonzisero renting a space next to a school to a gun shop, which has occupied the spot since 2002.
Wagner, who was standing near Gordon, defended the mailer.
“You know what? Everything in there is true. Is it a little strong? Yes, it is,” she said. “But it’s a campaign, and that’s what the campaign is about.”

Bergen County Republicans are enraged by a Democratic mailer that attacks the 38th District Republican Assembly candidates over "porn and guns."
The mailer hits recipients with an image of the word "porn" spelled out in computer keys above "guns" spelled out in bullets.
"If you make your money on porn or guns, then you have something in common with the Bergen Republican candidates," the front of the mailer reads. Turn it around, and the flyer says that Republican Assembly candidate Judith Fisher is a "consultant to one of the largest pornographic companies in the world" and that her running mate, Ridgefield Councilman Nick Lonzisero, rents property to a gun shop located next to an elementary school that is promoted by the National Rifle Association - "the same organization that's been lobbying to allow assault weapons in New Jersey."
"It is so despicable. It shows the two Democratic candidates are wallowing around in the sewers with pig manure," said Bergen County Republican Chairman Bob Yudin. "You can quote me on that."
The flyer's style is fairly typical of Bergen County's notoriously down and dirty political scene. What is unusual is that it was issued in a district that is considered a relatively safe bet for incumbents Joan Voss (D-Fort Lee) and Connie Wagner (D-Paramus) to win.

Bergen County Republican Chairman Bob Yudin said today that the corruption allegation against Ridgefield Mayor Anthony Suarez helps put the 38th Legislative District in play.
"It is in play because of the rampant Democratic corruption, first with Senator (Joseph) Coniglio and now with Mayor Suarez," said Yudin.
The 38th is considered a relatively safe Democratic district, although Republicans have indicated that they're keeping an eye on it this year. Even after Coniglio (D-Paramus) had to drop his candidacy for re-election to a third term after receiving a target letter from the U.S. Attorney's office in 2007, the Democratic slate, led by Robert Gordon (D-Fair Lawn) as Coniglio's replacement, won easily.
But Yudin thinks the corruption issue may have reached critical mass there. Republican candidate Nick Lonzisero is council president in Suarez's town, and, if Suarez resigns, he will become interim mayor.
In April, Coniglio was convicted of steering state funds to Hackensack University Medical Center, which employed him as a consultant. Former Bergen County Democratic Chairman Joseph Ferriero and ex-BCDO counsel Dennis Oury are set to have corruption trials that parallel the general election. Yudin thinks all that, combined having former U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie - who got the ball rolling on the investigations that ensnared the Democrats - at the top of the ticket, will make corruption a winning issue.
Yudin's focus on corruption - or the "corruption tax" that he ran last year's unsuccessful freeholder campaigns on - has drawn criticism from some Bergen Republicans in the past.
Former Republican state Sen. Louis Kosco said that he occasionally gets calls from his friends who follow politics asking if he feels happy to see the Democrat who beat him in 2001 in legal trouble.
With Coniglio convicted today of six counts of mail fraud and extortion, Kosco, who moved to Lacey Township from Paramus four years ago, said he's just sad.
"People call me and say ‘aren't you happy about this,' I say ‘absolutely not,'" he said. "It's not something that I'm gloating over, believe me," he said.
Kosco spent eighteen years in the Assembly and state Senate representing District 38, which was then a swing district. Like Coniglio, he served on the Paramus Borough Council before the moving up to the Legislature. He even lived ten doors down from Coniglio, though he said he did not know him well.
"I spent all those years in the legislature keeping that district as clean as it could possibly be. It just makes it look bad for all the honest politicians that are there, and there are a lot of them that do the right thing," said Kosco.
Fort Lee Republican activist Judith Fisher dropped her candidacy for Bergen County freeholder yesterday, instead choosing to run for assembly in the 38th Legislative District.
The move has the enthusiastic support of Bergen County Republican Chairman Bob Yudin, who said he encouraged Fisher – an unsuccessful candidate for mayor of Fort Lee in 2007 and council in 2008-- to run for assembly instead.
“She’s from Fort Lee and ran for mayor and did very well. It’s very important for us to reduce the pluralities in that part of the county. I’m absolutely delighted that she’s done this,” said Yudin.
In the race for the Republican nomination for Bergen County Freeholder, John Driscoll and Robert Hermansen won decisive victories at the Northeastern Republican Organization (NERO) convention on Saturday. While NERO is essentially a scrimmage, it is the first formal test of strength before the Bergen County Republican Organization (BCRO) convention on March 19, and therefore an important barometer of political support.
Ingle: Can you hear him now? Looks like the folks at the Delaware River and Bay Authority didn’t pay attention when Gov. Christie said enough of the open ended and unspecified pending commitments. So he vetoed their minutes, killing their plans. That was his second veto of the DRPA’s minutes...
“To their credit, public officials today are very sensitive to concerns among the citizenry toward their accepting gifts. They want to avoid even the appearance of being influenced.” -- ELEC Executive Director Jeffrey Brindle, who announced yesterday that benefit spending by lobbyists on legislatros has dropped from $163,375 in 1992 to $9,728 in 2009.
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