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The following is a list of neighborhoods in Newark, New Jersey, United States within its five political wards. [1] each with distinct neighborhoods. [2] North Ward
For the 2024-2025 session, the 29th legislative district of the New Jersey Legislature is represented in the State Senate by Teresa Ruiz (D, Newark) and in the General Assembly by Eliana Pintor Marin (D, Newark) and Shanique Speight (D, Newark). [7] The legislative district overlaps with New Jersey's 8th and 10th congressional districts.
Between the 1998 and 2018 elections, Democrats held between 6 and 8 seats. The 2018 elections brought Democrats to 11 of the 12 seats, which was their highest since the 1912 elections. This left Chris Smith in the 4th district as the only Republican member of New Jersey's congressional delegation for the 116th Congress. It was also the first ...
New Jersey's 10th congressional district, 2020 [citation needed] Party Candidate Votes % Democratic: Donald Payne Jr. (incumbent) 241,522 : 83.3 : Republican: Jennifer Zinone 40,298 13.9 Independent: Akil Khalfani 3,537 1.2 Independent: Liah Fitchette 3,480 1.2 Libertarian: John Mirrione 1,172 0.4 Total votes 290,009 : 100 : Democratic hold
Librarian and Newark South Ward Democratic activist Oadline Truitt was chosen by the committee to serve until a November 2006 special election that she also won. [ 20 ] [ 21 ] Truitt and incumbent Assemblyman Craig A. Stanley were defeated in the 2007 Democratic primary by the Cory Booker -backed ticket of Caputo and Cleopatra Tucker , widow of ...
Dover attorney-activist Karol Ruiz says the aldermen board is redistricting Dover to protect incumbent aldermen Ed Correa from primary challenges.
Apr. 6—Just because the U.S. Census data is delayed doesn't mean Ohio political leaders can't get started on drawing new state legislative and Congressional district maps, say voting rights groups.
Newark was governed by a mayor and common council from 1836 to 1917 and then by a five-member commission until 1954. Effective as of July 1, 1954, the voters of the city of Newark, by a referendum held on November 3, 1953 and under the Optional Municipal Charter Law (commonly known as the Faulkner Act ), adopted the Faulkner Act (Mayor-Council ...