Common Sense Pledge A Citizen Friendly Contract for NJ
Posted by Lon on 10/02/09 • Categorized as NJ
By Alonzo Hosford
New Jersey State Assembly 2009 candidates have adopted a Common Sense Pledge that outlines a citizen friendly contract for NJ.
Announced at the NJ State House on September 30, 2009, the Common Sense Pledge has the trappings of the 1994 Contract for America. Both were announced only a few weeks before the election. The 1994 Contract for America only 6 weeks and the Common Sense pledge just about 5 weeks.
Both also represent the unusual coalition of campaign platform points. The Contract for America was the first time since 1918 a US Congressional election was run on a national level. The Common Sense Pledge unites NJ Assembly candidates at a statewide level. Common Sense Pledge candidates are running under the banner Citizens for Assembly. The Common Sense Pledge elevates state wide government issues above local issues. Local issues have dominated the NJ legislature and resulted in corruption and mismanagement of State funds to the point of fiscal bankruptcy for a decade.
Different from the Contract for America, candidates pledging support for the Common Sense pledge do not need to have a particular allegiance to a political party. Although most candidates are Republican, independents have joined as well. This calls into question the impact on the NJ Gubernatorial candidates. The planks for the Common Sense pledge are grounded in grass roots sentiments that emerged in 2009 at tea party rallies, town hall meetings and other citizen activism events. The appeal ranges from conservatives through to moderates and independents. The latter often voting for such ideas only to find they do not see them implemented. The elected governor will need to contend with citizens and the Common Sense Pledge legislation.
The Common Sense Pledge
The Common Sense Pledge does not apply any particular NJ Assembly District.
Barry Funt Outlines the Common Sense Pledge
The points are targeted at issues cutting across NJ State districts.
- True property tax reform: End unfunded state mandates and reform the system that causes excessive reliance on property taxes.
- Cut taxes and red tape: Promote private sector job growth by changing the climate that has forced citizens and businesses to flee our state.
- Eliminate undue influence: Expand and enforce pay-to-play rules and conflicts of interest law to include special interest groups that take taxpayer dollars.
- Zero tolerance for abuse of power: End the culture of corruption by stiffening penalties for violators of the public trust.
- Free choice for affordable healthcare: Reduce state mandates and promote individual choice and competition.
- Pension reform: New Jersey’s public pension system has been abused and is broken. Make the system simple and fair for workers and taxpayers alike.
- Citizen Checks and Balances: Require voter approval for future state and agency debt issuances.
- Election competition: Restore competitive elections by ending campaign laundering (”wheeling”) to encourage regular citizens to run for office.
- Choice in education: Improve quality and reduce costs by introducing competition.
- Stop the violence: Government’s primary responsibility is to protect the public. We pledge to devote the necessary resources to end violence in our communities.
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