Latest news with #Election2025


CBS News
10-06-2025
- Politics
- CBS News
When do polls close in the N.J. governor primary elections?
New Jersey primary voters head to the polls New Jersey primary voters head to the polls New Jersey primary voters head to the polls It's Election Day in New Jersey, and voters are heading to the polls Tuesday to choose the Democratic and Republican nominees for governor in the 2025 primaries. The winner of each party's primary will advance to the November general election. New Jersey primary election poll hours Voters can cast their ballots at polling places across New Jersey starting at 6 a.m. on Tuesday, June 10. Polls close at 8 p.m. Those in line before the polls close will be allowed to vote. CLICK HERE to find your polling place. How to vote in the New Jersey primary There are three ways to vote in the New Jersey primary, including by mail, in-person early voting or at your polling place on the day of the election. If you are a registered Democrat or Republican, you may vote only in your party's primary. Unaffiliated voters must declare which party's primary they are going to vote in. Remember to check the deadlines if you plan to vote by mail-in ballot. The early voting window closed on June 8. Does New Jersey require voter ID? For the most part, New Jersey does not require people to present ID when voting. Voters will be asked to show ID at their polling place if they did not present it when registering. In certain situations, voters will be given a provisional ballot. Who is running for New Jersey governor? There are six Democrats and five Republicans running for governor of New Jersey. The Democratic primary candidates are Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop, U.S. Rep. Josh Gottheimer, U.S. Rep. Mikie Sherrill, New Jersey Education Association President Sean Spiller, and former State Senate President Steve Sweeney. The Republican primary candidates are Burlington County contractor and business owner Justin Barbera, State Sen. Jon Bramnick, former State Assemblyman Jack Ciattarelli, lawyer and former Englewood Cliffs Mayor Mario Kranjac, and former radio host Bill Spadea. Gov. Phil Murphy, who narrowly defeated Ciattarelli in the 2021 general election, is term-limited and cannot run for reelection. CLICK HERE to watch interviews with the candidates.


CBS News
10-06-2025
- Politics
- CBS News
When do polls open in the 2025 New Jersey primary election?
How candidates for N.J. governor are reacting to the so-called "big, beautiful" budget bill How candidates for N.J. governor are reacting to the so-called "big, beautiful" budget bill How candidates for N.J. governor are reacting to the so-called "big, beautiful" budget bill New Jersey voters are heading to the polls today to choose the Democratic and Republican nominees for governor in the 2025 primary elections. The winner of each party's primary will advance to the November general election. New Jersey primary election poll hours Voters can cast their ballots at polling places across New Jersey starting at 6 a.m. on Tuesday, June 10. Polls close at 8 p.m. Those in line before the polls close will be allowed to vote. CLICK HERE to find your polling place. How to vote in the New Jersey primary There are three ways to vote in the New Jersey primary, including by mail, in-person early voting or at your polling place on the day of the election. If you are a registered Democrat or Republican, you may vote only in your party's primary. Unaffiliated voters must declare which party's primary they are going to vote in. Remember to check the deadlines if you plan to vote by mail-in ballot. The early voting window closed on June 8. Does New Jersey require voter ID? For the most part, New Jersey does not require people to present ID when voting. Voters will be asked to show ID at their polling place if they did not present it when registering. In certain situations, voters will be given a provisional ballot. Who is running for New Jersey governor? There are six Democrats and five Republicans running for governor of New Jersey. The Democratic primary candidates are Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop, U.S. Rep. Josh Gottheimer, U.S. Rep. Mikie Sherrill, New Jersey Education Association President Sean Spiller, and former State Senate President Steve Sweeney. The Republican primary candidates are Burlington County contractor and business owner Justin Barbera, State Sen. Jon Bramnick, former State Assemblyman Jack Ciattarelli, lawyer and former Englewood Cliffs Mayor Mario Kranjac, and former radio host Bill Spadea. Gov. Phil Murphy, who narrowly defeated Ciattarelli in the 2021 general election, is term-limited and cannot run for reelection. CLICK HERE to watch interviews with the candidates.
Yahoo
09-06-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Governor hopefuls make final pitches as wild primary nears end
Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, a Democrat running for governor, talks to supporters on June 6, 2025, in Lawrenceville. (Dana DiFilippo | New Jersey Monitor) [Election 2025 Voter Guide: Eleven candidates are running in the June 10 Democratic and GOP gubernatorial primaries.] It's anyone's guess who will win the six-person race for the Democratic nomination for governor. One of the candidates, Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop, said he doesn't know what kind of mood there will be at the party his campaign is hosting to watch election results come in Tuesday night. 'Could be a party, could be a funeral,' Fulop told the New Jersey Monitor. Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat, is barred from seeking a third term this November. With New Jersey's controversial county-line ballot now in the trash bin and President Trump's reelection creating ire among New Jersey Democrats and renewed enthusiasm among the state's Republicans, the race to succeed Murphy is one of the most competitive in ages, with 11 total candidates in Tuesday's primaries spending a record amount of campaign cash. Republican Jack Ciattarelli is the front-runner in the five-man race for the GOP nomination. A former assemblyman who has run two unsuccessful campaigns for governor — and nearly beat Murphy in 2021 — Ciattarelli said Republican primary voters 'know that I can win in November' and promises 'a big change coming for New Jersey.' 'People are energized,' he told the New Jersey Monitor. 'They know that I'm going to unite the party, they know I'm going to raise the necessary money, and they know that I'm going to have coattails.' Ciattarelli's opponents are state Sen Jon Bramnick, contractor Justin Barbera, former Englewood Cliffs Mayor Mario Kranjac, and longtime radio talk show host Bill Spadea. Trump's endorsement of Ciattarelli is expected to give him a major boost with GOP primary voters. The Democratic field — Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, Fulop, Rep. Josh Gottheimer, Rep. Mikie Sherrill, teachers union president Sean Spiller, and ex-state Sen. Steve Sweeney — have talked almost as much about Trump on the campaign trail as they have about each other. Sherrill, who was first elected to Congress amid the 2018 Democratic wave that came after Trump's first two years in the White House, said her campaign's final days are focused on Democratic voters' desire for affordability and resistance to the Trump administration. 'Largely it's both the concerns they have about Trump and Washington and the attack on our economy and our rights and freedoms and the desire that we bring down costs here in New Jersey by building more houses and pushing clean, cheap solar into the power grid,' Sherril told the New Jersey Monitor Friday. 'And that's exactly what I'll do.' Sherrill, who is leading the Democratic race in public polling, in some ways is looking past the June 10 primary. During Friday's interview, she launched an attack against Ciattarelli and his coziness with Trump that presaged a potential November match-up between Ciattarelli and Sherrill. 'People are growing increasingly disgusted with how much Ciattarelli is just giving over power to Trump,' she said. Baraka, too, has Trump on his mind. The Trump administration has put Baraka in his crosshairs: It arrested Baraka on May 9 and charged him with trespassing on an ICE property, dropped the charges 10 days later, then sued Baraka and the city of Newark four days after that, accusing the city of illegal protection of undocumented immigrants via Newark's sanctuary city ordinance. Baraka last week sued the Trump administration for false arrest and malicious prosecution. During a campaign stop in Lawrenceville Thursday, Baraka presented himself as a fighter for the working class who has both the will and the experience to take on the Trump administration. He listed cut after cut that Trump 'and his minions' have made that hurt working people. 'This is a moral moment,' he said, likening it to civil rights struggles in the 1960s. 'We have to pray that fear doesn't turn us into cowards, because in moments like this, you make safe decisions, not the right decisions, and safe decisions don't get you where you need to be.' If elected governor, he added, he would not take a back seat to legislators. He accused Murphy of failing to effectively push legislative leadership to advance bills that stall interminably even when they align with Democratic ideals and priorities. Governors, he said, should set a state's agenda and have their legislators' backs. 'The governor has to be in the front. You got to take the blows,' he said. On the GOP side, Kranjac has argued that he — not Ciattarelli, not Spadea — is the Trumpiest candidate in the race. 'I was called the 'Trumpy mayor of Englewood Cliffs' because I fought relentlessly to keep my promises. I cut taxes, cut spending, kept CRT out of schools, stood up to Black Lives Matter, and didn't allow a single unit of high-density, 'affordable housing' to be built in our town. My record proves that I'll fight just as hard for New Jersey and never give up,' Kranjac said in a statement. From street festivals to telephone town halls, Spadea hopscotched the state over the weekend looking to impart one message: He's the only true outsider in the race, on both sides of the aisle. He argues that in November, he would not appeal just to Republicans but also to 'disaffected Democrats who feel that their party has abandoned them.' 'If you want something different than we have had over the past 30 years, where most Democrats have run roughshod over weak Republicans, then I am the only choice,' said Spadea. Spadea losing the Trump endorsement to Ciattarelli was a blow to Spadea's campaign — so much so that he cut a campaign ad addressing the snub — but Spadea remains committed to the argument that Ciattarelli is a 'compromiser' who too often supports Democrat-led policies and positions like discounted college tuition for undocumented immigrants. 'If we have any hope of winning in November, I am the right candidate at the right time,' Spadea said. Fulop is making the same type of pitch on the Democratic side, arguing that he is an outsider and that is what voters want and need. Fulop said when he talks to undecided voters — polls show they account for a quarter of respondents — he stresses that an institutional candidate is going to have a hard time getting elected in November because of issues Murphy could not resolve in his two terms. Fulop suggested internal Sherrill campaign polls that show she is up double digits have been fluffed. 'I think it's pretty clear that that was fake now that people look at how everybody's reacting and where the climate of the race is today. I think everybody thinks it's a very, very close race,' he said. Sweeney, on the other hand, is advocating for an insider. A former state Senate president who spent two decades in the Legislature, Sweeney argues that Trenton needs someone with Statehouse experience to lead. 'My experience in local government and the state Legislature has prepared me to lead from day one, but it's my deep understanding of hardworking people and the challenges they face that makes me the Democrats' best choice on Tuesday — and New Jersey's best choice this November,' Sweeney said in a statement. Sweeney, an ironworker by trade, said he was running to lower housing, utility, and medical costs. The spending in this year's gubernatorial primaries has already made this the most expensive governor's race in New Jersey history — topping the last record-breaker, the November 2005 general election — and one candidate is decrying the spending by his rivals. That would be Democrat Sean Spiller, who heads statewide teachers union the New Jersey Education Association. Spiller, whose personal campaign has raised so little that he's the only Democrat who did not receive public matching funds from the state, used the race's final days to hammer home his message that he can't be bought by 'big money.' 'We can finally elect somebody who is not going to be beholden and bought by the big money that always buys politics,' Spiller said. Spiller's critics have noted that big money has supported his campaign in a major way, with a super PAC aligned with Spiller's union pouring over $40 million into an independent expenditure group that has blitzed roadsides and mailboxes around the state with billboards and mailers. The group is responsible for more than half of the outside spending in the race. But that's not the big money he means. Instead, he said, too many candidates take too much money from insurance companies, Wall Street, big banks, developers, and political bosses. Such donations influence public policymaking and drive political candidates to make 'empty promises' to regular working people on the campaign trail that they never fulfill, he added. 'There's a disconnect between what somebody says and then what happens when they get there. And it is because of the money,' he said. Gottheimer is also focused on spending — the state's. A five-term congressman, he has made big pledges to cut property taxes by slashing state spending. 'People talk to me a lot about how they're just crushed by taxes,' Gottheimer said, 'but the other big thing that's coming up is making sure that we can win in November.' He said he's prepared to fight the Trenton machine that he says is to blame for rising utility bills and property taxes. In an interview Friday, he touted his first election in 2016, where he flipped a congressional seat held by Republicans for 84 years, and noted he was elected to his fifth term last year by 12 points. 'I've got a record of doing some of the most impossible things in Washington, solving the country's problems,' he said. 'I do what's best for Jersey. I'm willing to fight.' State Sen. Jon Bramnick (R-Union), the only sitting lawmaker seeking the GOP gubernatorial nod, is also focused on general election viability in his closing pitch. Bramnick, a moderate Republican long opposed to Trump, argues that candidacies fashioned in Trump's likeness would fare poorly in a New Jersey general election and says more traditional conservatism would prevail. 'The Democrats are running scared. They are not proud of their record. They want a candidate that they can beat,' Bramnick says in a closing ad. 'They don't want me, because I come to the table with the basic principles of our party: small government, low taxes, and law and order. That's how we win as Republicans in this state.' SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE


Korea Herald
04-06-2025
- Business
- Korea Herald
MBC logs highest viewership on election night
Joint exit polls by broadcasters miss mark, with final tally showing tighter race South Korea's three major broadcast networks, KBS, MBC and SBS, aired marathon coverage of Tuesday's presidential election running some eight hours, with MBC emerging as the clear ratings leader. According to Nielsen Korea, MBC's 'Election 2025' drew the highest nationwide household viewership across all parts of its six-segment broadcast. Its ratings climbed steadily, with Part 1 drawing 4.3 percent, peaking at 14.5 percent in Part 3, and concluding at 5.4 percent in Part 6. MBC was the only network among the three to record double-digit ratings. KBS' election coverage, titled 'Vote That Changes My Life" (translated), saw more modest numbers, starting at 2.4 percent and reaching a high of 5.2 percent in Part 2 before tapering off to 2.0 percent. The SBS special, '2025 People's Vote" (translated), posted still lower figures, opening at 1.4 percent and peaking at 3.7 percent in Parts 3 and 4, before ending at 1.2 percent. MBC's ratings dominance follows a strong performance during April's general election, when it led all Korean broadcasters with a viewership high of 11.7 percent. With election night coverage stretching eight to nine hours, each broadcaster introduced distinct features to retain viewer interest. MBC drew attention for a cinematic countdown video that wove together major moments in Korean history. One segment linked a 1946 speech by independence leader Kim Gu with BTS frontman RM's 2018 address to the United Nations -- an editing choice that garnered considerable online engagement for blending historical gravitas with contemporary cultural relevance. SBS leaned into playful visual effects, incorporating pop culture parodies, including references to "Squid Game" and the viral Pikki Pikki cheerleading dance, both of which gained traction on social media. Meanwhile, the accuracy of exit polls conducted jointly by KBS, MBC and SBS was called into question due to the significant difference between the exit polls and the final vote tally. The poll surveyed 80,146 voters at 325 polling stations nationwide on the day of the election, between 6 a.m. and 8 p.m. It carried a margin of error of plus or minus 0.8 percentage points at a 95 percent confidence level. The poll projected a decisive win for Democratic Party candidate Lee Jae-myung with 51.7 percent of the vote, compared to 39.3 percent for Kim Moon-soo of the People Power Party -- a projected gap of 12.4 percentage points. However, the final tally showed a narrower margin: Lee received 49.42 percent of the votes, while Kim garnered 41.15 percent, which amounted to an actual gap of 8.27 percentage points. The low accuracy of the exit polls is largely interpreted as stemming from high turnout during early voting, which took place May 29 and 30 and saw a participation rate of 34.74 percent. Since exit polling is conducted only on Election Day, early voters' preferences may have been harder to capture. To account for potential discrepancies stemming from the early voting turnout, an additional 11,500 people were surveyed by phone and correction factors were applied to the data. Despite these efforts, the broadcasters ultimately failed to deliver an accurate prediction. Some politicians attributed the miscalculation to the influence of so-called 'shy conservatives.' During a radio broadcast on Wednesday, Woo Sang-ho, co-chair of the Democratic Party of Korea's election campaign committee, remarked, 'It has been clearly confirmed that shy conservatives made up about 5 to 5.5 percent,' noting that 'voters in this group, who had been hesitant to cast their ballots, ultimately turned out in full force.' In the 2022 presidential election, exit poll results showed Democratic Party candidate Lee Jae-myung with 47.8 percent and People Power Party candidate Yoon Suk-yeol with 48.4 percent. The actual vote count closely aligned, with Lee receiving 47.8 percent and Yoon 48.5 percent. The early voting turnout during the 2022 presidential election reached 36.93 percent nationwide. The additional phone surveys were conducted to improve accuracy and were credited with producing exit poll estimates that were nearly spot-on.


Korea Herald
04-06-2025
- Business
- Korea Herald
Broadcasters pull out all stops in Election Day coverage
Broadcasters vie for viewership, with high-profile panels, dynamic visuals, proprietary voting prediction South Korea's major broadcasters went all-out for their live coverage of the June 3 presidential election, delivering eight-hours of marathon programming, each with a distinct editorial style. National broadcaster KBS opted for a documentarylike, serious tone, while SBS took a more energetic approach, incorporating upbeat music such as 10cm's 'To Reach You' and prominently featuring its teddy bear mascot, Toopyoro. Meanwhile, MBC stuck to a relatively traditional, news-driven format, delivering the results with a straightforward, businesslike tone. After leading the viewership rating during April's general election, MBC returned this year with an impressive setup for "Election 2025." The network unveiled its six-panel display, the largest LED screen ever used in Korean election broadcasting for displaying election results. Ceiling-mounted wire cameras provided sweeping shots of the studio for dynamic footage. The 'Debate M' segment featured a lineup of prominent figures including author Yoo Si-min, former Korea Economic Daily editor-in-chief Chung Kyoo-jae, Democratic Party of Korea Rep. Park Joo-min and People Power Party Rep. Cho Kyung-tae. SBS has stood out in past elections with its eye-popping graphics that heavily reference popular culture. This year, it offered a 'Squid Game'-inspired segment in its election coverage program, "2025 People's Vote." SBS also debuted Korea's first extended reality live talk show as part of its election coverage. Titled 'Sseoltongryeong,' the segment turned the studio into a fully rendered 3D environment, transporting talk show guests to digitally recreated locations such as the National Assembly and the presidential office. Guests on the talk show included younger voices such as YouTuber Oh Chang-seok, host of YouTube political satire-comedy channel "President Namcheon-dong"; Park Sung-min, a former youth secretary at the Blue House; and Park Min-young, a People Power Party spokesperson. KBS turned to generative AI for its coverage titled "Vote That Changes My Life." Images depicting cities that were hotbeds of democratization movements and industrial landmarks served as a backdrop to the broadcast announcing the election results, with the network also operating from a dedicated studio for panel talks at the 'K-Cube,' located in Gwanghwamun, Seoul. KBS' analysis segment assembled a diverse panel of politicians and political pundits including Democratic Party members Lee So-young and Kim Sang-wook, the People Power Party's Kim Jae-seop, the New Reform Party's Chun Ha-ram and former JoongAng Ilbo editorial writer Kim Jin. The broadcasters also highlighted their proprietary vote prediction systems. MBC utilized its own system that integrated exit polls, historical data and live vote counts to forecast results, while SBS deployed 'Yoo-Hwak-Dang,' combining early exit polling with ongoing vote updates to calculate winning probabilities. Meanwhile, KBS used 'Decision K+,' a system that tracked candidate performance in real-time and categorized their chances of victory as 'likely,' 'certain' or 'elected.'