Julio 04, 2026

Noticias

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The other day I was talking with my dear friend and Passaic County GOP chair, Peter Murphy, two days before his son’s wedding, Peter was excited and animated. His excitement was clear because the wedding was the fourth item he mentioned in our conversation. For those who don’t know Peter, you need to understand that Chairman Murphy operates 24/7 in this swirling eddy that we call politics. Why is that? Politics is in Peter’s blood, it runs deep in his veins, and he lives politics, breathes politics, and talks politics like we take in oxygen.  When I say politics is in his DNA, it is literally imbued in his chromosomes and it runs through his being, even when he is sleeping.

I have known Peter since the 1990’s, and throughout those years, I have witnessed Peter grow from a twenty-something year old rookie chair with big shoes to fill to a mature, focused, grounded senior political advisor who many of the top political players seek out for his distinguished counsel. Be forewarned, this usually occurs over a shot and beer.

Over the last few decades, I have witnessed Peter grow into the master of this trade and I have seen him maneuver, orchestrate, or fight over political territory both large and small. Peter has taught many of us the finer points of political gamesmanship and brinkmanship. In modern times, Peter is considered a legend by both parties. It is no stretch to say that Peter has been involved in creating and disposing of more political personalities than Genghis Khan or Fionn mac Cumhaill ever did.  Getting the picture?

This was not happenstance, but as I said, part of Peter’s DNA.  Peter’s dad, Red Murphy,  was an old school true power broker who made deals in smoky back rooms, literally and figuratively smoke-filled back rooms. As many of us know, Red died way too early. At the time, Red was the quintessential powerbroker in the northeast of New Jesey. Red was the GOP Chair of Passaic, and he held a collection of elected officials in his palm, and he was in the room when the selection of the next Governor, Senator or Congressmember was made, and that is no exaggeration.

It is important to note that Red had a gift, a gift beyond making or breaking careers of starry-eyed politicians. Red’s gift was that he practiced and preached about the moral and political good of helping the “little guy.” Red told those in charge that they had a duty to provide a decent job, with benefits to the individual who didn’t have a college degree or a wealthy family name. Red’s gift was to find and give out as many working-class jobs to as many working-class people as possible. He would rather have four $50K (adjusted for inflation) jobs to hand out than one $200K to job. Red’s rationale was simple. You could pull those four families out of poverty forever and break that cycle.  Chances are, many of those workers would remember Red’s action and maybe help put him in the next election cycle or so. As for the one $200K person, chances are they forget immediately how they received their first paycheck. But that is an entirely different column.

When Red passed away, he called his son Peter to his hospital bed and made him make two promises. The one was that young Peter would run the Passaic County Republican Organization and the second involved Red’s brother, which we can’t write about. Needless to say, Peter took those two orders and did exactly as expected. Following orders—sound familiar?

Over the years, Peter and I have grown from political allies into family friends,  we have served as each other’s consiglieres, therapists and we have been to each other’s family weddings and other family events. We talk often about the life in politics and life without. Peter is a very smart and very wise man, both in life and business. Peter is a rarity, an enduring powerbroker who learned the trade from the best. Peter has now schooled his son Brendan in his footsteps and the newly married Brendan will come back from his honeymoon as the chair of the very powerful Passaic Valley Sewerage Authority.

Back to our discussion. Peter was his excited and exuberant self, and he said something profound. He said we have known each other forever and he marveled at the fact that we were still friends, and we were still swimming in the public life. Peter said to me: “Kevin the gift that you have is that you have always brought people together…” and he went to add “…and you bring together people who would never get together, and you just make things happen and those things last a lifetime.”

I was somewhat taken aback by that rather generous statement.

It caused me to think about that profound observation and now I put pen to paper and somehow it gave birth to this column. I have never considered myself with any so-called gifts, but I know I work hard and am relentless at every task and I know if I focus long enough– some good things usually follow. But a gift?

That conversation got me thinking, maybe we all have gifts, but the question is do we all know what that gift is and are we using it to its highest and best use?

Are we good at connecting people? Are we terrific problem solvers? Are we big thinkers? Are we schooled at mentoring? Can we raise money for worthy causes? Can we help senior citizens? Are we talented enough to coach the next generation?  Do we make people happy? Can we bring humor to dark places? Can we create joy in moments of need?

Perhaps the task of the day is to identify that gift or tell someone else what their gift is so they can pay it forward.

PS- Congratulations to the newlyweds,  Brendan and Alexis Murphy.

The post The O’Toole Chronicles: Your Gift appeared first on New Jersey Globe.

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After New Jersey sued the Trump administration over $158 million in frozen education funds, state officials declared victory after the federal government said it would release money.

New Jersey was one of several states to sue the Trump administration over the frozen programs, which included English language programs, teacher development, and community learning centers. The Education Department will release about $6 billion in funds around the country, according to reports

Officials said the funds also went to after-school, literacy, and summer programs.

“While we are thankful that the Trump Administration has made the appropriate decision to release this education funding, the untenable delay in obligating the funding and the departure from past practice is cause for serious concern,” Gov. Phil Murphy and Education Commissioner Kevin Dehmer said in a release. “New Jersey school districts depend on predictable funding to ensure students receive the services they need and to plan for the upcoming school year.”

Attorney General Matt Platkin joined the lawsuit against the freezes last month. Platkin’s office has sued the Trump administration numerous times since the president took office in January. In many cases, judges have granted preliminary victories to Platkin.

“From the beginning, we have made clear that the President’s attempt to freeze $158 million in critical education funding for New Jersey was illegal and deeply damaging to students, families, teachers, and schools. Now, under pressure from our lawsuit, the Administration has relented,” Platkin said. “There is simply no excuse for the Trump Administration’s reckless attempt to claw funding away from afterschool care and summer programs, teacher training programs, and programs for English learners and students with special needs—and we are glad that even the Trump Administration has now recognized that it made a grave mistake in freezing this funding.”

The post Trump admin releases $158 million in education program funds appeared first on New Jersey Globe.

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A Montclair woman who helped direct new media communications for Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign and then in the White House, is actively looking at running in a special election for Congress in New Jersey’s 11th district if Democrat Mikie Sherrill (D-Montclair) wins the governor’s race this year.

Cammie Croft, 43, has been exploring a run for the last month, the New Jersey Globe has confirmed.

With Sherrill leading in polls, Democrats are already eying a run for her seat in a primary that could come as early as January.  Possible candidates include Essex County Commissioner Brendan Gill, former Rep. Tom Malinowski, Passaic County Commissioner John Bartlett, Assemblywoman Rosy Bagolie (D-Livingston), South Orange Mayor Sheena Collum, Morris Township Deputy Mayor Jeff Grayzel, Chatham Borough Councilman Justin Strickland, and Jack Miller, the former communications director at the U.S. Office of Personnel Management under Joe Biden, who was raised in Morristown and lives in Montclair.

Croft, now the vice president of Rewiring America, a non-profit aimed at converting America’s energy needs toward electrification.  She was the new media rapid response director for Obama and the deputy new media director at the White House.  She later worked at the U.S. Department of Energy and as deputy executive director of Amnesty International.

She began her public service career as a community organizer for environmental causes and against the war in Iraq.  In 2006, she managed the come-from-nowhere campaign of Jim Pederson, who won a competitive, six-candidate race for the Washington State House of Representatives by 239 votes against the Seattle City Council President; Pederson is now the majority leader of the Washington Senate.

The 11th district, which includes parts of Essex, Morris, and Passaic counties, went for Kamala Harris by nearly nine points in 2024; Joe Biden won it by almost seventeen points four years earlier.

The post Ex-Obama White House staffer exploring bid for Sherrill’s seat appeared first on New Jersey Globe.

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New Jersey added 10,974 registered voters to its ranks in July, most of whom signed up as independents, according to state data.

The GOP added 1,651 voters to its ranks in July, while Democrats lost 2,401. Another 12,256 registered as unaffiliated voters.

A total of 6,591,590 New Jerseyans are now registered to vote. Bergen County accounted for a major portion of the gains, with 2,396 additional registrants. Monmouth County added 1,380 and Union added 1,279.

After a strong month in June for Democrats, the GOP gains are the resumption of a prior pattern. Democrats gained about 82k and Republicans gained about 41k in June, or primary month. Democrats at one point held a one-million-voter gap over Republicans, a buffer that fell to 827,000 in May. With their strong June, the gap went back up to about 869,000, undoing months of GOP improvement, but the July numbers could be a return to the trend.

Republicans, like influencer Scott Presler, have put significant energy into registering voters in the state.

Data for legislative and congressional districts is not available; initial numbers included typos or other errors.

The post N.J. adds 11k to voter rolls; most unaffiliated appeared first on New Jersey Globe.

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