Julio 04, 2026

Noticias

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The already-crowded Democratic field for New Jersey’s competitive 7th congressional district is growing once again.

Valentina “Vale” Mendoza, an attorney from Rahway, will run for the seat on a progressive platform that she says contrasts with the more moderate, traditional campaigns being run by her primary opponents. If elected, Mendoza would make history: she would be the first transgender congresswoman in New Jersey, which has never before elected an openly LGBT member of Congress.

“In this race, I saw so many candidates pouring into it, discussing their identities, avoiding controversial issues, and doing the exact same thing that I consider the problem with the Democratic Party’s general strategy and why I think so many people feel disenfranchised,” Mendoza told the New Jersey Globe. “We’re just not addressing the problems that people feel are salient to them.”

Mendoza’s entry to the race means that there are now no fewer than six Democrats vying to flip the district, which spans six counties in North and Central Jersey. The eventual winner of the Democratic primary will take on Rep. Tom Kean Jr. (R-Westfield), a battle-tested incumbent who won heated races in 2022 and 2024.

Originally from Los Angeles, Mendoza said that she had a turbulent early life – “I’m not someone that has lived a life that’s pristine or free from mistakes,” she said – and first came to New Jersey around 2017. She got her law degree that same year, and spent several years working at a variety of law firms and companies like Party City before starting her own practice earlier this year.

Alongside her professional journey, Mendoza, now 39, was going through a personal journey as well: coming to terms with her identity as a transgender woman. Having only just recently finalized her legal name change, Mendoza said she wants to be an advocate for transgender Americans everywhere, especially as President Donald Trump’s administration makes them an explicit target.

“We have a lot of people who govern from a place of privilege, and I think that’s created dynamics that are really difficult for individuals to navigate day-to-day,” she said. “When you live the consequences of the legislation and the policies that people impose, you understand them more intimately.”

Already actively running for the seat are five other Democrats: physician Tina Shah, former Small Business Administration official Michael Roth, businessman Brian Varela, former Summit Councilman Greg Vartan, and U.S. Navy veteran Rebecca Bennett.

A sixth Democratic candidate, criminal justice professor Beth Adubato, said earlier this year that she plans to get in the race, but she hasn’t yet launched her campaign. And yet another, former Agriculture Department official Megan O’Rourke, is mulling a potential campaign as well.

Many of those Democrats have already begun raising huge amounts of money – Bennett, the field’s top fundraiser thus far, has raised upwards of $900,000 – and making inroads with state and local Democratic organizations. Mendoza, though, said she believes she has a different path to victory. 

“A lot of people don’t vote because they don’t feel seen. They just feel like there’s no point,’” she said. “Minorities of all forms – LGBTQIA individuals, disabled individuals, you name it – those are the communities I’m focused most on… If you protect the most marginalized, the ripple effects are so profound throughout society, because your policy is based in compassion.”

To activate those kinds of voters, Mendoza said she’ll run on “the most progressive platform” in the field: ending trickle-down economics, helping minority communities start businesses, reforming public housing, increasing taxes on the wealthy, and getting money out of politics, among other things. She also hit Kean for his support of the One Big Beautiful Bill, which stands to reduce Medicaid coverage across New Jersey, and accused the Trump administration’s immigration officials of creating “concentration camps on U.S. soil.”

“People are scared,” she said. “People feel disenfranchised. And it’s incumbent on politicians and candidates to be talking about these things, and not water them down for fear of coming off less than perfect.”

Kean, for his part, was first elected in 2022 after serving in the New Jersey Legislature for almost two decades. He unseated Rep. Tom Malinowski (D-Ringoes) in an expensive contest, four years after Malinowski himself had gotten to Congress by defeating a Republican incumbent.

The district was bluer when Malinowski first won it – Democrats on the Congressional Redistricting Commission sacrificed Malinowski in 2022 in order to shore up neighboring seats – but it remains highly competitive, with Trump carrying it last year by a tiny 49% to 48% margin. National Democrats, who poured around $5 million into last year’s race, have identified the 7th district as a top target for 2026.

The post Rahway attorney joins busy Dem primary for CD-7 appeared first on New Jersey Globe.

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Megan O’Rourke, who served as a national science liaison for climate change at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, is now mulling a bid for the Democratic nomination for Congress in New Jersey’s 7th district.

O’Rourke has spoken with Democratic operatives about a campaign to take on Rep. Tom Kean, Jr. (R-Westfield), the New Jersey Globe has confirmed.

The 46-year-old Blairstown native joined the Biden administration in 2020 after working as a Brookings Congressional Fellow and as a tenured associate professor at Virginia Tech.  She worked in Cambodia as an environment advisor for USAID, and as an agricultural climate change advisor at the USDA.

She left her federal post two months ago.

“There has been a whirlwind of emotions since January 20: fear, anxiety, anger, confusion. But I remember back from before the election when I told my family that if Trump was elected, I would probably lose my job as a climate change scientist. I can’t say I didn’t see this coming,” O’Rourke said in a message to friends and colleagues.  “Since January 20, my job duties have been stripped away one by one until I had no work left to do.”

With two months left in the third fundraising quarter, the window is narrowing for Democrats who are interested in taking on Kean.  Former U.S. Navy helicopter pilot Rebecca Bennett; former Biden administration official Michael Roth; businessman Brian Varela; physician and former Obama and Biden administration official Tina Shah; and former Summit Councilman Greg Vartan.

Bennett has raised $913,847 for her campaign so far. Varela has raised $693,883 (with the help of $400,000 in self-funding). Roth has raised $302,880, and $55,751 for Vartan.  Shah entered the race after the Q2 filing deadline but announced that she raised more than $260,000 in just one day as a candidate.

The post Scientist who led climate change issues at USDA might challenge Kean appeared first on New Jersey Globe.

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The vice chair of the New Jersey Casino Control Commission will work her final day on the job Thursday after thirteen years on the commission. 

Alisa Cooper, one of the commission’s three members, will leave the licensure commission after Thursday. Former Gov. Chris Christie first appointed Cooper to complete an unexpired term in 2012; Christie nominated her to a full five-year term in 2014, and Gov. Phil Murphy did the same in 2021. 

“It’s been an incredibly exciting journey,” she said. “I’m proud to have helped uphold the commission’s commitment to honesty and integrity since its inception in 1977.”

Cooper said she will remain active in Atlantic City after leaving the commission, but did not specify how.

“While I’m starting a new chapter as I move on from the Commission, I’m definitely not retiring!” she said in the release. “I’m excited to remain actively involved and promote Atlantic City and the region—places that are incredibly important to me. I eagerly look forward to future endeavors and initiatives and I am dedicated to its continued growth and development.”

Before joining the commission, Cooper served two terms as an Atlantic County freeholder. Cooper ran for Assembly as a Democrat in the 2nd legislative district, but lost to the Republican ticket.  She is the daughter of the late Delores Cooper (R-Atlantic City), a legendary officeholder who served as a freeholder and five terms as an assemblywoman 

The post Alisa Cooper stepping down from casino regulatory board appeared first on New Jersey Globe.

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On most of the key issues that the U.S. Senate has taken up during the early months of President Donald Trump’s second term, New Jersey Senators Cory Booker and Andy Kim have been in lockstep. But when it comes to the issue of Israel and Gaza, the two senators’ voting records have begun to diverge.

Last night, amid rapidly worsening conditions for starving civilians in Gaza, Senator Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) put forward two resolutions in the Senate that would block the sale of hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of bombs and assault rifles. Kim voted yes on both resolutions; Booker voted no.

The resolutions failed 27-70 and 24-73, but Kim’s yes votes aligned him with a narrow majority of the Democratic caucus – a notable shift in a party whose traditional allegiance to Israel has been tested by the last two years of war. In a statement last night, Kim said that, with critical food and supplies unable to enter Gaza, he views the sale of more weapons as an impediment to peace.

“I voted today to support the Joint Resolutions of Disapproval because the humanitarian catastrophe and widespread starvation underscores the necessity to end the military campaign in Gaza and allow for unfettered humanitarian access,” Kim said. “The weapons systems in the resolutions would only take us further from the change that is needed and prolong the suffering we witness.”

Booker, meanwhile, joined with the remainder of the Democratic caucus (including Minority Leader Chuck Schumer) and every Senate Republican in voting against the resolutions. He said that while he believes that the “suffering, starvation, and atrocities” in Gaza must be halted, he doesn’t believe Sanders’ resolutions are the best way to bring about an end to the war.

“It’s time for the conflict in Gaza to end – there must be an immediate ceasefire that stops the fighting, ends the suffering for innocent civilians caught in the crossfire, brings the hostages home, and dramatically increases humanitarian aid,” Booker said. “These Joint Resolutions of Disapproval would restrict our country’s ability to provide future security guarantees without achieving the goal of ending this war now or increasing vital humanitarian aid.”

Last night’s vote wasn’t the first time that the Senate has voted on efforts to block military aid to Israel, nor is it the first time that a divide between Booker and Kim has emerged. In April, Kim was one of just 15 senators to support two Sanders resolutions halting $8.8 billion in bombs and munitions sales; Booker voted against them.

And last fall, Booker split with Kim’s predecessor, interim Senator George Helmy, on a resolution blocking mortar sales to Israel. Helmy, the only Arab American in the Senate at the time, said that he believed it was important to “send a message” by supporting the resolution despite its nonexistent chance of success.

That vote, though, occurred when President Joe Biden still held the White House and Democrats still held some real sway over American policy in the Middle East. Now, of course, the context is different; even if Democrats were fully united on the issue, it might not mean much in the face of a Trump administration that has stood firmly behind Israel, though the ongoing starvation crisis may be prompting a change in that stance.

The issue is also tremendously politically sensitive for Democrats, and stances on either side are often subject to anger and attack. Polls show that an increasingly overwhelming majority of Democrats now side with the Palestinian cause over the Israeli one – a Quinnipiac poll from last month found that 60% of Democrats said their sympathies lie more with the Palestinians, versus just 12% with the Israelis – but not all longtime Democratic leaders and voters are on board, and Kim’s prior votes against weapons sales for Israel have drawn blowback in New Jersey.

Kim said in his statement last night that he understands his vote will likely anger some people once again, but that he’ll always be open to discussions with a wide range of New Jerseyans on the issue.

“I’ve had emotional and honest conversations with many in the Jewish, Muslim, and Arab communities in New Jersey over recent months,” he said. “I weighed these conversations heavily as I considered my vote and I understand that some will strongly disagree with my decision. I will continue to engage with those in our state deeply impacted by the current crisis and will do so with the incredible weight and importance of these decisions in mind.”

 

Cory Booker’s full statement

“The suffering, starvation, and atrocities happening in Gaza are unacceptable. I will continue fighting for humanitarian aid now.

It’s time for the conflict in Gaza to end– there must be an immediate ceasefire that stops the fighting, ends the suffering for innocent civilians caught in the crossfire, brings the hostages home, and dramatically increases humanitarian aid. These Joint Resolutions of Disapproval would restrict our country’s ability to provide future security guarantees without achieving the goal of ending this war now or increasing vital humanitarian aid.

Donald Trump promised to secure a ceasefire in his first week in office, yet the suffering and death in Gaza continues. It’s time for Trump to walk the walk, not just talk the talk. The Trump administration must facilitate an immediate ceasefire between the Israeli government and Hamas to end this conflict. And we all must work to bring about a just and lasting peace, one that guarantees Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish and democratic state and ensures the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination and a state of their own.”

Andy Kim’s full statement

“I voted today to support the Joint Resolutions of Disapproval because the humanitarian catastrophe and widespread starvation underscores the necessity to end the military campaign in Gaza and allow for unfettered humanitarian access. The weapons systems in the resolutions would only take us further from the change that is needed and prolong the suffering we witness.  

I had a heartbreaking phone call this morning with someone on the ground in Gaza who shared a story about a mother whose children are surviving on a quarter loaf of bread a day each, who herself often goes two-three days without eating. Her story is one of many in Gaza that cry out for help. 

Part of the outrage of this crisis is that there is enough food waiting across the border to feed Gazans in need. Thousands of trucks are ready to deliver, but they need greater access by the Israeli government. The current distribution system cannot handle the level of desperation. In fact, it’s making the misery worse. The current pauses in fighting and air drops simply are not enough for the necessary food to get to the people who need it. 

There needs to be an immediate and fundamental change in the response in Gaza. That means an immediate cessation of military action that will restore full humanitarian access levels that aid groups had during the last ceasefire earlier this year, as well as an agreed ceasefire to end the violence and free the remaining hostages. There is overwhelming support for this approach, including among Israelis surveyed.

Prime Minister Netanyahu has so far rejected calls to change course, but I believe the magnitude of the humanitarian crisis demands that supporters of Israel continue to urge him to do so. Having worked in war zones before, I know how much worse this crisis can get. I do not take this action lightly, and I plead with all to join the call for change. Providing sufficient humanitarian assistance doesn’t strengthen Hamas; it in fact would weaken the terrorist group and provide the necessary conditions for a viable alternative. Allowing aid to flow doesn’t diminish Israel’s security; it would strengthen it by rebuilding confidence with key regional and international actors.

I’ve had emotional and honest conversations with many in the Jewish, Muslim, and Arab communities in New Jersey over recent months. The antisemitism and Islamophobia that has left communities reeling is real fear and we need to work together to stop it. I weighed these conversations heavily as I considered my vote and I understand that some will strongly disagree with my decision. I will continue to engage with those in our state deeply impacted by the current crisis and will do so with the incredible weight and importance of these decisions in mind.”

The post Vote on blocking weapons for Israel divides New Jersey’s senators appeared first on New Jersey Globe.

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