New Jersey Republican State Committee
New Jersey affiliate of the Republican Party
Republican Party of New Jersey
|
|
---|---|
Chairman | Bob Hugin |
Senate Leader | Anthony M. Bucco |
Assembly Leader | John DiMaio |
Founded | 1880 |
Headquarters |
150 West State Street, Suite 230
Trenton, NJ 08608 |
Membership (2023) | 1,556,079 [1] |
Ideology | Conservatism |
Colors | Red |
U.S. Senate seats |
0 / 2
|
U.S. House seats |
3 / 12
|
Seats in the New Jersey Senate |
15 / 40
|
Seats in the New Jersey General Assembly |
34 / 80
|
Website | |
www
|
|
This article
needs additional citations for
verification
.
Please help
improve this article
by
adding citations to reliable sources
. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "New Jersey Republican State Committee" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( February 2023 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message ) |
The New Jersey Republican Party ( NJGOP ) is the affiliate of the United States Republican Party in New Jersey . It was founded in 1880 and is currently led by Bob Hugin .
Current leadership
- Bob Hugin , Chairman [2]
- Darlene Shotmeyer , Vice Chairwoman [2]
- Irene Kim Asbury , Secretary [2]
- Shaun Van Doren , Treasurer [2]
- Bill Palatucci , National Committeeman [2]
- Virginia Haines , National Committeewoman [2]
- Christine Giordano Hanlon , Strategic Advisor to the Chairman [2]
- Tom Szymanski , Executive Director [2]
- Madi Holmes , Finance & Events Director [2]
- Alexandra Wilkes , Communications Director [2]
- Luke Ferrante , Political Director [2]
Current elected officials
The New Jersey Republican Party holds a minority in both the New Jersey General Assembly and the New Jersey Senate.
Members of Congress
U.S. Senate
- None
Both of New Jersey's U.S. Senate seats have held by Democrats since 2013 . Clifford P. Case was the last Republican elected to represent New Jersey in the U.S. Senate in 1972 . Case served four consecutive terms before losing the Republican primary in 1978 to Jeff Bell , who himself lost the General election to Democratic challenger Bill Bradley . Two Republicans have served interim appointments to the Senate since: Nicholas F. Brady and Jeffrey Chiesa . Neither ran for election to a full term.
U.S. House of Representatives
Out of the 12 seats New Jersey is apportioned in the U.S. House of Representatives , three are held by Republicans:
District | Member | Photo |
---|---|---|
2nd | Jeff Van Drew | |
4th | Chris Smith | |
7th | Thomas Kean Jr. |
State officials
New Jersey Senate
- Jon Bramnick of Westfield
- Tony Bucco of Boonton Township
- Christopher J. Connors of Lacey
- Kristin Corrado of Totowa
- Michael J. Doherty of Washington Township (Warren)
- Edward Durr of Gloucester City
- James W. Holzapfel of Toms River
- Declan O'Scanlon of Little Silver
- Joseph Pennacchio of Montville
- Vince Polistina of Egg Harbor
- Holly Schepisi of River Vale
- Robert Singer of Lakewood
- Jean Stanfield of Westampton
- Mike Testa of Vineland
- Samuel D. Thompson of Old Bridge
New Jersey Assembly
- Robert Auth of Old Tappan
- Christian Barranco of Jefferson Township
- Brian Bergen of Denville
- Robert D. Clifton of Matawan
- Ronald S. Dancer of Plumsted
- DeAnne DeFuccio of Upper Saddle River
- Christopher DePhillips of Wyckoff
- Aura Dunn of Mendham Township
- Kim Eulner of Shrewsbury
- Vicky Flynn of Holmdel
- DiAnne Gove of Long Beach
- Don Guardian of Atlantic City
- Sean T. Kean of Wall
- Michele Matsikoudis of New Providence
- Gregory P. McGuckin of Toms River
- Bethanne McCarthy Patrick of Mannington
- Nancy Munoz of Summit
- Marilyn Piperno of Colts Neck Township
- Erik Peterson of Franklin (Hunterdon)
- Kevin J. Rooney of Wyckoff
- Brian E. Rumpf of Little Egg Harbor
- Beth Sawyer of Woolwich Township
- Gerard Scharfenberger of Middletown
- Parker Space of Wantage
- Claire Swift of Margate City
- Ned Thomson of Wall
- Michael Torrissi of Hammonton
- Brandon Umba of Medford
- Jay Webber of Morris Plains
- Hal Wirths of Wantage
- John Catalano of Brick
Past elected officials
Vice President of the United States
- Garret Hobart (1897–99)
U.S. senators
- John C. Ten Eyck (1859–65)
- Richard Stockton Field (1862–63)
- Alexander G. Cattell (1866–71)
- Frederick T. Frelinghuysen (1866–69, 1871-77)
- William Joyce Sewell (1881–87, 1895–1901)
- John Kean (1899–1911)
- John F. Dryden (1902–07)
- Frank O. Briggs (1907–13)
- Joseph S. Frelinghuysen (1917–23)
- David Baird (1918–19)
- Walter Evans Edge (1919–29)
- Hamilton Fish Kean (1929–35)
- David Baird, Jr. (1929–30)
- Dwight Morrow (1930–31)
- William Warren Barbour (1931–37, 1938–43)
- Albert W. Hawkes (1943–49)
- Howard Alexander Smith (1944–59)
- Robert C. Hendrickson (1949–55)
- Clifford P. Case (1955–79)
- Nicholas F. Brady (1982)
- Jeffrey Chiesa (2013)
U.S. representatives
1856–1874
- Isaiah D. Clawson (1857–59)
- George R. Robbins (1857–59)
- William Pennington (1859–61)
- John T. Nixon (1859–63)
- John L. N. Stratton (1859–63)
- John F. Starr (1863–67)
- William A. Newell (1865–67)
- George A. Halsey (1867–73)
- William Moore (1867–71)
- John Hill (1867–73, 1881–83)
- John W. Hazelton (1871–75)
- Amos Clark, Jr. of Elizabeth (1873–75)
- William W. Phelps (1873–75, 1883–89)
- Isaac W. Scudder (1873–75)
- Marcus L. Ward (1873–75)
- Samuel A. Dobbins (1873–77)
1875–1899
- Clement H. Sinnickson (1875–79)
- Thomas B. Peddie (1877–79)
- John H. Pugh (1877–79)
- John L. Blake (1879–81)
- Lewis A. Brigham (1879–81)
- Charles H. Voorhis (1879–81)
- George M. Robeson (1879–83)
- Phineas Jones (1881–83)
- John H. Brewer (1881–85)
- Benjamin F. Howey (1883–85)
- John Kean of Elizabeth (1883–85, 1887–89)
- George Hires (1885–89)
- Herman Lehlbach (1885–91)
- James Buchanan of Trenton (1885–93)
- Charles D. Beckwith (1889–91)
- Christopher A. Bergen (1889–93)
- Henry C. Loudenslager (1893–1911)
- John J. Gardner (1893–1913)
- Thomas McEwan, Jr. (1895–99)
- Mahlon Pitney (1895–99)
- Charles N. Fowler (1895–1911)
- Richard W. Parker (1895–1911, 1914–19, 1921–23)
- James F. Stewart (1895–1903)
- Benjamin F. Howell (1895–1911)
1900–1924
- William M. Lanning (1903–04)
- William H. Wiley (1903–07, 1909–11)
- Ira W. Wood (1904–13)
- Henry C. Allen (1905–07)
- Marshall Van Winkle (1905–07)
- William J. Browning (1911–20)
- Dow H. Drukker (1914–19)
- John Henry Capstick (1915–18)
- Edward W. Gray (1915–19)
- Elijah C. Hutchinson (1915–23)
- Frederick R. Lehlbach (1915–37)
- Isaac Bacharach (1915–37)
- John R. Ramsey (1917–21)
- William F. Birch (1918–19)
- Amos H. Radcliffe (1919–23)
- Ernest R. Ackerman (1919–31)
- Francis F. Patterson, Jr. (1920–27)
- Theodore F. Appleby (1921–23)
- Archibald E. Olpp (1921–23)
- Herbert W. Taylor (1921–23, 1925–27)
- Randolph Perkins (1921–36)
- George N. Seger (1923–40)
1925–1949
- Stewart H. Appleby of Asbury Park (1925–27)
- Franklin W. Fort of East Orange (1925–31)
- Charles A. Eaton of Plainfield (1925–53)
- Harold G. Hoffman of South Amboy (1927–31)
- Charles A. Wolverton of Camden (1927–59)
- Fred A. Hartley, Jr. of Kearney (1929–49)
- Peter A. Cavicchia of Newark (1931–37)
- Donald H. McLean (1933–45)
- D. Lane Powers of Trenton (1933–45)
- J. Parnell Thomas of Allendale (1937–50)
- Walter S. Jeffries (1939–41)
- Frank C. Osmers, Jr. of Englewood (1939–43, 1951–65)
- Albert L. Vreeland of East Orange (1939–43)
- Robert W. Kean of Livingston (1939–59)
- Gordon Canfield of Paterson (1941–61)
- Frank L. Sundstrom of East Orange (1943–49)
- Harry Lancaster Towe of Tenafly (1943–51)
- James C. Auchincloss of Rumson (1943–65)
- Frank A. Mathews, Jr. (1945–49)
- Clifford P. Case of Rahway (1945–53)
- Thomas M. Hand (1945–56)
1950–1974
- William B. Widnall of Ridgewood (1950–74)
- Peter Frelinghuysen, Jr. of Morristown (1953–75)
- Milton W. Glenn of Margate City (1957–65)
- Florence P. Dwyer of Elizabeth (1957–73)
- George M. Wallhauser of Maplewood (1959–65)
- William T. Cahill of Collingswood (1959–70)
- John E. Hunt of Pitman (1967–75)
- Charles W. Sandman, Jr. of Cape May Court House (1967–75)
- Edwin B. Forsythe of Moorestown (1970–84)
- Joseph J. Maraziti of Boonton (1973–75)
- Matthew J. Rinaldo of Union (1973–83)
1975–present
- Millicent H. Fenwick of Bernardsville (1975–83)
- Harold C. Hollenbeck of East Rutherford (1977–83)
- James A. Courter of Hackettstown (1979–91)
- Marge Roukema of Ridgewood (1981–2003)
- Jim Saxton of Mount Holly (1984–2009)
- Dean A. Gallo of Morris Plains (1985–94)
- Richard Zimmer of Flemington (1991–97)
- Bob Franks of Union (1993–2001)
- Rodney Frelinghuysen of Morristown (1995–2019)
- Frank LoBiondo of Ventnor City (1995–2019)
- William J. Martini of Clifton (1995–97)
- Michael J. Pappas of Franklin Township (1997–99)
- Michael A. Ferguson of Warren Township (2001–09)
- Scott Garrett of Sussex (2003–17)
- Leonard Lance of Lebanon (2009–19)
- Jon Runyan of Mount Laurel (2011–15)
- Tom MacArthur of Toms River (2015–19)
Governors
- William A. Newell (1857–60)
- Charles Smith Olden (1860–63)
- Marcus Lawrence Ward (1866–69)
- John W. Griggs (1896–98)
- Foster McGowan Voorhees (1899–1902)
- Franklin Murphy (1902–05)
- Edward C. Stokes (1905–08)
- John Franklin Fort (1908–11)
- Walter Evans Edge (1917–19, 1944–47)
- Morgan Foster Larson (1929–32)
- Harold G. Hoffman (1935–38)
- Alfred E. Driscoll (1947–54)
- William T. Cahill (1970–74)
- Thomas Kean (1982–90)
- Christine Todd Whitman (1994–2001)
- Donald DiFrancesco (2001–02)
- Chris Christie (2010–18)
Party chairmen
See also
References
External links
Political parties of
New Jersey
|
||
---|---|---|
Major (Ballot qualified) | ||
Minor (Not Ballot Qualified) | ||
Former | ||