On October 22, New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine presided over a
much-publicized groundbreaking for the Stem Cell Institute of New
Jersey, a state-of-the-art research laboratory that, according to
the advanced billing, would attract a “world-class faculty” and
“advance stem cell research worldwide.”
Given that New Jersey voters had yet to approve the governor’s
plan to borrow $450 million in bonds over ten years to pay for both
the world-class faculty and the “revolutionary” research, the
ceremony seemed more than a little premature. But Corzine, armed
with a spade and the impregnable self-assurance that has defined
his tenure as governor, would brook no skepticism. Massive
borrowing was justified, he lectured, because the institute would
spur a “quantifiable payback” at some later date.
Such faith-based salesmanship may have wowed the governor’s
erstwhile colleagues at Goldman, Sachs & Co., but New Jersey
voters were plainly unimpressed. In this week’s statewide
elections, they handed the governor a far more quantifiable version
of payback, overwhelmingly rejecting the Corzine-backed ballot
proposal to borrow millions for stem-cell research. In the process,
they made history: The defeat of the proposal marked the first time
the state’s voters had rejected a statewide ballot measure since
1990.
UNQUESTIONABLY, THE BIGGEST LOSER in the election was the governor.
As a longtime proponent of stem-cell research, he spared no effort
to assure the passage of the ballot proposal. After signing the
Stem Cell Research Bond Act in July, he defended the plan at every
opportunity. Dipping into his own estimated $300 million-plus
fortune, the governor gave $150,000 to New Jersey for Hope, a
political action committee formed to advocate for the passage of
the stem-cell ballot question. Cynics quipped that the governor
might as well fund the entire project himself, but the gesture was
symbolic of the political capital that Corzine had invested in the
stem-cell ballot proposal.
His confidence in its passage was not entirely unfounded. A
recent Rutgers-Eagleton poll found 57 percent supporting the
stem-cell measure, with only 36 percent opposed. Similarly, another
poll showed that liberals and Democrats supported the measure by a
2-1 margin, a favorable indicator in a state that has increasingly
become a Democratic Party stronghold. It’s no wonder that Corzine
felt secure enough to celebrate the measure’s presumed victory with
a groundbreaking. The state seemed to be on his side.
A different set of calculations seems to have motivated his
constituents. Not the least daunting among them is that New Jersey
is the nation’s fourth most indebted state — this even as it
boasts the nation’s highest property taxes. Factor in a deficit
that may exceed $3 billion this year and a $33.5 billion state
budget that shows no signs of shrinking, and you get a good sense
of the staggering fiscal irresponsibility of the state’s
Democratic-led legislature. In the end, this week’s election was
less a referendum on the merits of embryonic stem-cell research,
which remains broadly popular, than a rebuke to the political
powers-that-be.
AND YET IT WOULD BE A MISTAKE to view the defeat of the stem-cell
proposal — one of three budget-related proposals rejected by state
residents this week — as a vote for new leadership in New Jersey.
Notwithstanding some unexpected defeats, Democrats easily retained
control of the state senate and the state assembly. The result,
then, was a mixed message. On the one hand, voters clearly want
sounder stewardship of state finances. On the other hand, they are
prepared to vote for the same politicians who landed them in the
fiscal mess in which the state now finds itself.
How to account for the cognitive disconnect? Steve Lonegan, the
executive director of the New Jersey chapter of Americans for
Prosperity, a grassroots group that campaigned against the
stem-cell proposal, has a ready answer: There is little in the way
of a compelling alternative. Although Lonegan’s group worked
overtime to get out their message, planting some 15,000 lawn signs
in 14 days, it found no support among state Republicans. “The
Republican Party chose not to side with us on this issue,” Lonegan
told me. “They had every opportunity to step up and take a
leadership role, but they were eerily silent.”
Eerily is right. Fiscal mismanagement in the state has reached
near-crisis proportions, yet there is little evidence that the
Democratic leadership has paid the price. Possibly that is because,
as some suggest, the state’s demographics have changed to favor
Democrats. According to another school of thought, the state
Republican Party, battered so many times in recent years, has grown
too timid. Whatever the explanation, the end result is that
Democrats are the only choice around, if only by default. That may
not be the kind of triumph Corzine had in mind when he hyped his
stem-cell initiative, but in New Jersey’s impoverished political
climate it amounts to snatching victory from the jaws of
defeat.