A lot contributed to the Tammy Murphy Campaign meltdown, and people talk about it now, just a few hours removed from the gurgling end, as though any one factor caused that single, shocking flat tire that ran the sedan off the road and into the (no pun intended) swamp.
It was $15 million or $20 million that Tammy Murphy had to contribute. It was the momentum generated by her rival Andy Kim, and the embarrassment suffered by chairs who went up there in front of their people, who didn’t want to back the candidate they had to back. It was the arrogance of Murphy’s inner circle. It was the campaign, one source said, describing it as “the worst campaign I ever saw.” It was the candidate. She lacked the common touch. Or so they said. It was the coming court case, to be decided, evidently, in favor of Kim, not Murphy, in favor of the people, not the lines, or so said insiders at a Sunday breakfast meeting.
That last one cut deep, probably because it connected to the core piece – the core problem – at the outset, which revolved around public outrage over the obscenity allegedly committed by the state’s sitting senior U.S. Senator, and the establishment’s solution to the coming vacancy. That remedy required the county chairs to back the First Lady for the seat in question, presumably in exchange for Governor Phil Murphy’s attention – and political affection – come budget time. Two budgets left.
What’s the U.S. Senate, after all?
On the heels of Menendez, who prior to his own lurid slide-down had incidentally secured the congressional seat he used to sit in for his son, Murphy wanted the same privilege for his own family member. Menendez got that congressional seat for his son, now Murphy would get the senate seat for his wife. And he could get it done because he’s constitutionally the most powerful governor in the country, and the party lines would hold up to any public pushback in a Democratic Primary, a presidential year, no less, no problem.
Even before anyone in the establishment put out a public statement about Menendez, Kim jumped at the chance to run statewide. When everyone else blinked, he immediately ignited into a pillar of fire, and people tired of the same game saw it and celebrated. They had a champion.
The system that produced Menendez, also produced Jon Corzine, and Murphy, and now Tammy Murphy, and not that they’re all the same, because they’re not, not by a long shot, but what the party response confirmed was that the public franchise in New Jersey was more about money than people, whether allegedly illicit in the case of Menendez, or supposedly above board in the case of the Wall Street people who came “to serve.” Kim didn’t really talk about issues when he campaigned. Not really. He talked about his kids. Family. Opportunities. Apathy. It was so basic it offended anyone curious about language by virtue of sheer vapidity. And yet – it connected because Kim suddenly defied a system all too cocooned, all too cozy, all too merely conditioned by money, and all too rampantly nepotistic. It didn’t matter what he said. He had good timing, and some guts. In this environment, that said a lot.
He supposedly hopped on a call with the county chairs on Sunday and said he would work with them.
They would work with him.
They didn’t need to be enemies, after all, so said the sources alert to the communications between the sides coming together. Time to defeat Donald Trump, not one another. Even with the federal case unresolved, the congressman had apparently proved his point and would return to line-friendly Andy, the one who ran with organizational backing in his congressional runs, as opposed to legal challenging Andy. Oh, he was still challenging. But that didn’t mean he planned to reject the lines he challenged. This was politics – imprecise, and usually imperfect – even sometimes ridiculous – in its alignment of power, money, and passion. Humiliated by the Tammy Murphy candidacy, exposed, but maintaining the stiff upper lips of a ruling minorit1y, the chairs prepared to mobilize behind Kim, even as the lawsuit – with other plaintiffs attached, didn’t disappear, creating a kind of cross-pollination with the details of new ballot dimensions still awaiting the dropping of a judge’s gavel. The chairs won, or as one establishment source harrumphed, “case for the moment moot,” even as Don Quixote, what one of his followers called Kim, tore the top off a sinister windmill, no small feat amid, yes, such profuse apathy, and destructive passions. For now, the Tammy Murphy Campaign would have to suffice as a party sacrifice, the crumpled roadster in the rearview. Two more years on the clock wasn’t much, after all, or so they hoped. They had sold the unsellable in this climate, and the governor had to appreciate that, didn’t he, they asked, come budget time?
An email landed in a Sunday inbox like an early Easter Egg rolled out of somewhere in cyberspace.
It was from the governor’s office, concerning his Monday itinerary:
“No Public Schedule.”
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Federal Judge Prepares to Preside as Kim and Democratic Chairs Meet
As tensions rise within the Democratic party in New Jersey, all eyes are on the upcoming meeting between Congressman Andy Kim and the state’s Democratic chairs. The meeting, which is set to take place in front of a federal judge, is expected to address the recent controversy surrounding Kim’s decision to break party lines and vote against President Biden’s infrastructure bill.
The meeting comes at a crucial time for Kim, who is facing backlash from his own party for his vote. Many Democratic leaders in the state have expressed their disappointment in Kim’s decision, with some even calling for his resignation. The meeting will give Kim the opportunity to explain his reasoning behind the vote and potentially mend fences with party leaders.
The presence of a federal judge at the meeting adds an extra layer of complexity to the situation. The judge will be tasked with overseeing the proceedings and ensuring that both parties adhere to the rules and regulations set forth by the Democratic party. This could potentially lead to a more formal and structured discussion between Kim and the Democratic chairs.
Overall, this meeting is shaping up to be a pivotal moment for Congressman Andy Kim and the Democratic party in New Jersey. The outcome of the meeting could have far-reaching implications for Kim’s political future and the unity of the party as a whole. All eyes will be on the federal judge as they preside over what promises to be a tense and high-stakes gathering.