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Please read from Anna B:

 

We've created a petition to urge the Warren County Library Commission to immediately rescind its official endorsement of BookLooks.org and remove it from all library branches' recommended book review resources. We need to get as many signatures as possible before the next Warren County Library Commission meeting, on March 25, as possible. Sign the petition. Spread the word!

 

SHORTLINK: https://www.fightforthefirst.org/p/No2BookLooks

Meagan O'Rourke Announces run for Congress

Warren County native Megan O'Rourke has announced a run for NJ-07 Congressional  Representative :

CONTACT:

Travis Brimm, press@meganorourke.com

August 11, 2025

ICYMI: NJ Globe – Megan O’Rourke Raises over $175,000 in First Day as NJ-7 Candidate

Last week, climate scientist and local union leader Megan O’Rourke announced her campaign for New Jersey’s 7th Congressional District. Within one day of her announcement, O’Rourke said she raised an impressive $175,000.

 

READ MORE FROM NJ GLOBE:

 

NJ Globe: Megan O’Rourke raises over $175,000 in first day as NJ-7 candidate

 

By David Wildstein, August 08 2025 8:00 am

Megan O’Rourke, who resigned her position as lead climate scientist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture after President Donald Trump attacked her work, raised more than $175,000 in her first day as a candidate for Congress in New Jersey’s 7th district — an impressive haul as the latest entrant into a growing field of Democrats seeking to take on two-term Rep. Tom Kean, Jr. (R-Westfield).

“We knew early support and resources would be crucial to establishing a foothold in this primary, and I’m so grateful for everyone who has chipped in to be part of this campaign from my hometown, from the science community and beyond,” O’Rourke stated. “As a scientist, you never go in without a plan, and that’s exactly how we’re approaching this campaign. This is my home and these are my people, and I couldn’t be more proud of the campaign we’re building to advocate for local families and workers.”


Her fundraising relied exclusively on donors and not on personal funds.

[...]

A former university professor and Blairstown native, O’Rourke became a top official of the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA), overseeing roughly $200 million in funding annually in 2020 as a civil servant.  She’s also a former union steward with the American Federation of Government Employees, worked as a Brookings Congressional Fellow and as a tenured associate professor at Virginia Tech.  She served in Cambodia as an environment advisor for USAID.

O’Rourke, 46, joins the race with an interesting life story: she grew up as the youngest of four children in a family that struggled financially, and put herself through college, eventually earning a Ph.D. from Cornell University while starting a small farm business with her husband; they raised three kids on less than $30,000 a year, relying on federal programs like Medicaid, WIC and Head Start to make ends meet.

[...]

 

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August 7, 2025

Megan O’Rourke - Former USDA Climate Scientist & Labor Leader

- Announces Campaign for NJ-07
 

The Blairstown Native Recently Resigned from Trump’s USDA As He Attacked the Science Community & Her Role
 

BLAIRSTOWN, NJ. – Today, climate scientist and local union leader Megan O’Rourke announced her campaign for New Jersey’s 7th Congressional District.

 

Megan was born and raised in the district where her family has lived since her great grandfather immigrated from Ireland. She recently resigned from her post as the lead climate scientist within her agency at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) due to the Trump Administration’s aggressive attacks on her work and climate science as a whole.
 

“My entire career, I’ve fought to help put nutritious, affordable food on the table and to combat climate change for families in New Jersey, and the Trump Administration is working to undermine and devastate those efforts on a daily basis. I took an oath to uphold the Constitution when I joined federal service and unfortunately, but unsurprisingly, my time serving the public as a climate scientist has come to an end. But, I am excited to fight for New Jersey families here at home in a new way: by running for Congress,” said Megan O’Rourke.

 

Megan personally understands how prices at the grocery store, sky-high taxes, housing shortages, and the cost of health care can make or break a family. Until she earned her Ph.D. at the age of thirty, Megan and her family were below the poverty line and relied on critical programs like Medicaid, Head Start, and WIC to make ends meet. So when Tom Kean Jr. voted for President Trump’s so-called Big Beautiful Bill, she knew she had to do something. She’s running for Congress to stand up for her friends and neighbors in New Jersey and to fight to lower the cost of living and ensure a sustainable, safe future for our families.

 

O’Rourke continued, “Families here in New Jersey are struggling to pay the bills and to afford the basics, and solving those problems will be a deeply personal mission in Congress. I grew up in a family of six in Blairstown and my Mom worked hard to support us, but we still struggled financially. I’d go to the office with my Mom on weekends so she could work overtime, my family had a cleaning gig where I was in charge of bathrooms, and there were points in my life where I counted on Medicaid and food assistance to make ends meet.”  

 

“So, it’s infuriating and hurtful to see members of Congress like Tom Kean, Jr. vote to rip away affordable healthcare through Medicaid and cut food assistance - all while increasing our debt to pad the pockets of the very rich. I’ve always fought to make lives better for workers and families, and when I’m in Congress my neighbors and constituents will never have to wonder where I am or if I have their back.”

 

After eight years working in the federal government as a Ph.D. climate change scientist and agriculture expert, Megan resigned this spring. Within the USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) Program, Megan led the distribution of approximately $200 million annually in research and program funding to improve food security and affordability for families and combat climate change in the United States. Megan is also a local union leader, serving as a Union Steward for the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE).
 

 

More About Megan O’Rourke:

 

Megan is a native of Blairstown, NJ, the youngest of four children, and a graduate of North Warren Regional High School. Growing up, her family struggled financially. Her mother, who was the primary bread winner, began her career in clerical work and went to college later in life, bringing Megan with her to classes at Centenary College when she couldn’t find a sitter.

 

Despite graduating at the top of her class as a Star Ledger Scholar, there was no immediate path to college for Megan after high school. Instead, Megan found a fellowship through the local Rotary Club and earned money by sorting mail, waitressing and whatever other odd jobs she could get.

 

 

Determined to continue her education, she found her way to Brigham Young University, where she met her husband of 25 years who is a native of Madison, NJ. Megan worked her way through school, eventually earning degrees at Stony Brook University, Iowa State University, and her Ph.D. from Cornell University while starting a small farm business with her husband and raising three kids on less than $30,000 a year. During that time, her family used critical federal programs like Medicaid, WIC and Head Start to make ends meet.

 

 

Megan has used her education to give back. As a tenured professor, she studied how to make agriculture more sustainable to lower costs for families and protect our environment for future generations. As a federal employee, she has worked to improve food security and combat climate change at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). As a Brookings Fellow serving as a senior advisor to Congresswoman Chellie Pingree, Megan learned first-hand how to get things done in Congress and deliver results for constituents.

 

For the last five years, she led climate change science at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) overseeing approximately $200 million in funding annually. Now with three adult children, Megan continues her dedication to public service and making lives better by running for Congress.

 

Megan also served as the Union Steward for the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) while at USDA-NIFA where she led efforts to ensure coworkers could access benefits under the Americans with Disabilities Act and Family and Medical Leave Act.

NJ Gubermatorial Forum

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Today, U.S. Rep. Andy Kim (D-3) delivered yet another win for his grassroots campaign, this time in Warren County. Kim won over 80% of the vote and won by 65 points over First Lady Tammy Murphy after delegates voted via secret paper ballot between all Democratic primary candidates declared for U.S. Senate.

Lt. Governor Sheila Oliver dies at 71

Essex County Democrat was the first woman of color to serve as Assembly Speaker and to win a statewide election. By David Wildstein, August 01, 2023, 12:25 pm

 

Sheila Y. Oliver, the trailblazing two-term lieutenant governor who became the first woman of color to serve as Assembly Speaker and the first to win a statewide election, died today after a long illness. She was 71.

 

Oliver spent 27 years in public office as a fierce advocate for social justice, affordable housing, opportunities for women, and New Jersey’s economically disadvantaged communities.

 

In 2017, Phil Murphy, then the Democratic nominee for governor, picked Oliver as his running mate. They defeated Republicans Kim Guadagno and Carlos Rendo by a fourteen-point margin. Murphy also picked Oliver as Commissioner of Community Affairs in his cabinet.

 

“I knew then that her decades of public service made her the ideal partner for me to lead the State of New Jersey,” Murphy said. ”It was the best decision I ever made.”

 

Murphy said that Oliver “did not view these issues in the abstract because she lived with them every day of her life.”

 

“She brought a unique and invaluable perspective to our public policy discourse and served as an inspiration to millions of women and girls everywhere, especially young women of color,” he said. “She was an incredibly genuine and kind person whose friendship and partnership will be irreplaceable.”

 

Oliver ran for Essex County Freeholder in 1993 on an off-the-line slate backed by State Sen. Richard Codey (D-West Orange). She lost the primary to the organization line slate headed by incumbent Joseph DiVincenzo.

 

Mayor Cardell Cooper appointed Oliver to serve on the East Orange Board of Education the following year. She served there until 2000.

 

Following the retirement of Essex County Freeholder Arthur Wright in 1996, Essex County Democrats backed Oliver to succeed him in the East Orange-based District 3 seat. After Wright resigned in June to become the deputy county clerk, Oliver was appointed to fill the unexpired term.

 

Oliver sought the Democratic nomination for mayor of East Orange in 1997. She came within 51 votes of defeating Robert Bowser in a field of five candidates.

 

Democrats backed Tony Jackson to replace her as a freeholder in 1999, and in 2000 she became the deputy Essex County Administrator while Republican James Treffinger was still the county executive. She remained in a county post, including a stint as director of the Essex County Department of Citizen Services and Economic Development, Training and Employment, until she was elected lieutenant governor.

 

After legislative redistricting in 2001 created a solidly Democratic 34th district represented by Republican State Sen. Norman Robertson (R-Clifton), Oliver became a candidate for the State Senate. But Essex Democrats backed Assemblywoman Nia Gill (D-Montclair) instead, and Oliver lost the primary by a 78%-18% margin and a plurality of 8,243 votes.

 

Two years later, when the Essex County Democratic organization tossed Gill from their ticket and backed former Assemblyman LeRoy Jones, Jr. (D-East Orange), Oliver became a candidate for State Assembly. Democrats also withdrew party support for freshman Assemblyman Willis Edwards (D-East Orange), and Oliver ran with Jones and Assemblyman Peter Eagler (D-Clifton). While Gill narrowly edged out Jones for the Senate, Oliver was the top vote-getter in her race, running 1,469 votes ahead of Gill’s running mate, Helyn Baltimore.

 

She became the Assistant Majority Leader in 2006 and chaired the Assembly Human Services Committee.

 

A Senate legislative coup in 2009 led to Oliver’s meteoric rise in power. As part of a deal for Steve Sweeney to take out Richard Codey as Senate President, Oliver became the new Assembly Speaker.

 

She became the first Democratic woman to serve as Speaker – Marion West Higgins (R-Westwood) held the post in 1965 – and the first Black Speaker – S. Howard Woodson (D-Trenton) served from 1974 to 1976.

 

In contrast with Sweeney, Oliver was often a ferocious critic of the state’s Republican governor, Chris Christie. She called him “mentally deranged” and a liar.

 

In 2011, she faced a possible challenge from Joseph Cryan (D-Union) after she backed Christie on pension reforms.

 

But after four years as Speaker, political alliances changed, and she was replaced by Vincent Prieto (D-Secaucus).

 

Following the death of Frank Lautenberg, Oliver sought the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in 2013. She finished fourth in a special primary election that Cory Booker, the mayor of Newark, won.

 

As a legislator, Oliver advocated for increases in the state’s minimum wage, affordable health care, better public schools, and increased funding for Planned Parenthood.

 

Oliver became New Jersey’s second lieutenant governor in 2018, a position created nearly a decade earlier after New Jersey watched two consecutive governors resign and be replaced by the Senate President.

 

As head of the Department of Community Affairs, Oliver managed the state’s takeover of Atlantic City. She also championed tax incentives for neighborhood revitalizations, urban enterprise zones, and programs to prevent homelessness.

 

Born in Newark, Oliver graduated from Lincoln University and received her master’s degree from Columbia University. She has taught at Essex County College. She helped found the Newark Coalition for Low-Income Housing and was director of Newark’s Office of Youth Services and Special Projects.

 

Oliver is survived by her mother, Jennie, and her brother, Charles.

https://newjerseyglobe.com/in-memoriam/lt-governor-sheila-oliver-dies-at-71/?fbclid=IwAR28Tnf6auCBZqO8jFhDtEUlQFMZmPPD4dTXE0u-uRPGixfYJvkpDe8DEZU_aem_AVblOlNrQ4KfwIwS8TgHlwFyRad9p2CeWM53E9_BwTXf01Mdz-txErnjgTxf6NTZCcI&mibextid=Zxz2cZ

Fulop wins his second county chairman endorsement

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Warren County’s top Democrat, Tom Palmieri, backs Jersey City mayor’s bid for governor.

By David Wildstein, June 15 2023 7:01 am

In his bid for the Democratic nomination for governor, Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop has picked up the backing of Warren County Democratic Chairman Tom Palmieri.

“New Jersey has made tremendous progress over the last six years, which is why we need a candidate for Governor who can win in 2025 and continue moving our state forward — there is no one better equipped for that fight than Steven Fulop,” Palmieri said.  “I’m ecstatic to announce the Warren County Democratic Committee’s support for Mayor Fulop, and I look forward to working closely with him to deliver the leadership our state needs.”

Washington Celebrates America - Mayor Ethel Conry, Washington Boro Dems & Warren County Young Dems President Chris Bauknight 

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WCDC & Blairstown Dems in Blairstown for July 4th Event.

WCDC spring fundraiser at Hawk Pointe

Convención de nominación de la WCDC 27/02/22 11 a. m. 
Reunión virtual - Instrucciones a seguir

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Ann Stone, a former Warren County freeholder and a Democrat, dies at 84

https://newjerseyglobe.com/in-memoriam/ann-stone-a-former-warren-county-freeholder-and-a-democrat-dies-at-84/

Daughter of a GOP county chairman switched parties in 1987
By David Wildstein, April 11 2023 12:12 pm

Ann M. Stone, a former Warren County commissioner and Greenwich mayor who won three countywide elections as a Democrat, died on April 8.  She was 84.


Along with James DeBosh, Stone was part of the last Democratic majority on the Warren County Board of Freeholders when her party had two of the three seats in 2000.


Stone became involved in politics at a young age; her father, Harry Snyder, served as Warren County GOP chairman and county clerk.


She began her political career in 1970 when she won a seat on the Greenwich Township Board of Education.  She was re-elected in 1973, 1976, and 1979 and spent six years as the school board president.


Stone was elected to the Greenwich Township Committee in 1981 as a Republican.  She defeated Democrat James Pacenti with 72% of the vote.  She became Greenwich’s first woman mayor and was re-elected in 1984.

In 1986, Stone, then the Republican mayor, endorsed Democrat John Polhemus for freeholder after her preferred candidate in the general election, Rosemarie Albanese, lost the GOP primary to White Township Committeeman Harold Reeves.  Polhemus defeated Reeves by seventeen percentage points.

The endorsement of Polhemus led to a split between Stone and top Warren GOP leaders, including Assembly Majority Leader Chuck Haytaian (R-Hackettstown) and GOP County Chairman Frank DeLello.

Stone switched parties in 1987 and became the Democratic candidate for freeholder against GOP incumbent Kenneth Miller.  She came within 178 votes of winning the general election.  Still, Stone was re-elected to the township committee, this time as a Democrat.
Running for freeholder again in 1988, Stone defeated Anthony Fowler, the Republican incumbent, with 56% of the vote.  She did that even as George H.W. Bush carried Warren County in the presidential election with 64.5% of the vote.

In the 1991 Republican wave election that followed Gov. Jim Florio’s $2.8 billion tax increase, Jake Matthenius defeated Stone with 58% of the vote. Matthenius was a political newcomer who had headed the state’s beekeeping industry during his 42 years at the New Jersey Department of Agriculture.

After the election, Florio hired Stone in the governor’s Office of Constituent Relations.
In 1994, Stone sought a rematch with Matthenius and ousted him by about 1,000 votes, 52%-48%.   Haytaian, then the Assembly Speaker, carried Warren County with 62% in his U.S. Senate race against Frank Lautenberg that year.

Seeking re-election in 1997, Stone faced Hackettstown Mayor John DiMaio, now the Assembly Minority Leader.  She won by seven points, 49%-42%, with independent John Celentano receiving 8%.

As a candidate for re-election in 2000, Stone faced a challenge from a young West Point graduate and attorney, Michael Doherty.   Doherty came within 221 votes of unseating Assemblywoman Connie Myers (R-Milford) in the Republican primary in 1999.
Doherty ousted Stone by 4,217 votes, 51%-40%, with Celentano (6%) and Thomas “Reggie” Regrut (3%) running as independents.

Stone made one last run for office in 2004, challenging DiMaio, who had joined the freeholder board in late 2000.  DiMaio defeated her by 4,000 votes, 43%-45%.


Over the years, Stone served on the Warren County Tax Board and Board of Elections.

Predeceased by her husband, Dale, Stone is survived by her four daughters, fifteen grandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren.

A visitation will be held on April 14 at the Stewartsville Presbyterian Church from 10-11 AM, followed by an 11 AM funeral service.

Ann M. Stone, 84, of Stewartsville, NJ passed away on Saturday, April 8, 2023 at Complete Care of Brakeley Park Center.

Ann was born in Bellefonte, PA on August 14, 1938 to the late Harry J. Snyder, Sr. and Marion Bieler Snyder.

Ann had been a government official for Warren County and Greenwich Township, NJ for many years. She was a member of the Greenwich Township Board of Education (1970-1981), serving as president for six years. Ann was a member of the Greenwich Township Committee (1981-1990), of which she was Greenwich Township's First Female Mayor, having served for six years. She served on the Warren County Freeholder Board (1989-1991 and 1994-1997), of which she was Director for one year during each term. Ann was an aide to New Jersey Governor James Florio (1992-1993), working in The Office of Constituent Relations. In 1996, she was awarded the Warren County Woman of the Year award.

Ann had served as President of the Warren County Cancer Society, was a member of the Warren County Tax Board, was involved with the Warren County Habitat for Humanity Organization, the Warren County Election Board, the Warren County and Greenwich Township Democratic Committee, and the Warren County Welfare Board.

Ann was a member of Stewartsville Presbyterian Church, where she served as an elder and deacon, was a Member and Senior Coordinator of Greenwich Township Senior Citizens, and was a Founding and Life member of the Greenwich Township Historical Society.

Ann is survived by Four Daughters, Debbie Riley of Stewartsville, NJ, Kim Stone of Stewartsville, NJ, Denise DeMasi of Bethlehem, PA, and Dawyne Stone of Alpha, NJ; 15 Grandchildren; 9 Great-Grandchildren; Sister, Sally J (George) Wilbur of MN and AZ; Two Brothers, Thomas (Connie) Snyder of AZ, Charlie (Karin) Snyder of GA; Daughter-in-law, Brenda Stone of Stewartsville, NJ; Two Sister-in-Laws, Alice Stone of Bloomsbury, NJ and Barbara Snyder of AZ; many nieces and nephews. Ann was predeceased by her Beloved Husband, Robert D. "Dale" Stone, Sr., Son, Robert D. "Bob" Stone, Jr. and Brother, Harry J Snyder, Jr.

A Visitation for the Family and Friends of Ann will be held on Friday, April 14, 2023 from 10:00 am to 11:00 am at Stewartsville Presbyterian Church; 550 North Main St; Stewartsville, NJ 08886, with a Service at 11am. Interment will be in Stewartsville (Presbyterian) Cemetery.

Memorials may be made in Ann's name to Stewartsville Presbyterian Church Deacons; 550 North Main St.; Stewartsville, NJ 08886, American Cancer Society; 110 W. Laurel Ave.; Cheltenham, PA 19012, or American Heart Association; 450 Hamburg Pike #2a; Wayne, NJ 07470. Condolences may be made at www.rupellfuneralhome.com

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