Mark Smith

  • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2008
    Winners:
    JON CORZINE, , Michael Doherty, , Mark Smith, , Joseph Roberts, , , , , , , , , , , , ,
    Losers:
    JON CORZINE, Steve Lipski, Leonard Kaiser, Joseph Roberts
  • November 11, 2008 - 4:12pm

    Flashpoint Chiappone

    Assemblyman Tony Chiappone (D-Bayonne) and state Sen. Sandra Cunningham (D-Hudson)

    BAYONNE – It was a bruising fight for Assemblyman Tony Chiappone (D-Bayonne), one he wanted badly to win, but his ally in last week’s mayoral election lost, and now Chiappone must look ahead to his own re-election bid next year and the grim prospect of running off the line.

    Whether on or off, Chiappone makes it clear.

     “I’m running,” he said.

    The Jersey Journal’s Political Insider points out that Mark Smith’s defeat of Pat Conaghan on Election Day gives the Hudson County Democratic Organization (HCDO) the necessary leverage to dump Chiappone, who comes from that part of the 31st Legislative District composing a third of what is otherwise dominated by Jersey City.

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    November 10, 2008 - 3:58pm

    Smith assumes Bayonne mayor's office this evening

    Mayor-elect Mark Smith

    Triumphant last week in the mayor’s race, Acting Police Director Mark Smith will officially take office today in Bayonne.

    Five O’clock Mass at St. Henry’s Church will be followed by a 6 p.m. swearing-in ceremony at City Hall on Avenue C.

    Smith topped a five-man field that included retired municipal Judge Pat Conaghan, former Mayor Richard Rutkowski, Zoning Commissioner Ray Rokicki and city clerk Robert Sloan.

    Smith won with over 45 percent of the 20,000 votes cast.

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    November 4, 2008 - 10:26pm

    Smith wins in Bayonne

    Mark Smith has been elected Mayor of Bayonne, defeating former Muncipal Court Judge Patrick Conaghan by a 46%-33% margin. Smith is the city's  Police Director.  Former Mayor Richard Rutkowski finished third with 15%, followed by 5% for City Clerk Robert Sloan and 1% for Raymond Rokicki, a city zoning official.

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    October 27, 2008 - 11:04am

    In Passaic and Bayonne: the Scarinci factor

    In at least two special elections for mayor on Nov. 4th – in Passaic and Bayonne - attroney and big money Democratic Party donor Donald Scarinci stands to lose money if the other side wins.

    In Passaic, Scarinci’s powerful firm, Scarinci and Hollenbeck, has the lucrative city attorney contract, with a base salary as high as $600,000 annually, not including add-ons.

    City supervisor Vincent Capuana says if elected mayor he would look at trimming the firm from the payroll.

    Countering that claim on the day he endorsed former School Board President Alex Blanco, Acting Mayor Gary Schaer said Capuana’s designs on in-house legal work likely wouldn’t save the city money.

    In Bayonne, Scarinci represents Fidelco-Roseland Property, a residential developer of the Bayonne peninsula, site of the former Military Ocean Terminal.

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    October 19, 2008 - 4:47pm

    Obama drama shakes up Bayonne

    Obama volunteer Karin R. White Morgen: Politicker photoObama volunteer Karin R. White Morgen: Politicker photo 

    BAYONNE - Forget about president, there’s a war for mayor going on, and millions of contract dollars at stake as this hard knock dock town faces redevelopment of the Navy peninsula.

    But the mayor’s race and its implications for next year’s politics have now produced a smaller - but no less intense - spin-off war between regular and renegade Democrats scrambling to prove their allegiance to Sen. Barack Obama (D-Il.) with a little more than two weeks until Election Day.

    Leading mayoral candidates, police director Mark Smith and retired judge Pat Conaghan, don’t want to publicly back Obama as they court 7,453 independent voters and 2,157 Republicans in what is billed as a nonpartisan election in an overwhelmingly Democratic (15,894 registered voters) yet historically white city.

    The Republicans see opportunity here in this onetime Reagan Democrat stronghold, and have made targeted phone calls on behalf of Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.). But Obama’s 13-point lead over McCain in New Jersey and the Democrat’s frontrunner status nationally have at least one conspicuous Conaghan ally rushing to quell the perception that he’s operating outside the auspices of Obamaland.

    On Saturday, Assemblyman Anthony Chiappone (D-Bayonne) enlisted the help of his ally, state Sen. Sandra Cunningham (D-Hudson), and opened an Obama for President headquarters at the corner of Avenue C and Andrews Street.

    From that vantage point, he launched an attack on what he sees as a stalled-in-the-past local party organization he said has soft-pedaled its Obama outreach.

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    October 15, 2008 - 8:35am

    Sires will endorse Smith in Bayonne mayoral contest

    Sources say that U.S. Rep. Albio Sires will endorse Mark Smith for Mayor of Bayonne next week. Sires' support of Smith isn't a surprise: the Hudson County Democratic Organization is supporting Smith in the November non-partisan special election to replace Joseph Doria, and Sires is closely allied with the HCDO.  And Sires staffer Erica Daugherty has been working hard to help Smith win the mayoralty.

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    October 10, 2008 - 1:51pm

    Smith leads in Bayonne money race

    BAYONNE - In the special election for mayor here, the campaign of Police Director Mark Smith this week reported the biggest influx of cash.

    Leading the four other men in the money race, Smith has raised $212,902.38 for his campaign, including $154,527.38 since the last period, which ended in July. He reports $33,670.23 on-hand.

    His chief rival, retired municipal Judge Patrick Conaghan, reported raising $109,197.77, which includes a self-loan to his campaign totaling $50,247.77. He has $16,321.75 in the bank.

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    September 30, 2008 - 11:51am

    Conaghan and Smith dominant on the streets of Bayonne

    Retired municipal Judge Pat Conaghan walks the streets on Monday evening.: Politicker photoRetired municipal Judge Pat Conaghan walks the streets on Monday evening.: Politicker photoBAYONNE - The bands of men move through the streets on separate ends of Avenue C, claiming city blocks as territory for their respective campaigns.

    There are other men running for mayor in Bayonne, but Police Director Mark Smith and retired Municipal Judge Pat Conaghan remain the most dogged public competitors, and their followers the most intense.

    The signs stare out from everywhere as evidence: Conaghan for Mayor, or Smith for Mayor.

    Across the river, Wall Street’s tanking. Worst day in its history. Police Director Mark Smith outside his Broadway campaign headquarters on Monday evening: Politicker photoPolice Director Mark Smith outside his Broadway campaign headquarters on Monday evening: Politicker photo

    But Bayonne’s been feeling pain for years. They have a history of pain, of course. Not for nothing the local boy who once challenged Mohammed Ali for the heavyweight crown, Chuck Wepner, still walks Broadway Avenue and goes by the nickname "Bayonne Bleeder" in boxing circles.

    Here they prefer to call him the "Bayonne Battler."

    The former title may be more appropriate, for now the city faces a $22 million budget deficit. A mixed use project slated for the closed down Navy yard once was supposed to save this maritime blue collar capital at the bottom end of Hudson County, yet at this point, even that project’s champions say they need to reexamine the harbor.

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    September 29, 2008 - 2:09pm

    Smith lands advantageous position in clerk's ballot drawing

    Clerk Barbara Netchert gives renewed meaning to an old form of Hudson County political spin.: Politicker photoClerk Barbara Netchert gives renewed meaning to an old form of Hudson County political spin.: Politicker photo 

    JERSEY CITY - Police Director Mark Smith took the pole position here today in a ballot drawing for the special election to be held Nov 4th for Bayonne mayor.

    In the Division of Elections Office at the William Brennan Court House, Hudson County Clerk Barbara A. Netchert put the names of the five mayoral candidates in small plastic tubes and then placed the tubes in a revolving holding chamber.

    "This ballot box probably goes back to the days of (Jersey City Mayor) Frank Hague," she said.

    The clerk spun the chamber a number of times before withdrawing Smith's name first.

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