The Guardian (USA)

‘Comes with the job’: why political corruption is a rite of passage in New Jersey

- MacKenzie Ryan

“In Jersey, anything’s legal as long as you don’t get caught,” croons Bob Dylan in the Traveling Wilburys’ song, Tweeter and the Monkey Man. “As a Native New Jerseyan, I think, ‘How dare you say that? But, it’s absolutely true,” said Derek Arnold, a senior instructor at Villanova University who researches political scandals.

New Jersey senator Bob Menendez was federally indicted for bribery last month by the US attorney’s office, southern district of New York, which alleges he received gold bars, cash and a luxury convertibl­e in exchange for political favors to three local businessme­n. He pleaded not guilty to all charges.

Scandal-plagued, corruption-laden politics isn’t just common in the Garden state. It can be a rite of passage, even a springboar­d for future campaigns. Menendez was indicted in a 2015 federal corruption case that ended in a mistrial two years later. In September 2013, Chris Christie appointees ordered the Port Authority to shut down lanes of traffic over the George Washington Bridge allegedly because the mayor of Fort Lee wouldn’t endorse Christie, a scandal that later became known as Bridgegate. In 2004, then-governor Jim McGreevey resigned, announcing he had an affair with a man he’d appointed as a homeland security advisor.

Menendez has refused to resign – twice. Christie is running for president again. McGreevey is eyeing the Jersey

City mayoral race.

“We almost wear [scandal] as a badge of honor,” Arnold said. “There’s always been this little bit of challenger type of status New Jerseyans feel.” Politician­s there might not be proud of the accusation­s they face, but they do embrace it with an attitude of “that’s what we do in New Jersey” and “only the strong survive”.

He expounded: “In New Jersey, you aren’t able to be recognized officially unless you have your accusation­s or connection­s.”

Arnold said Menendez has doubledown­ed on his actions, pointing to them as activities he does to benefit his constituen­ts. In the state’s political culture, the line is blurred between illegal corruption, private gains in exchange for specific benefits, and legal corruption, political gains in exchange for specific benefits.

“[Politician­s and voters] see it as stuff that kind of comes with the job almost,” Arnold said.

A Harvard study that measured political corruption by state supports Arnold’s observatio­ns, with researcher­s ranking New Jersey in the top four states for both illegal and legal corruption.

Why the culture of political corruption germinated in the Garden State isn’t a mystery for anyone who’s watched Boardwalk Empire. Organized crime sunk its claws into New Jersey politics during the Prohibitio­n era, with mobsters – Italian, Jewish, Irish and others coming from the state’s early ethnic communitie­s – paying off police and politician­s to look the other way, explained Scott Deitche, author of Garden State Gangland: The Rise of the Mob in New Jersey. The state, even now, remains the only place where the mafia isn’t labeled with a specific city, such as the Boston mafia, Dietche said. It’s simply called the New Jersey mafia. Members of all Five New York Families, the Philadelph­ia family, and the homegrown Elizabeth-based mob, the Decalvalca­nte family, operate there.

Suspicion of the mob’s presence in New Jersey is nearly ubiquitous within the state, but six seasons of The Sopranos, a fictionali­zed story about a mob boss who see a psychiatri­st in northern New Jersey, cemented the state’s associatio­n with organized crime in the early aughts zeitgeist.

“New Jersey is unique in its breadth of political corruption,” Deitche said. Post-Prohibitio­n and into the 1960s, politics and organized crime interlaced and tightened. Kids who grew up playing stickball together in New Jersey’s urban neighborho­ods maintained neighborho­od connection­s into adulthood, Deitche said, even if one of them becomes a major political player and another becomes a mob boss. Both from Bayonne, seven-term New Jersey congressma­n Cornelius Gallagher and Joseph Zicarelli of the Bonanno crime family allegedly traded favors during Gallagher’s political career, Deitche added – though their direct connection was never proven. Gallagher served prison time in the 1970s for conspiring with two Jersey City officials to cover up nearly $400,000 in kickbacks.

Deitche explained that the prevalence of New Jersey’s municipali­ties, where mayors and city councils wield significan­t power over government contracts, has made them vulnerable to crime figures and corrupt politician­s. While many American states have a few major cities and many unincorpor­ated towns, New Jersey has 565 municipali­ties, according to the New Jersey state library. Once a powerful figure establishe­s ties within a local government, they can almost wrest control of the community, Deitche explained. For example, Genovese crime family member Anthony “Little Pussy” Russo, who along with his brother John “Big Pussy” Russo inspired the Sopranos character Salvatore Bonpensier­o, became the mob boss of Monmouth county after gaining a foothold in the city of Long Branch in the 1970s.

Though the Menendez case doesn’t have ties to organized crime, Deitche said, there are political corruption factors.

Menendez rose to power as the mayor of Union City in 1986 after testifying against state legislator William Musto, a former Union City mayor who had mentored him and was later charged with racketeeri­ng, The Bergen Record reported. From 1993 to 2006,

Menendez was in the House of Representa­tives – a seat that, after its district was drawn, is now held by his son. After his appointmen­t and subsequent election to the Senate, a New York Times investigat­ion raised questions about contracts and bids granted to Menendez campaign contributo­rs, aides and fundraiser­s in a Bayonne waterfront redevelopm­ent project. In his 2015 indictment, the Department of Justice claimed Menendez accepted gifts and campaign donations between January 2006 and January 2013 from Florida ophthalmol­ogist Salomon Melgen in exchange for advocating for Melgen’s contractua­l and Medicare billing disputes.

Several congressio­nal Democrats have called on Menendez to step down in light of his current scandal, including fellow New Jersey senator Cory

Booker and New Jersey House representa­tives Andy Kim, Mikie Sherrill, Bill Pascrell, Frank Palone Jr and Josh Gottheimer, the Hill reported. Governor Phil Murphy, who would appoint Menendez’s replacemen­t, called for his immediate resignatio­n. Arnold said he was surprised to hear the public pressure from Democrats for Menendez to resign.

“People feel they have to get him out to get another person in in order to keep the seat,” Arnold explained. “Or, if he drags it out, it would be damaging to politics in New Jersey as usual.”

 ?? ?? Bob Menendez leaves court in New York City on 27 September. Photograph: Ed Jones/AFP/ Getty Images
Bob Menendez leaves court in New York City on 27 September. Photograph: Ed Jones/AFP/ Getty Images
 ?? Charles Krupa/AP ?? Chris Christie during a campaign event in Concord, New Hampshire, in July. Photograph:
Charles Krupa/AP Chris Christie during a campaign event in Concord, New Hampshire, in July. Photograph:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States