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Christie’s Bridgegate Baggage Is Back — And David Wildstein Should Be Question #1

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Former New Jersey governor Chris Christie is once again in the blast zone of Bridgegate. After Christie criticized Donald Trump on ABC this weekend, Trump fired back by threatening to push for a fresh look at the 2013 Fort Lee lane-closure scandal — the same episode that kneecapped Christie’s national ambitions and still shadows his claims of judgment and leadership. Independent reporting confirms Trump’s threat and the renewed political fight. 

Bridgegate is not ancient history. It’s a test of basic ethics in government: whether public power was abused to punish a local mayor and whether those at the top fostered — or tolerated — a political culture where that could happen. The core facts are not in dispute: lanes to the George Washington Bridge were closed in September 2013, causing massive gridlock in Fort Lee. Emails from Christie’s deputy chief of staff read, infamously, “Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee.” 

Two senior Christie allies — Bridget Anne Kelly and Bill Baroni — were convicted by a jury, only to have those convictions unanimously overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2020 on narrow legal grounds: the scheme, as charged, did not aim to obtain money or property, which the federal fraud statutes require. That decision did not vindicate the conduct; it held the charged federal crimes didn’t fit the facts. Read it yourself: Justice Kagan’s opinion is concise and clear. 

And then there is David Wildstein.

Wildstein, a Christie appointee to the Port Authority, admitted he ordered the closures. He pleaded guilty in 2015, cooperated with prosecutors, and in 2017 received three years’ probation, 500 hours of community service, and financial penalties. That is the legal record. Wildstein now runs The New Jersey Globe as editor-in-chief — a position that gives him outsized influence over how Jersey politics are framed. These two facts together should make every reader — and every newsroom — sit up straight. 

Why Christie still hasn’t answered the fundamental question

Christie was never charged. But multiple proceedings and trial testimony placed his inner circle at the center of a punitive misuse of government power — under his watch, during his reelection. Whether he “knew then” has been contested in courtrooms and committee rooms, and Christie has repeatedly denied prior knowledge. None of that erases the leadership failure: a political operation close enough to him felt comfortable weaponizing a bridge. That’s not exoneration — that’s a management indictment. 

The media accountability gap around Wildstein

Wildstein isn’t just a historical figure in the case; he is a present-day gatekeeper in New Jersey political media. Given his admitted role and plea, his coverage and commentary on Christie, Bridgegate, and related players deserve rigorous scrutiny and transparent disclosure, every single time. When Bridgegate re-enters the conversation — as it did this week — Wildstein should be the first person aggressively questioned on-the-record about:

what he did, what others around Christie knew in real time, and how his outlet navigates conflicts when reporting on the scandal’s protagonists. That’s Journalism 101. (His current role at the New Jersey Globe is publicly stated by the outlet itself.) 

The Supreme Court ruling isn’t a moral clean bill of health

Some will wave the 2020 Supreme Court reversal as a political shield for Christie. Read the decision: the Court threw out the convictions because the federal fraud theory didn’t fit — not because the behavior was fine. Using public resources to choke a town for political payback is an abuse of power, even if it doesn’t satisfy a specific federal statute’s “money or property” element. That is precisely what the Court explained. 

What New Jersey should demand now

From Christie: clear answers about his office’s culture in 2013 and what, if anything, he did to hold wrongdoers accountable beyond public distancing. Voters deserve an account of leadership, not lawyered denials. (Background on the scandal’s documented facts is well established.)  From David Wildstein: on-the-record interviews about his admitted conduct and any contemporaneous communications with senior Christie aides; explicit conflict-of-interest practices at the Globe when covering Christie, Bridgegate, and Port Authority politics; and publication of a standing disclosure on Bridgegate pieces. (Wildstein’s plea and sentence are documented by DOJ.)  From the press: stop treating Bridgegate as old news when its principal actors still shape coverage and political narratives today. Re-read the legal record and ask sharper questions. (Recent reporting confirms the political fight has brought Bridgegate back to center stage.) 

Bottom line

Trump’s threat to resurrect Bridgegate as a political cudgel tells us less about Trump than it does about Christie’s unresolved problem: the scandal is a leadership stain that a Supreme Court opinion cannot bleach. And as long as David Wildstein — the man who admitted to ordering the closures — is editing a major New Jersey political outlet, the first accountability interview on any Bridgegate redux should start with him. That’s not personal. It’s responsible journalism grounded in the public record. 


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Unanimous Vote, Unanswered Questions: Hudson County’s OEM Appointment Demands Transparency

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Hudson County’s emergency preparedness apparatus is now under renewed public scrutiny following the unanimous appointment of Junior Ferrante as Hudson County Office of Emergency Management (OEM) Coordinator—a decision that has triggered serious questions about oversight, transparency, and public safety accountability.

On January 5, 2026, the Hudson County Board of Commissioners voted 9–0 to approve Ferrante, formerly Bayonne’s OEM coordinator, to lead emergency management operations for the entire county. The appointment was sponsored by Commissioner Kenneth Kopacz and reported by Hudson County View, which described Ferrante as a long-serving OEM official who cited more than a decade of experience in Bayonne and expressed confidence in his readiness to assume countywide responsibility.

Under the current structure, Hudson County OEM now operates under the administrative authority of the Hudson County Sheriff’s Office, placing Ferrante within the chain of command overseen by Sheriff Jimmy Davis.

The Role at Stake

The Office of Emergency Management is not ceremonial. OEM is responsible for coordinating responses to natural disasters, large-scale fires, hazardous materials incidents, floods, mass casualty events, school emergencies, and inter-agency command during crises. The position demands unimpeachable judgment, trust across agencies, and public confidence—particularly in a densely populated county like Hudson.

That context has amplified public concern following widely circulated allegations from multiple sources claiming that Ferrante may have failed a drug test at some point prior to his appointment. These claims have fueled sharp questions about what information decision-makers had access to before casting a unanimous vote—and whether any potentially disqualifying issues were addressed internally or ignored entirely.

Questions the Public Is Asking

The controversy has coalesced around a set of core questions now being asked by residents, activists, and independent investigators:

Was any drug screening conducted in connection with Ferrante’s employment or appointment? If so, were the results disclosed to county leadership or commissioners? What vetting or due-diligence process preceded a unanimous confirmation? Who reviewed Ferrante’s background, and under what standards? Why was no public discussion held regarding qualifications, screening, or risk assessment for such a critical post?

These questions persist not because of partisan disagreement—the vote was unanimous—but because unanimity without transparency can obscure responsibility rather than confirm confidence.

Power, Relationships, and Public Trust

The appointment has also drawn attention due to Ferrante’s close personal and professional relationship with Sheriff Jimmy Davis, as well as Davis’s political backing from State Senator and Union City Mayor Brian Stack. Critics argue that Hudson County’s political ecosystem has, for decades, concentrated authority within a tight network of alliances—raising concerns about whether loyalty and relationships outweigh independent oversight.

While no criminal findings have been issued in connection with the OEM appointment, critics stress that public safety roles require a higher standard than silence or closed-door assurances. They argue that the absence of publicly documented vetting leaves residents to rely on trust rather than transparency—an approach many find unacceptable when disaster response and emergency command are at stake.

Why Unanimity Matters

A split vote invites debate. A unanimous vote invites scrutiny.

Every commissioner voted yes. That means every commissioner now owns the decision—and the consequences of what the public does or does not know about the process behind it. In matters of emergency management, the cost of undisclosed risks is measured not in political fallout, but in lives, response time, and institutional credibility.

Public Accountability Moving Forward

Independent journalists and civic watchdogs have indicated they are examining:

The communications surrounding the appointment The scope of background checks applied The role of the sheriff’s office in OEM oversight Whether established standards for emergency leadership were followed or bypassed

For residents of Hudson County, the issue is no longer simply who holds the OEM title—it is whether the systems meant to protect the public are governed by transparency or by trust in private assurances.

In emergency management, credibility is not optional. It is operational.

And once public confidence is compromised, restoring it requires more than a unanimous vote—it requires answers.


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Union City Police Dispatcher Caught in Inappropriate Sexual Conduct

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An Investigative Editorial on Transparency, Oversight, and Public Trust

Multiple municipal employees have provided consistent accounts of serious alleged workplace misconduct involving a former Union City Police Dispatcher. Internal complaints were reportedly filed and reviewed. The employee was allegedly terminated, yet no criminal charges were announced, and the individual was later reportedly observed working in a public school setting.

This report does not assert criminal guilt. It examines the processes and decisions of public institutions—and the absence of public explanation—where clarity is essential to maintaining trust.

What Is Being Alleged (High-Level)

Employees reported alleged sexually inappropriate conduct during work hours in the Union City Police Dispatch Room and then later in the females employee restroom. Complaints were allegedly elevated to supervisors and internal affairs. Employment reportedly ended following the internal process in which camera footages confirm the acts. No public criminal referral or charges were disclosed. The individual was later reportedly seen working within the school system, alarming those familiar with the complaints. Specifically, George Washington Elementary School.

These claims are presented as allegations, based on employee whistleblowers.

Key Questions That Demand Answers

1) When does internal misconduct trigger criminal referral?

If internal reviews substantiate conduct that could implicate criminal law, what criteria govern referral to prosecutors? Who decides, and where is that decision documented?

2) What is the scope of Internal Affairs’ obligation?

Is Internal Affairs limited to employment discipline, or is there a duty to refer potential crimes externally? If no referral occurred, why not?

3) What safeguards exist after termination?

How are individuals separated for serious misconduct prevented from re-entering sensitive public-facing roles, especially those involving children?

4) Do agencies share critical information?

Within the same city, are hiring authorities informed—lawfully—of substantiated misconduct known to another agency, even absent criminal charges?

5) Why the silence?

When institutions do not explain their actions, public confidence erodes. Transparency reduces speculation; silence invites it.

Institutional Accountability—Not Individual Guilt

The focus here is systemic accountability, not personal adjudication. The Union City Police Department should clarify how allegations of serious workplace misconduct are evaluated for criminal referral and how outcomes are communicated to the public.

City leadership and the Board of Education must also explain hiring vetting, inter-agency communication, and safeguards designed to protect students and the public.

As mayor, Brian Stack carries responsibility for ensuring that municipal systems prioritize public safety, transparency, and ethical governance. However, Stack already has a history of allegation of protecting allies who commit such acts from accountability.

What Transparency Would Look Like

A public explanation of referral standards and decision-making. Confirmation of information-sharing protocols between agencies. Disclosure of post-termination safeguards for sensitive roles. Willingness to submit the process to independent review, if appropriate.

City hall and police department did not return phone calls for comment.

Disclaimer

All matters discussed are allegations only.

No individual has been convicted of a crime.

Every person is entitled to due process and is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty in a court of law.

This article examines institutional processes and public accountability, not determinations of criminal guilt.


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New Jersey Leaders Dismiss Legitimate Voter Integrity Concerns — Where Is Accountability in Hudson County?

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New Jersey’s governor recently told voters that they have a better chance of being struck by lightning than finding evidence of voter fraud in the state’s elections — a comment that not only glosses over ongoing concerns about election integrity, it also signals a troubling lack of accountability from Trenton when serious allegations have been raised locally. 

Speaking in a social media Q&A, Governor Phil Murphy defended New Jersey’s decision not to adopt voter identification requirements and described efforts to tighten election safeguards as “a solution in search of a problem that doesn’t exist.” Murphy went so far as to claim that instances of voter fraud are “significantly less likely” than lightning strikes. 

But in Hudson County — one of the state’s largest population centers and a longtime Democratic stronghold — concern about the integrity of the process has not simply vanished because Trenton says it has. In fact, local leaders themselves have previously called for additional scrutiny.

In May 2025, Hudson County State Senator and Union City Mayor Brian Stack publicly called for election monitors to be sent into Hudson County to help “ensure the integrity” of the voting process, citing allegations of voter registration irregularities and mail-in ballot concerns. Stack specifically asked the New Jersey Attorney General to engage independent observers during early voting — a move that acknowledged there were at least perceived vulnerabilities worth investigation. 

If elected officials in Hudson County are willing to ask for extra monitoring in their own backyard, it’s difficult to reconcile that with a gubernatorial dismissal of fraud concerns statewide as a statistical improbability.

Murphy’s lightning analogy might play well in partisan debates, but it sidesteps the fundamental duty of government: to examine and address credible concerns about the electoral process rather than brush them aside with rhetoric. When local leaders — including Stack — signal that citizens aren’t fully confident in how elections are conducted, the public deserves transparent investigation and responsive oversight, not deflection.

And it’s not just about perception. Voter confidence is a cornerstone of democratic legitimacy. Leaders who casually suggest fraud is rarer than natural phenomena without acknowledging localized concerns undermine trust in the system they are sworn to protect.

Murphy’s comments also ignored the political context in which they were made. Hudson County has seen multiple election-related disputes and calls for review over the years, including past requests to investigate registration practices and voting pattern anomalies. While no official state determination has confirmed widespread fraud, it is indisputable that such concerns have been raised by local officials and activists — and they warrant thorough, transparent review. 

The governor’s stance — that fraud is virtually impossible — essentially shuts the door on accountability. It tells voters that skepticism, scrutiny, and oversight are unnecessary in a system that has already been flagged for potential vulnerabilities by the very leaders who operate within it.

New Jersey needs leadership that doesn’t dismiss concerns out of hand. Instead, it needs mechanisms that ensure every legitimate question about election integrity is examined with full transparency, especially in places like Hudson County where local figures have called for action.

If the administration truly believes fraud is “virtually nonexistent,” the answer shouldn’t be to compare it to lightning strikes — it should be to support open, independent investigations and reporting that can put these debates to rest once and for all.


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