
Legislature's lone independent mounts crusade to hold his seat
By STEVE KORNACKI
PoliticsNJ.com
August
27 - Upset by his reluctance to accede to their demands, Democratic Party
leaders plotted earlier this year to deny freshman Assemblyman Matthew Ahearn
(G-Fair Lawn) organizational support in his bid for re-election in the Bergen
County-based 38th District.
But before he could be formally dumped, Ahearn caught on to the plan, bolted the
party and became only the third Green Party state legislator in the country.
Now as he runs for re-election as the Green Party's sole 38th District Assembly
candidate, Ahearn stands as a formidable obstacle to his former party's attempt
to maintain its Assembly majority.
In 2001, the top vote-getter in the 38th District's Assembly race received only
803 more votes than the last-place finisher. Even if he doesn't win in
November, many observers believe Ahearn could receive enough votes to swing the
election to the two Republican candidates, former Fair Lawn Mayor Edward J.
Trawinski and Bergen County Freeholder Louis A. Tedesco, Jr.
But make no mistake about it: Ahearn thinks he has a shot to hold his seat.
Third party candidates have a poor track record in New Jersey, where until two
years ago a voter could not register with a party other than the Democrats or
the Republicans. But Ahearn thinks the heavy-handed county Democratic
leadership has left many progressives in the party frustrated and receptive to
his message.
"The Democratic machine may be well-oiled, but the rank-and-file...is about as
disenfranchised with the leadership, the patronage, and how it's all about the
money at the county level, and a lot of them are plugging me quietly," he said
this afternoon at the Paramus law office where he worked until earlier this
year.
The last Independent to win a seat in the New Jersey Legislature was Anthony
Imperiale, a gun-toting vigilante from Newark who won races for the State
Assembly in 1971 and for the Senate in 1973. Two incumbents dumped by their
party in 1977, State Sens. Joseph L. McGahn and Thomas G. Dunn, won 22% and 33%,
respectively, in their unsuccessful re-election campaigns.
Ahearn left the firm to become a full-time legislator, a consequence of not
being affiliated with a major party, he said. But he says the experience has
made him a more knowledgeable legislator.
"Because I didn't have the huge partisan staff to rely on, I've had to do all
the work myself in terms of researching legislation," he said. "I'm probably
the only legislator who's read every piece of legislation I've voted on since
January."
Ahearn said the switch from the Democrats to the Greens has allowed him to speak
his mind. He describes himself as a progressive who is committed to women's
rights, environmental protection, campaign finance reform and curbing the power
of large corporations. He's also taken some positions -- like his support of
the Second Amendment -- that are at odds with many on the left.
The Assembly caucus of either party is a tough place to be for a legislator with
such an independent vision, Ahearn said.
"It was a good thing for the first six months after I got elected," he
recalled. "It was kind of like the glow of victory. The next six months was
not too fun, having caved too many times on not voting the way I wanted to, and,
more importantly, the way I think my constituents felt I should."
In addition to feeling he was compromising his principles, Ahearn said he was
also unhappy as a Democrat because of pressure from the party's leadership to
raise money from individuals and companies with business before the state.
He recalled an instance earlier this year when a state Democratic staffer came
to his law office with a list of potential donors and the bills they were
interested in. The staffer, Ahearn said, instructed him to call the people on
the list, discuss the bills with them and insist that they purchase tickets to a
Democratic fundraiser.
According to Ahearn, the staffer stood over him while he sat at his desk and
made a few calls. But Ahearn wasn't comfortable, and soon told the staffer he
wanted no part of the scheme.
"It was pay-to-play," he said.
"That's probably what 'uncooperative' referred to," he added, a reference to
news reports from the time of his party switch that indicated party leaders in
Trenton felt the adjective described him.
Ahearn says the publicity from his party switch has given him a reputation in
the district as a straight-talking politician. He said that when he first
became a Green, he feared people would dismiss him as a flake, but that the
reaction has been different.
"What I've gotten is, 'Oh, you're that Ahearn guy. Keep it up! Give 'em
hell!'...It's really kind of energized me," he said.
It's also convinced him that he can win the race, a view that Republicans and
Democrats don't share.
But that doesn't mean the Republicans don't want him in the race.
"It's assumed that he's going to only peel away voters from the Democrats, but
it all depends on his ability to get his name out there," said Kenneth Bassett,
who is managing the GOP's 38th District effort.
Bassett added that "it would be silly for anyone to say that he won't have an
impact here," and said he wants Ahearn included in any Assembly debates that are
held.
Democrats are just as quick to downplay Ahearn's significance.
Former Fair Lawn Mayor Robert Gordon, one of Ahearn's Democratic opponents, said
he and his running-mates -- Assembly candidate Joan Voss and State Sen. Joseph
Coniglio (D- Paramus) -- have knocked on 8,700 doors this summer, getting a good
sense of what's on the mind of voters in the district.
"Of that sample, I've heard two people mention [Ahearn's] name," Gordon said.
Gordon, who, like Ahearn, calls Fair Lawn his hometown, said most Democrats are
offended by Ahearn's attacks on their party and won't support him this fall.
"He's really irritated everybody," Gordon said. "I think that's part of Matt's
problem. He doesn't get along well with people."
Ahearn said Democrats are starting to worry he may cost them one or both
Assembly seats. Gordon, he said, had been civil to him earlier this year but
that his attitude has changed as the campaign has unfolded.
"Over the summer, when I've seen him, he does not look very happy and he's been
down-right rude to me, and that indicates to me that I'm scoring," Ahearn said
Another reason Ahearn thinks he's doing well is a poll one of the campaigns
conducted and shared with him in June. The poll, he said, showed him with
higher name recognition than he had two years ago, and a favorable/unfavorable
margin of at least two-to-one in each of the district's towns.
The Democrats and Republicans will have much more money than him, Ahearn
admits. But he says that won't stop him from getting his message out. His
campaign is set to begin its first round of mailings, and Ahearn says he has
spent the summer attending community events throughout the district and doing
constituent work. Even his Democratic and Republican opponents concede he has
been visible this year.
Ahearn also has his own web site --which he designed himself -- and has hired
Douglas Friedline -- a strategist for Jesse Ventura in his 1998 campaign for
governor of Minnesota -- to run his campaign.
Ahearn says he's in the race to stay, even if his bid ends up helping the
Republicans pick up the seats. Far more meaningful than whether Democrats or
Republicans hold the Assembly seats, Ahearn said, is whether an alternative
political voice, like the Greens, will have an opportunity to be heard. To be
recognized as an official party, the Greens must score an average of 10 percent
in Assembly races throughout the state. Ahearn wants to prove that the
threshold is attainable.
"It's not just a gimmick with me," he declared. "I'm the real deal, a true
believer...That's how I see myself."
Steve Kornacki can be reached at kornackinj@aol.com