While dozens of candidates were making last minute appeals on primary day, Republican Senate candidate Joe Pennacchio spent the afternoon working on dental fillings and root canals. The next day, about 12 hours after congratulating rival Dick Zimmer on his victory, Pennacchio was at his Mount Arlington dental practice again, engaging in his pre and post-election routine: going to work.
“I make a habit of working my regular job on election day and the next morning,” he said. “It grounds me. It tells me who I am, gets me back with the people and in the mix.”
Pennacchio, a conservative, lost to the more moderate Zimmer, 46% to 40%, with Murray Sabrin, a finance professor at Ramapo College, taking 14% of the vote. But despite a respectable showing, Pennacchio was true to the persona he cultivated during the campaign, exemplified by his “Jersey Joe” moniker and the slogan that accompanied it: “He’s one of us!”
“Basically what I want to do is watch TV, eat too much and love my family – basically what everyone else does,” said Pennacchio.
Pennacchio began exploring the Senate run last summer, when businesswoman Anne Estabrook and conservative Assemblyman Michael Doherty were both preparing to mount campaigns. After Doherty declined to run in August, any relief Pennacchio felt at not having another conservative to sap his votes was short-lived, as Sabrin entered the race in January on the wings of presidential candidate Ron Paul.
Pennacchio hoped that, after Estabrook dropped out in March due to suffering a minor stroke, the establishment GOP would rally around him. But rather than become the default choice of the Republicans, Pennacchio watched as prominent members of his party searched vigorously to field a more moderate, self-funding candidate, going through a series of potential choices before settling on the three week ill-fated candidacy of Goya heir Andy Unanue and, after that didn’t work out, drafting Zimmer from Washington, where he worked as a lobbyist.
Pennacchio admits that, without Sabrin in the race, he might have been able to attract enough of his voters to beat Zimmer. But Sabrin was more than just a drain on Pennacchio’s votes – he was an active critic who publicized a collection of policy papers Pennacchio had written in the early 1990s, dubbing it a “fascist manifesto.”
And although Pennacchio prefers not to blame his loss on anyone, there’s still a sense of bitterness that the Republican Party’s leadership failed to rally around him – or at their failure least remain neutral.
“(Republican State Chairman Tom Wilson) told me that he was going to remain neutral and I was going to have a fair shot,” said Pennacchio, who felt that Wilson was active in recruiting other candidates. “I don’t think that’s honorable for him to do.”
Pennacchio also remains angry about Sabrin’s campaign tactics – especially the fascism charge.
“To me it’s an Italian-American slur,” he said. “Murray Sabrin has to speak for himself. I sleep very nicely at night, my head hits the pillow… We always knew he was going to be a spoiler. Everyone knew it but him.”
Meanwhile, Pennacchio is convinced that the message of his campaign resonated and that, even if he lost, he helped build a foundation for future Republican statewide candidates – which may or may not include himself. In the campaign, Pennacchio highlighted his background as the working-class child of Italian immigrants who made his way through dental school by working at a Brooklyn pizzeria. He presented himself as the America Dream incarnate.
“That message was a shot across the bow to the leaders of the party, the party that basically knows what’s good for the voters, and were saying we have to change,” he said. “And that’s why it was very difficult and the party went against me. We have to become more of a blue collar/white collar party. We can’t keep anointing candidates with a sense of elitism, because voters don’t like that.”
On policy, Pennacchio said he made the energy issue a cornerstone of his campaign “before it was fashionable,” and now offers words of advice to Zimmer: “Energy, energy, energy.”
Pennacchio doesn’t rule out a future bid for statewide office, and won’t run for Congress as long as Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen remains committed to running in the district. But he promises to stay active in shaping his party’s message, even as a back-bench legislator.
“I’ll put our party back on the right track. And I’m not going away. I’m still a state Senator.”
Voters don’t care if Gov. Jon Corzine picks a woman or a minority for Lt. Governor if he runs again next year, according to a Zogby ... >
One hesitates to quote Shakespeare to the Editors of The Record. The thought of all that dust rising from their library shelves is enough to make me ... >
A Post columnist contends that New Jersey offers a cautionary tale to New York. He's right. >
Despite all the recent downsizing news at The Record and Star Ledger, similar economic pressures at New Jersey's only statewide television ... >
Tibet – the broad, high plateau between India and China – is bigger than Western Europe and the source of the great rivers of Asia: the Indus, ... >
For the past few weeks, I've watched with fascination as politician after politician have appeared on a beach or a boardwalk and declared their ... >
To view more cartoons by Politicker.com editorial cartoonist Rob Tornoe, click here. >
Some time ago, I analyzed the Catholic vote and noted in passing how some members of the Church hierarchy, in places such as St. Louis and Colorado ... >
As labor is burning, our National union leaders are fiddling. Some of them are simply arsonists. While the labor movement has made tremendous ... >
Last Thursday around 1 p.m., I began my dissertation defense -- a 45-minute talk for the final stage of the Ph.D. process. At almost exactly the ... >
Joe definitely
got short-changed by the state party leaders. Had he won, he surely would have been more visible on the campaign trail than Zimmer has been.
Joe was passionate about his campaign and the people of NJ and I can only hope that he considers another run.
Gallo's revenge
As long as there is a living breathing Republican who remembers what Joe P tried to do to dean Gallo, he has reached as high as he's going to get in Republican politics.
Payback is a bitch, Joe!
Yea the State GOP really
Yea the State GOP really screwed Joe P over. Dick Zimmer isn't a viable candidate so the Senate race is over, Joe P might have been able to make at least a decent run. Oh well
What is the Dean Gallo
story?
The story
is that Joe ran against Dean Gallo in the 94 primary. Gallo was an establishment figure and the dean of the NJ congressional delegation.
I don't blame Sabrin
as a spoiler. His followers came into the party for the election and left.
Joe's staff let him down by not utilizing volunteeers and concentrating on a Morris County turnout.
As far a Zimmer, where is the "I'm not Frank candidate"? The Party is unenthused and waiting for after Labor Day isn't going to work.
Jersey Joe is going to be a force in this State. He made alot of new friends on the trail. People always talk about about "Reagan democrats". Joe tapped into blue collar GOPers.
Other than advocating less
government spending, neither Joe P nor Zimmer had much to say about national issues a US Senator has to address. The same was true of Kean Jr. in his senate run two years ago.
An issue for NJ Republicans--for Zimmer and the Congressional Repubs.--is homeland security. For example Frank Lautenberg voted against FISA amendments and John Doe legislation. So did Rush Holt. IMO Zimmer can make the argument that Sen. Lautenberg has been week on Homelancd security based on these votes, which are on the record. For example:
Sen Lautenberg voted against the so-called John Doe Amendment, which pased in the US Senate 57 to 39. The amendment would protect from civil law suits those who report suspicious behavior on airplanes. Even Hillary Clinton and Chuck Schumer voted "yes" on John Doe.
what nj repubs need to do
Jersey Joe has to realize that the reason the party didn't rally around him is that they realize while a nice guy, he's not too smart. his message of just being an average guy was just plain silly. he's not an average guy! he thinks he's an average guy which is what makes him kind of endearing.... though not too bright. sorry Joe.
NJ Repubs need to do what winning Democrats in the South and mid-West do to win.....D's there can't identify with the national party, it's too liberal, so they run as pro-gun and anti-abortion and as God-fearing Democrats. NJ Repubs can't identify with the national Repub party...it's way to conservative. So in order to win they need to become Lincoln Republicans again, or Eisenhower Republicans..... pro-education, pro-union, anti-Bush. when they do that and end their Karl Rove like tactics on the Dems they will start to win again. Remember, Karl Rove only won in the short term.... look at what he has done to the Republican party for the next 20 years....minority party.
heynow,
While I agree that we GOPer's here in NJ need to move away from the Karl Rove strategy, I don't think it would be wise to become strong union supporters and anti-Bush. Why would a Democrat vote for a Republican with that record when they could just vote for the Democrat who says the same thing?
Nice Guy..but
Everyone liked Joe, but he's never going to be good for a statewide run.
As much as we'll bemoan about Zimmer, we know he will only lose by about 10%. Joe's an unknown..he could of lost by 15-20, and that would hurt those 3rd and 7th CD R's.
No R was going to win against Lautenberg this year unless it was one of the really top prospects and all of them were smart enough not to run in a leans blue state in a presidential year against an incumbent senator with dementia who for whatever reason is still popular.
And the kicker is Joe wasn't some everday Joe guy despite his dentist job, he had plenty of money to lend his campaign and own a slum in New York. Only shot he had was his last name ending in a vowel, but he would been crushed by the machine.
Zimmer knows what's coming..even though nobody gives a crap about that campaign. Joe's never run a competitive race in his life outside of primaires against other Republicans.
If R's want to win elections in this state, they are going to need to go with proven and tested R's who have shown they can beat Democrats in tough races in even tougher districts. Although, next year might be an oddity since Corzine is so beatable that maybe even crazy legs Lonegan could beat him.
No, wait that's just insane talk.
Haynow ? What now
Just who the hell are we anyway ? What do we stand for ? We have tried the Tom Kean Mushy Middle, We have tried the Forrister Bland Brand and now its July and Zimmers silent message is deafening. Its time to get a set and show the Liberal Dems that they are out of touch with the rest of America. Its time to return NJ to the Unites States of America. So get a message, get core values or contine the cycle of defeat.