CBS- For months, Republican Senate candidate Bob Hugin has assailed Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez in TV ads, calling the two-term incumbent corrupt because of now-dismissed federal corruption charges, whittling down the incumbent's double-digit lead in the polls to single digits only a six point edge.
Now, with less than three months until voters go to the polls in Democratic-leaning New Jersey, where the Senate race is at the top of the ticket, Menendez is unleashing his own TV advertising fusillade, with two new 30-second spots this week criticizing the wealthy former pharmaceutical executive as greedy.
Both men, 64, grew up in Union City, the roughly square-mile city in Hudson County, just a short ride from New York across the Hudson River. It's an old neighborhood brawl, but with national political implications.
"It's frankly notable that I even have to pay attention to it," said Jennifer Duffy, a senior editor at the Cook Political Report. New Jersey has about 900,000 more Democrats than Republicans and hasn't elected a Republican to the Senate since 1972.
The contest is already a multimillion-dollar race for a Democrat-controlled seat in a tightly held Republican-led Senate, and Republican President Donald Trump, whose administration faces the special counsel's probe, needs party support there to advance nominees and legislation.
A Quinnipiac University poll out last week showed Menendez with a six-point edge over Hugin, 43 percent to 37 percent. The poll surveyed 908 registered voters and had a margin of error of plus or minus 4.6 percentage points. That's a tighter gap than a March survey that showed Menendez with a 13-point lead.
The attacks have been sharp and personal, and New Jersey residents have seen them on television and online for months, with the prospect for months more of negative ads.
One Hugin ad says Menendez thinks voters are stupid because he "thinks he can get away with corruption," a reference to a federal corruption trial that ended in a mistrial before prosecutors dropped the charges in January.
Menendez was indicted on charges he accepted lavish gifts from longtime friend Dr. Salomon Melgen in return for help settling a Medicaid billing dispute. He maintained his innocence. He was also admonished by the Senate Ethics Committee over it in a strongly worded letter, though the full Senate stopped short of a censure vote.
Hugin said in an interview he would not have entered the race had it not been for Menendez's corruption trial.
"This election is about New Jersey, and it's Bob Hugin versus Bob Menendez, corrupt and ineffective, versus someone who has had a life of service and committed to outcomes and improving the quality of life of all New Jerseyans," Hugin said.
Menendez, during an interview in Union City, pointed out that the jury didn't "believe the government's case on any given count." Asked whether voters might question his judgment, he listed Senate accomplishments including getting federal aid after Superstorm Sandy and helping draft the Affordable Care Act.
While pivoting to attack Hugin, he also said he thinks voters will consider his entire career.
"I don't think New Jerseyans are going to buy the judgment of Bob Hugin, who ultimately made a killing off the back of cancer patients," Menendez said. "I think people are going to look at the totality of my decisions and my actions versus Bob Hugin's decisions and actions, and I think that I'm happy to let the fate of the election rest on that."
Menendez's criticism centers on Hugin's nearly two-decade career as head of Celgene, which markets a cancer drug called Revlimid that has proved a market and medical success. The cost of the drug has risen over the years, leading to Menendez's attack. The senator also notes that under Hugin's watch Celgene settled for $280 million last year over allegations it promoted cancer drugs that were not approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Celgene did not admit liability.
Hugin defended his tenure at Celgene, saying that the company had a generous aid program for patients in financial need and that the firm's drugs had helped hundreds of thousands of people.
The president, whose approval rating in New Jersey is low, is another lightning rod in the contest so far.
Menendez said that if he wins, and if Democrats win the Senate, voters should expect more oversight over the Trump White House. If Democrats take control, he would expect to be Foreign Relations Committee chairman and would schedule hearings on Russia and North Korea.
Hugin, who has been a donor to Trump in 2016, as well as to former Gov. Chris Christie's failed presidential bid, said he would be an independent representative. Asked what he would say to a skeptical voter, he pointed out White House meetings he attended with former President Barack Obama.
On policy, both support a woman's right to have an abortion, and both have been critical of the Trump administration's tariffs.
Hugin said he would likely vote in favor of Mr. Trump's Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, while Menendez is opposed. read more at cbs news
Menendez is truly a bad person. Years ago, I wrote him asking that he intercede on behalf of Sholem Rubashkin. he responded by suggesting that I perform a biological impossibility.
ReplyDeleteThis November we must send a message that we will not tolerate the Democrat Party's fascist tactics.
can you elaborate and what he told you
DeleteWatch Clint Eastwood's speech at the Republican Convention and you'll understand what is biologically impossible.
Deletewe all know who the corrupt VAAD will endorse
ReplyDeleteIt is a little dis-engenous of Menendez to say "the jury didn't "believe the government's case on any given count." . A mistrial just means the jury could not reach a unanimous conclusion. He is clearly corrupt, the Senate ethics committee was very clear about that.
ReplyDeletethis is why the vaad will endorse him corrupt politicians deliver the goods and bring home the bacon but the vaad always takes it for themselves never sharing the spoils with the rest of us.
Deletei haven't liked menendez since when he and his brother Lyle did what they did to their parents in Beverly Hills in 1989.
ReplyDeleteStupid racist comment. Wrong Menendez. Obviously.
DeleteWe have to stop with the self destructing idealism. Corruption, in and of itself, is not the worst thing for our interests. An idealist who opposes all social programs, as an example, is a lot more detrimental.
ReplyDeleteIf Menendez supports our interests, the corruption allegations should be ignored
Tipesh,I see which end you are on. I guess as long as u get to eat your cake u are happy. No matter who gets screwed along the way. Once again rooiy hadavar lemi sheomrom
ReplyDeleteI see you have a valid answer to my points. You obviously have a name of someone from our community who was hurt by the Senator's actions, and you also probably have a reason why all of us should vote for the interests of that person who was hurt. Please share it with us.
Deleteאי דייקינן כולי האי לא תנינן, we will never have the Chofetz Chaim as our Senator/president/rosh yeshiva. Stop demanding standards that are improbable and do not help us. The question is only, do they help us? Nothing else is relevant. of course, 'us' means the voter, not same asskan. But that is our only question.