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Michael Spector

From Ballotpedia
Michael Spector
Education
Bachelor's
Hofstra University
Contact

Michael Spector was a 2011Green Party candidate for District 26 of theNew Jersey General Assembly.

Spector, 72, is a 20-year resident of Mt. Tabor, New Jersey. He is retired. Prior to his retirement, Spector worked as an Associate Staff Analyst with the New York City government. He graduated from Hofstra University with a B.A. in English-Journalism. Spector is married and has three children.[1]

Elections

2011

See also:New Jersey General Assembly elections, 2011

Spector was a Green Party candidate for District 26 of theNew Jersey General Assembly. He was defeated in the November 8 general election. IncumbentsAlex DeCroce andJay Webber ran unopposed in the Republican Primary on June 7.Joseph Scafa was also vying for the Republican nomination, but withdrew hwas candidacy in April. Republican candidateGary Steele was disqualified and removed from the ballot in late April.Elliot Isibor andJoseph Raich ran unopposed in the Democratic primary.[2]

New Jersey General Assembly District 26 General Election, 2011
PartyCandidateVote %Votes
    RepublicanGreen check mark transparent.pngAlex DeCroceIncumbent32%19,696
    RepublicanGreen check mark transparent.pngJay WebberIncumbent31.8%19,543
    Democratic Joseph Raich17.6%10,847
    Democratic Elliot Isibor16.8%10,319
    Green Michael Spector1.8%1,095
Total Votes61,500

Campaign themes

2011

Spector outlines his policy goals as follows:[1]

  • A Medicare health program for all would save $2.6 billion on employee’s healthcare, charity care and workers’ compensation. New Jersey would also eliminate more than $60 billion in unfunded obligations for retirees’ medical care.
  • Restoring the Millionaire’s tax. A 10.7 percent levy on the 16,000 New Jersey residents whose income is seven figures or greater. The additional revenue would raise up to $1.1 billion.
  • Returning state money that goes into endless wars by exerting pressure on the Federal government to end these wars. New Jersey’s share for the past 10 years in Iraq and Afghanistan is calculated at $23.3 billion with an additional $6.1 billion proposed for 2012 alone.

Additional reading

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.01.1Email communication with Ballotpedia, November 2, 2011
  2. 2011 Unofficial General Assembly General Election Candidte List(dead link)


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