1985 New Jersey gubernatorial election

The 1985 New Jersey gubernatorial election was held on November 5, 1985. Incumbent Republican Governor Thomas Kean won a landslide re-election against the Democratic candidate, Essex County Executive Peter Shapiro. To date, Kean's is the largest margin in terms of percentage and raw votes in all New Jersey gubernatorial elections. Kean was the first Republican to be re-elected governor since 1949, and the first Republican to ever win two four-year terms.

1985 New Jersey gubernatorial election

← 1981
November 5, 1985
1989 →
Turnout52% ( 12pp)
 
Nominee Thomas Kean Peter Shapiro
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 1,372,631 578,402
Percentage 69.6% 29.3%

Kean:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%

Governor before election

Thomas Kean
Republican

Elected Governor

Thomas Kean
Republican

Primary elections were held on June 4. Kean was unopposed for the Republican nomination. In the Democratic primary, Shapiro prevailed over strong competition from Senate President John F. Russo and Newark mayor Kenneth A. Gibson. Stephen B. Wiley and Robert Del Tufo ran competitive campaigns but finished well behind the top three.

The general election was a foregone conclusion in favor of the popular incumbent. Kean won 564 out of 567 municipalities (all except Audubon Park, Chesilhurst, and Roosevelt) and a 62% majority among African-American voters, a remarkable margin for a modern Republican candidate. Kean's coattails led the Republicans to win the General Assembly for the first time since the 1971 elections. To date, Kean is the last Republican to win Essex and Hudson counties in a statewide election and the last candidate of any party to carry every county. Until 2021, this was the last election where the winning candidate was of the same party as the sitting president.

Republican primary

Candidates

  • Thomas Kean, incumbent governor since 1982

Campaign finance

Primary campaign finance activity
Candidate Spent
Tom Kean $1,144,244
Source: New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission

Results

Incumbent Governor Thomas Kean was unopposed in the Republican primary election.

Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Thomas Kean (incumbent) 151,259 100.00
Total votes 151,259 100.00

Democratic primary

Candidates

  • Robert Del Tufo, former U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey
  • Kenneth A. Gibson, mayor of Newark
  • Elliot Greenspan, president of the New Jersey chapter of the National Democratic Policy Committee
  • John F. Russo, State Senator from Toms River and Senate Majority Leader
  • Peter Shapiro, Essex County Executive and former State Assemblyman
  • Stephen B. Wiley, former State Senator from Morris Township

Declined

  • James Florio, U.S. Representative from Camden and nominee for Governor in 1981

Campaign finance

Primary campaign finance activity
Candidate Spent
Peter Shapiro $1,161,161
John Russo $1,134,504
Thomas F. X. Smith $1,058,851
Kenneth Gibson $987,835
Robert Del Tufo $737,094
Elliot Greenspan $600
Source: New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission

Results

Democratic Party primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Peter Shapiro 101,243 31.02
Democratic John F. Russo 86,827 26.60
Democratic Kenneth A. Gibson 85,293 26.13
Democratic Stephen B. Wiley 27,914 8.55
Democratic Robert Del Tufo 19,742 6.05
Democratic Elliot Greenspan 5,834 1.65
Total votes 326,403 100.00

General election

Candidates

  • George M. Fishman, retired social studies teacher (Communist)
  • Virginia Flynn, word processor and Universal Life Church minister (Libertarian)
  • Rodger Headrick, real estate salesman (The True Light)
  • Julius Levin, apartment manager (Socialist Labor)
  • Thomas Kean, incumbent Governor since 1982 (Republican)
  • Mark Satinoff, sheet metal worker (Socialist Workers)
  • Peter Shapiro, Essex County Executive and former Assemblyman (Democratic)

Campaign

Kean was riding on high popularity ratings from voters on account of the good economic situation of the state in the 1980s including a surplus in the state budget.

His efforts to aid depressed cities through Urban Enterprise Zones and reaching out to groups not typically associated with the Republicans including African Americans and labor unions led to endorsements from black ministers, Coretta Scott King, the AFL–CIO, and The New York Times.

Shapiro ran on a platform of reducing car insurance rates, the state's high property taxes, and improvement of the environment but his struggles of fundraising due to New Jersey being located in two expensive media markets (New York City and Philadelphia) and Kean's momentum left his campaign little-received.

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Peter
Shapiro (D)
Tom
Kean (R)
Undecided
Star-Ledger/Eagleton[not specific enough to verify] August 15–25, 1985 586 RV ±4.1% 13% 68% 19%
Star-Ledger/Eagleton[not specific enough to verify] Sept. 29–Oct. 8, 1985 982 LV ±3.2% 16% 67% 17%

Campaign finance

Primary campaign finance activity
Candidate Spent
Tom Kean $2,254,971
Peter Shapiro $1,980,213
Source: New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission

Results

New Jersey Gubernatorial Election, 1985
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Thomas Kean (incumbent) 1,372,631 69.58% 20.12
Democratic Peter Shapiro 578,402 29.32% 20.06
Independent Rodger Headrick 8,537 0.43% N/A
Libertarian Virginia Flynn 4,710 0.24% 0.14
Socialist Workers Mark Satinoff 3,703 0.19% 0.12
Socialist Labor Julius Levin 2,740 0.14% 0.05
Communist George M. Fishman 1,901 0.10% N/A
Majority 794,402 40.26%
Turnout 1,972,624
Republican hold Swing

By county

County Kean % Kean votes Shapiro % Shapiro votes Other % Other votes
Atlantic 69.1% 38,477 29.8% 16,611 1.1% 608
Bergen 71.5% 181,238 27.8% 70,525 0.6% 1,554
Burlington 68.7% 56,573 30.5% 25,078 0.9% 696
Camden 60.9% 70,374 38.1% 43,960 0.9% 1,173
Cape May 74.7% 23,331 24.5% 7,665 0.8% 239
Cumberland 66.4% 21,017 31.8% 10,065 1.8% 570
Essex 66.9% 121,685 31.2% 56,694 1.8% 3,383
Gloucester 63.6% 35,424 35.3% 19,662 1.2% 640
Hudson 65.1% 88,165 34.1% 46,195 0.8% 1,160
Hunterdon 75.4% 17,875 22.7% 5,388 1.9% 453
Mercer 63.2% 53,562 35.6% 30,212 1.2% 994
Middlesex 65.8% 113,020 33.1% 56,815 1.0% 1,804
Monmouth 72.9% 109,238 26.4% 39,529 0.7% 1,084
Morris 78.4% 85,189 21.0% 22,847 0.4% 566
Ocean 73.7% 90,670 25.1% 30,948 1.2% 1,455
Passaic 69.8% 70,896 28.8% 29,263 1.4% 1,429
Salem 64.9% 12,376 33.7% 6,417 1.4% 270
Somerset 75.6% 44,502 23.1% 13,601 1.3% 761
Sussex 77.7% 22,109 21.1% 5,998 1.2% 346
Union 73.3% 102,411 25.1% 35,060 1.5% 2,187
Warren 70.4% 14,499 28.5% 5,869 1.0% 219

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

  • Burlington
  • Camden
  • Cumberland
  • Essex
  • Gloucester
  • Hudson
  • Mercer
  • Middlesex
  • Salem

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