Stand up for the facts!

Our only agenda is to publish the truth so you can be an informed participant in democracy.
We need your help.

More Info

I would like to contribute

$
Steve Lonegan
Steve Lonegan
stated on September 23, 2013 in an interview on the John Gambling radio program:

“I would be the first Republican senator elected in New Jersey in 41 years.”

True
By Caryn Shinske
September 29, 2013

Steve Lonegan claims he could be the first Republican elected in New Jersey to the Senate in four decades

Steve Lonegan is well aware of the potential to make history in the Oct. 16 special election for a U.S. Senate seat.

If elected, the Republican would be the first senator from his party to be elected to the upper house of Congress in at least two generations, Lonegan noted during a radio interview Monday on the John Gambling show, during which he discussed his campaign.

“I would be the first Republican senator elected in New Jersey in 41 years,” said Lonegan, who is vying with Newark Mayor Cory Booker, a Democrat, for the seat left vacant after Sen. Frank Lautenberg died in early June.

Lonegan is correct. Other than an eight-month period in 1982 when a Republican was appointed to a Senate seat from New Jersey, and this summer’s appointment of Republican Jeff Chiesa to temporarily fill Lautenberg’s seat until the special election, Democrats have had a stronghold on the state’s two Senate seats for more than 30 years.

This statistic is not a new claim. Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican, referenced it in May 2012 during a speech he gave at an event held by the libertarian Cato Institute.

Let’s first review some history about New Jersey’s senators.

Clifford P. Case was the last Republican that New Jerseyans elected to the Senate, in 1972. Case served four terms before losing a re-election bid in the 1978 Republican primary to Jeffrey Bell.

The Democratic lock on New Jersey’s Senate seats began in 1978 with the election of Bill Bradley.

Republicans from the Garden State had served in the Senate for the 40 years leading up to Bradley’s election, but Democrats have dominated every Senate race since Bradley’s election.

That changed briefly in 1982, when Republican Nicholas Brady was appointed to fill in for Democrat Harrison Williams Jr., who left office after convictions on bribery and conspiracy charges as part of the federal ABSCAM probe. ABSCAM was an investigation by the FBI in which several public officials were offered money or other items in exchange for special favors.

Brady left the Senate after Lautenberg won the 1982 general election, defeating Republican Millicent Fenwick. Kean appointed Lautenberg to complete the final days of the term.

Lautenberg started his first full term in January 1983 and served three six-year terms before deciding not to seek re-election in 2001. His retirement was short-lived, however.

Lautenberg returned to the Senate in 2003 to replace fellow Democrat Robert Torricelli on the ballot. Torricelli, who had served one term, quit his re-election bid in 2002 over an ethics probe.

Democrat domination continued until Christie appointed Chiesa, the state’s former attorney general, to Lautenberg’s seat on June 6. Chiesa was sworn in four days later. 

Our ruling

Lonegan said during a radio interview, “I would be the first Republican senator elected in New Jersey in 41 years.”

In 1972, New Jersey sent Republican Clifford Case to the U.S. Senate to serve a fourth term, but he lost a Republican primary re-election bid in 1978, to Jeffrey Bell.

Since then, New Jersey voters have not elected another GOP candidate to the Senate. Republicans from New Jersey served in the Senate for eight months during 1982, and since mid-June, but both were appointed, not elected.

We rate Lonegan’s claim True.

To comment on this story, go to NJ.com.

Editor’s Note: The ‘Our Ruling’ section of this story has been corrected to reflect that Clifford Case lost the Republican primary in 1978 to Jeffrey Bell, not Bill Bradley.

Our Sources

The John Gambling show, WOR Radio 710 AM, interview with Steve Lonegan, Sept. 23, 2013, accessed Sept. 24, 2013

Fitzgerald’s Legislative Manual, 2013, Former United States Senators, accessed Sept. 24, 2013

PolitiFact New Jersey, Chris Christie says New Jersey hasn’t sent a Republican to the U.S. Senate in 40 years, May 9, 2012, accessed Sept. 24, 2013

Infoplease website, ABSCAM, accessed Sept. 24, 2013

FBI website, FBI Records: The Vault, ABSCAM, accessed Sept. 24, 2013

United States Senate website, The Expulsion Case of  Harrison A. Williams, Jr. (1982), accessed Sept. 24, 2013

Sen. Jeff Chiesa's U.S. Senate website, accessed Sept. 28, 2013

Browse the Truth-O-Meter

More by Caryn Shinske
Chris Christie
stated on January 14, 2014 a State of the State address
"Today, our unemployment rate is 7.8 percent. That is the lowest in five years."
Mostly True
David Rible
stated on November 30, 2013 an interview on NJTV's 'On the Record' with Michael Aron program
"This governor has given us continual balanced budgets without raising taxes."
Half-True
Chris Christie
stated on December 2, 2013 response to subpoenas being sent out over a bridge lane-closure controversy
"The fact that one town has three lanes dedicated to it, that kind of gets me sauced."
Pants on Fire!
Loretta Weinberg
stated on November 14, 2013 an interview on the John Gambling radio program
"We pay among the highest tolls in the nation for the privilege of crossing that bridge."
True
Chris Christie
stated on November 10, 2013 interviews on four Sunday morning news shows
Says New Jersey has gained "143,000 new private-sector jobs."
True
Chris Christie
stated on November 2, 2013 a response to a public school teacher
"In fact, there’s more state funding for education today than any other time."
True
Chris Christie
stated on October 21, 2013 a gubernatorial campaign TV ad
Says Barbara Buono "voted to raise her own pay 40 percent."
Mostly True
Milly Silva
stated on October 7, 2013 a speech to an American Legion in Little Ferry
"Property taxes have increased 20 percent under four years of Chris Christie."
Mostly True
Kim Guadagno
stated on October 8, 2013 a speech to supporters in Carlstadt
Chris Christie "has not increased the taxes on anyone."
Half-True
Barbara Buono
stated on August 23, 2013 a speech to students at the Rutgers New Brunswick campus
Tuition at Rutgers has increased 10 percent since Gov. Chris Christie took office because he "cut funding for higher education."
Half-True
Cory Booker
stated on September 10, 2013 an e-mailed campaign letter
Newark is "now home to one-third of all commercial and multi-family development."
Half-True

NJEA ad claims politicians cut more than $1 billion from education

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
stated on January 7, 2026 a press briefing

stated on January 14, 2026 a statement

Social Media
stated on February 14, 2026 social media posts



stated on January 20, 2026 an op-ed


Donald Trump
stated on February 3, 2026 remarks in the Oval Office


Social Media
stated on February 8, 2026 social media posts





Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
stated on stated on November 17, 2025 in remarks at George Washington University:

Donald Trump
stated on February 2, 2026 an interview with Dan Bongino