Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Red wave coming to New Jersey? Jack Ciattarelli makes his case

WATCH: “Standpoint with Gabe Groisman” and guest Jack Ciattarelli

Could deep-blue New Jersey flip red in 2025?

On this week’s episode of “Standpoint with Gabe Groisman,” the attorney, Jewish advocate and former Mayor of Bal Harbour, Fla., sits down with Republican nominee Jack Ciattarelli, who’s mounting a serious challenge for the governorship of New Jersey in a race that’s gaining national attention.

Ciattarelli breaks down his bold agenda to slash the highest property taxes in America, restore public safety, champion school choice and confront the rising tide of antisemitism. As a lifelong New Jerseyan, small-business owner and former state assemblyman, he argues that he’s uniquely equipped to fix what’s broken in the Garden State without using the governorship as a stepping stone to Washington.

Covered in this episode:

  • The real chances of a state Republican victory in November
  • How school-choice policies can empower middle-class families
  • What the rise of figures like New York’s Socialist Democrat Zohran Mamdani means for regional politics
  • New Jersey’s electricity crisis and the failure of offshore wind bets
  • Property-tax relief plans for seniors, young families and new homeowners
  • Fighting antisemitism with legal teeth, including support for the IHRA definition

From local governance to national implications, this episode goes deep into the future of New Jersey … and maybe the nation.

Gabe Groisman is an attorney, government affairs consultant and founder of Groisman, LLC. He is the former mayor of Bal Harbour, Fla., and host of the podcast “Standpoint with Gabe Groisman.”
The man sent “several antisemitic and sexually derogatory letters” to the female prosecutor who tried his case, according to the ruling.
“Real peace requires neutral humanitarian agencies, not those serving as an arm of Hamas,” the Israeli envoy to the global body in Geneva, told JNS.
The paper is “just casually whitewashing what ‘J-pilled’ actually means,” Jerry Dunleavy of ‘Just the News’ stated. “ Hint: ‘Israel’ doesn’t start with ‘J.’”
“This wasn’t about what these kids can’t do—it was about what they can do when they’re included,” said Daniel Zeltser, chief operating officer of the community center.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani dodged a question about restoring bike lanes in Williamsburg during a press conference on March 31.
“Confronting antisemitism is not a partisan issue, but a shared responsibility,” the Conference of Presidents stated.