All of the Candidates Running for New Jersey Governor in 2025 (2025)

New Jersey is set to elect a new governor in 2025. Governor Phil Murphy has served two terms as governor and cannot seek reelection. As of January 2025, there are six Democrats and eight Republicans looking to become the next governor. The filing date for the primary election is March 24th, 2025. The 2025 primary election will be on June 10th and the 2025 New Jersey gubernatorial election is scheduled to take place on November 4th. Read on to learn about the people running for the governor of New Jersey in 2025.

All of the Candidates Running for New Jersey Governor in 2025 (1)

Candidates Running In The Democratic Primary

Ras Baraka, Newark

Ras Baraka, 54, has been the mayor of Newark since 2014. Ras also previously served on the Newark City Council and was a high school principal. He tells NorthJersey.com, “I’m ready to take that fight to the state level, because New Jersey deserves leadership that isn’t afraid to fight for working people. We need to ensure every resident — not just the privileged — has a path to the middle class.” Ras is looking to “reimagine New Jersey” with several of his proposed policies outlined on his campaign website here.

All of the Candidates Running for New Jersey Governor in 2025 (2)

Steven Fulop, Jersey City

The mayor of Jersey City, Steven Fulop, is also in the running. The 47-year-old has been the mayor of Jersey City since 2013. Before becoming involved in politics, Steve worked in finance in Chicago, Manhattan, and Jersey City, and is a Marine veteran. According to his campaign website, Steve says, “We go beyond empty promises, offering detailed, actionable proposals to drive real change in New Jersey.” Details on his proposed policies can be found on his website here.

Read More: 23 Montclair + Beyond News Stories This Week | February 9, 2025

Josh Gottheimer, Tenafly

Congressman Josh Gottheimer from Tenafly is running on the promise of being the “lower taxes, lower costs Governor.” The 49-year-old has worked with former President Bill Clinton, former President Barack Obama, at the US Commission on Civil Rights, and the Federal Communications Commission. The congressman tells NorthJersey.com, “I launched my campaign for governor to cut taxes and costs, like child care, rent and utilities, and to make Jersey affordable again.” Details on his proposed policies can be found on his campaign website here.

Mikie Sherrill, Montclair

Congresswoman Mikie Sherrill is from Montclair. She is a graduate of the Naval Academy and former Navy helicopter pilot. The 52-year-old was elected to the House of Representatives in 2018 and says she is a strong voice for families in New Jersey. Mikie says she’s “Fighting for affordability, opportunity, and freedom in New Jersey.” Details on her campaign can be found on her website.

Sean Spiller, Montclair

The New Jersey Education Association President, Sean Spiller, is running for governor. The 49-year-old from Montclair was a teacher and also served as the mayor of Montclair and on it’s city council. Sean tells NorthJersey.com, “From child care to housing to health care to the cost of groceries, New Jersey is facing an affordability crisis. We have to make this state a place where raising a family or starting a business is within reach for everyone — not just the wealthy.” Details on his campaign can be found online.

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Steve Sweeney, West Deptford

Steve Sweeney is a former state senate president from West Deptford. The 65-year-old was born in Camden, and his background as an ironworker taught him the importance of a hard day’s work. When asked about why he wants to be the next governor, he tells NorthJersey.com, “I’ve had a career where we fix things that they say can’t be fixed, and honestly, we have work to do, and unlike the outsiders that would come in, I know how this place works, and I know how to get things done. I want to fight and fix this place. It’s that simple.” More information about his campaign can be found on his website.

Candidates Running In The Republican Primary

Jon Bramnick, Westfield

Jon Bramnick has served in the state Senate since 2022. The 71-year-old attorney is from Westfield and previously served in the state Assembly and on the Plainfield City Council. He also does stand-up comedy. Jon’s first priority. “If elected, my first priority is convening a government efficiency panel made up of private residents and business leaders to examine every facet of our state government and find waste, overregulation and areas for improvement,” he tells NorthJersey.com. His proposed policies can be found on his campaign website here.

Jack Ciattarelli, Somerville

Former Assemblyman Jack Ciattarelli is from Somerville and says he’s fighting for the state he loves. The 63-year-old served in the state Assembly from 2011 to 2018 and lost the governor’s race in 2021 to Governor Phil Murphy. “My grandparents came here as Italian immigrants over 100 years ago, my parents ran a restaurant/bar, and through their example I created and ran two successful small businesses in the state,” Jack tells NorthJersey.com. “I want today’s New Jerseyans and their children and grandchildren to feel they can do the same.” Details about his plan can be found on his website here.

Ed Durr, Logan Township

Former state Senator and truck driver Ed Durr is in the running. The 61-year-old Logan Township resident says he wants to make New Jersey, “A place where you can find a job, make a living, and thrive instead of simply survive.” He was a truck driver for over 30 years. His plan can be found on his campaign website here.

Bill Spadea, Princeton

Morning radio talk show host Bill Spadea from Princeton is looking to be the next governor of New Jersey. For the last decade, the 55-year-old has hosted the Bill Spadea Show on New Jersey 101.5 every morning. Bill says he is, “the outsider that Democrats and Establishment Republicans are afraid of. Never one to shy away from criticizing a bad idea, Spadea has consistently called out the bad actors in both parties.” The details on his plan can be found online.

Roger Bacon, Phillipsburg

Navy Veteran Roger Bacon from Phillipsburg is familiar with running for election. The 76-year-old is a perennial candidate and has run in at least 10 state and federal races since 1992, all unsuccessful. His campaign website can be found here.

Robert Canfield, Brick

Robert Canfield from Brick is running on the platform of working towards a better New Jersey. The 33-year-old is a lifelong resident of New Jersey. He is a real estate broker and a firearms instructor. Robert’s focus is on “protecting the Second Amendment, ensuring that every child has access to a quality education, and empowering parents to be involved in their children’s schooling.” His campaign website can be found here.

James Fazzone, Burlington

Former Burlington City Mayor James Fazzone is another candidate for governor. The 70-year-old is a retired public school teacher, principal, superintendent, and coach. James previously lost a bid for state Senate in 2023.

Hans Herberg, Linden

Hans Herberg was born in Trenton and graduated from Cranford High School. The 37-year-old ran unsuccessfully for state Assembly in 2021. His work experience includes retail management, sales and retail operations, hospitality, customer service, media, and tech repair.

Monica Brinson, Hackensack

Former substitute teacher for the Bergen County, Paterson, and Newark, Monica Brinson is the first black woman in the United States to run for governor. She previously ran for New Jersey governor and is running again for the 2025 cycle. With a grassroots approach, her campaign focuses on engaging historically disenfranchised and disadvantaged cities like Camden, Newark, and Paterson. “The dedication to this cause is mirrored in my approach to education, where I empower and guide future generations through transformative learning experiences,” Monica Brinson shared via LinkedIn. Further details surrounding her campaign can be found here.

Mario Kranjac, Englewood Cliffs

Mario Kranjac is a New Jersey native and former Mayor of Englewood Cliffs. His campaign for governor involves lowering property taxes, securing the border, cutting regulations and taxes to benefit small business growth, passing term limits for politicians, making state and local government more transparent, ending high-density housing mandates, recovering damages for targeted communities, and more. For more details on Mario Kranjac’s plans, visit his website.

See More: Who’s Running for Hoboken Mayor in 2025?

Independent Candidates In The General Election

Stephen Zielinski, Elizabeth

New Jersey native Stephen Zielinski is a member of the Green Party. Stephen is passionate about “food, nature, the environment, and the pursuit of meaningful change,” according to his website. He previously worked as a solar sales consultant and created his own pickle and salsa company called Crazy Steve’s Concoctions. He says his goal as governor is to, “take the knowledge and experience I’ve gained over the past 60 years and use it to develop meaningful reforms that will benefit everyone in the state.” Details of his campaign can be found on his website.

The other two independents running for governor are Gerardo Cendrone and Karen Zaletel.

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All of the Candidates Running for New Jersey Governor in 2025 (5)

Alice Paul might not be a household name today, but her life’s work greatly shaped the world we live in. She endured repeated imprisonments and the agony of forced feeding, made herself a pariah to some, and appealed directly to her President to bring the right to vote to US women. This New Jersey native was a pioneer in discussions of gender equity. Read on to learn more about Alice Paul’s work to open suffrage to all the world’s women and to pass the Equal Rights Amendment to the US Constitution.

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Raising a Rabble Rouser

Alice Paul was born in 1885 on a farm her family dubbed Paulsdale, near what is now Mount Laurel, New Jersey. She and her younger siblings were raised as Hicksite Quakers, a liberal branch of Quakers who were amongst the earliest advocates for the abolition of slavery and generally committed to a belief in equality for all people. Alice’s mother, Tacie Parry, attended college at Swarthmore until she married William Paul and the university denied her a degree based on her marital status. Alice was educated first at Morristown Friends School where her parents’ liberal beliefs were affirmed. She was said to be reserved and shy, yet she rode her horse to the school stables each day and played basketball, field hockey, and tennis.

All of the Candidates Running for New Jersey Governor in 2025 (7)

Alice’s independence in childhood, though natural within her upbringing, was not typical of the era. Consequently, her expectations of what she might do in the world did not reflect the era’s doctrine of “separate spheres” which maintained that women were born to a world of privacy, focusing all their attention on their family’s health and morality. Such a worldview left men the sole occupants of the public sphere through which society was governed. This denial of women’s participation in public life and repression of their academic and professional accomplishments clashed drastically with the gender equity Alice had been raised to believe in. She was pretty sure she could do just about anything she put her mind to.

Read More: 33 Famous Women From New Jersey in Honor of Women’s History Month

Alice earned a Bachelor of Science degree in biology from her parents' alma mater, Swarthmore. She then went on to earn a Master of Arts degree in sociology and a PhD in economics from the University of Pennsylvania. When she was in her mid-30s, she returned to school and acquired multiple law degrees from Washington College of Law at American University. Alice was no slouch.

All of the Candidates Running for New Jersey Governor in 2025 (8)

“Deeds Not Words”

A vital part of Alice’s education did not come from a classroom. As a young woman, Alice took a steamer ship to England. Ostensibly, her journey was to study at Birmingham University. After attending lectures by Christabel Pankhurst she was pulled to the picket line to demonstrate alongside the Women’s Social and Political Union where she was arrested and imprisoned for the first time.

Despite the damaging physical and psychological effects of forced feeding operations on Alice and the other suffragists who engaged in hunger strikes while held in British prisons, she took the confrontational tactics she’d learned from her sisters abroad back with her to the United States. Christabel’s motto of “deeds not words” had convinced Alice that militant strategy was necessary to end the exclusion of women from public ambitions. She was received as a celebrity upon her return to the States and used that momentum to organize a pivotal event in the fight for women’s equality— a spectacular parade.

Racial Inequity in Her Work for Gender Equity

All of the Candidates Running for New Jersey Governor in 2025 (9)

Black women leaders did not capitulate to Alice’s request that they absent themselves from the momentous event that would become known as “The Great Demand.” They showed up as they had originally planned. The parade was organized around the idea that each section of marching women was an argument regarding the accomplishments of the nation’s women. There were state delegations and groups defined by their professions or their university degrees. It was absolutely out of the question that a march purporting to demonstrate women’s dignity and competence would not include the Black women who had fought so hard for each of their accomplishments. At least 25 Howard University graduates; various state delegates and professional representatives; along with Mary Church Terrell, a powerful leader of the National Association of Colored Women; and the legendary Ida B Wells all marched. Ojibwe lawyer Marie Louise Bottineau Baldwin marched with the lawyers contingent of the procession to further the long fight for Native American suffrage.

The parade took place on the day before Woodrow Wilson’s inauguration and followed the same route on Pennsylvania Avenue that the inaugural parade would take the next day. Bands played patriotic music. Lawyer and activist Inez Milholland was regal in a costume of Greek robes, riding a white horse as she led the procession. The surrounding crowd of men turned nasty early into the event. Police chose not to intervene as jeering men grew increasingly violent. By the time the Calvary intervened, upwards of 100 suffragists were taken to emergency hospitals. The end result, however, was weeks of favorable publicity from news reporters sympathetic to the women of the movement.

Stalwart + Tireless, Alice did not Back Down

All of the Candidates Running for New Jersey Governor in 2025 (10)

President Woodrow Wilson was far from free of Alice Paul’s organizing efforts following his inaugural parade. His time in office was marked by Alice Paul’s protest actions. Alice and her co-conspirator, Lucy Burns, organized the Silent Sentinels in 1917. President Wilson was unmoored by the women of all ages standing quietly outside the White House gates every day, holding banners demanding the vote. He was not sure what to do with this unprecedented commotion that greeted him each and every time he was driven through the White House entry.

The battle for the vote was consistently met with hostility. The suffragists were called anarchists for upsetting the social order. Alice was again imprisoned and then force-fed when engaged in hunger strikes. Then, on August 18th, 1920, the 19th Amendment — after skidding through the House and Senate by two votes— was signed into law. White women now had the freedom to vote their conscience in all elections, local and national.

Women of color, on the other hand, found themselves subject to poll taxes, literacy tests, fraud, and intimidation that disenfranchised their male contemporaries. Asian-American women who had gained their citizenship as immigrants were excluded from voting until the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952. In 1929, Puerto Rican women were given the vote only if they were proven to be literate in English. Voting rights were expanded to all Puerto Rican women only in 1935 after decades of activism by local suffragists. It took the 1975 extension of the Voting Rights Act to expand voting access fully. At the time of its passing, Alice Paul was still alive and still in the fight. Alice Paul passed away in July 1977 in Moorestown, New Jersey.

Mother of a Movement

All of the Candidates Running for New Jersey Governor in 2025 (11)

Alice didn’t have or raise children, but future generations of women working toward gender equality have identified her as a foundational parent to their efforts. While fully recognizing her obstinate blind spots on the intersectionality of discrimination and the importance of Black women leaders’ visibility, her work was touted as groundbreaking by Shirley Chisholm, Gloria Steinem, and other second-wave feminists.

All of the Candidates Running for New Jersey Governor in 2025 (12)

The impact of Alice’s activism outlived her. The Equal Rights Amendment that she wrote in 1923 was reintroduced in every session of Congress from then until Virginia finally became the last state to sign on in 2020. Her legacy is global in its reach, too. In 1938, Alice founded the World Women’s Party (WWP) which lobbied the League of Nations to include an equal rights clause in its charter. Article 1 of the United Nations Charter states its goal “To achieve international co-operation … in promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex, language, or religion.” Today, the UN Commission on the Status of Women is a global policy-making body dedicated exclusively to gender equality.

See More: 46 Women Community Leaders Making a Difference in Hoboken + Jersey City

The Alice Paul Center for Gender Justice

All of the Candidates Running for New Jersey Governor in 2025 (13)

The Alice Paul Center for Gender Justice in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, is a thriving organization situated in the beautiful childhood home of Alice Paul, Paulsdale. The Center welcomes individual and group tours. It is a bustling home for youth, community, and advocacy programs — such as the Girls Leadership Council and the Champions of Equality presentation series. The house hosts happenings big and small, including Family Saturdays Events, author talks, and a wide array of virtual presentations that can be found on the website.

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All of the Candidates Running for New Jersey Governor in 2025 (2025)

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