Swing State? Is New Jersey Really Turning Red? Let’s Break Down the Facts

Swing State? Is New Jersey Really Turning Red? Let’s Break Down the Facts

New Jersey, a state long synonymous with blue-leaning politics, has become the center of whispers suggesting it might be swinging toward the Republican Party. But is this speculation grounded in reality? Let’s dive into the numbers, recent elections, and political trends to see if the Garden State is really ripe for a GOP takeover.

A State of Democratic Dominance

First, the cold, hard stats. Democrats hold a commanding lead in voter registration, with about 2.6 million registered Democrats compared to 1.5 million Republicans. That’s a difference of over a million voters—no small gap to overcome. Independents (or “unaffiliated” voters) do outnumber Republicans, but they tend to lean left in statewide elections, further tilting the scale against the GOP.

Ciattarelli’s 2021 Run: A Glimmer of Red?

Republican Jack Ciattarelli’s relatively close loss to Democratic Governor Phil Murphy in 2021 sparked GOP hopes. Murphy won by just over 3 percentage points—a surprisingly tight race for a state where Democrats have a voter registration advantage this large.

The race wasn’t without controversy. Murphy’s pandemic-era policies, including school shutdowns, mask mandates, and vaccine requirements, fueled Republican enthusiasm. Ciattarelli managed to rally rural and suburban areas, but it wasn’t enough to overcome Murphy’s stronghold in urban centers.

A near miss, yes. A sign of a Republican resurgence? That’s harder to argue.

Trump Bump or Trump Slump?

Donald Trump’s polarizing presence looms large in any conversation about the GOP. But New Jersey has never been kind to Trump. He lost the state by 16 points to Joe Biden in 2020 and by 14 points to Hillary Clinton in 2016.

While Trump enjoys solid support in the state’s conservative pockets—especially the Jersey Shore—his brand of politics doesn’t resonate with the suburban and urban voters who make up a significant share of the state’s electorate.

Andy Kim’s 2022 Win: More Blue Than Purple

In 2024, Democratic Congressman Andy Kim cruised to a 10 point defeat over openly gay Republican Curtis Bashaw. Kim’s last congressional win highlighted the difficulty Republicans face in flipping even purple-leaning districts, let alone the entire state, which he easily took this year.

Kim’s victory also underscores another key point: New Jersey Democrats have been successful in defining their Republican opponents as too extreme, a message that resonates with the state’s more moderate voters.

The 2023 Setback for Republicans

If there were any doubts about the GOP’s struggles in New Jersey, the 2023 state legislative elections erased them. Republicans lost seats in both the State Senate and Assembly, despite hopes of capitalizing on national discontent with Democrats.

Three Republicans in Congress—and That’s It

New Jersey sends 12 representatives to Congress, but only three of them are Republicans. These GOP strongholds—largely in conservative Jersey Shore and northwest areas—highlight the deeply entrenched blue tilt of the state’s other regions. Even in a “red wave” year like 2022, the GOP made no significant gains.

For Republicans to turn New Jersey red, they’d need to do more than just win over independents—they’d have to flip large swaths of Democratic voters in urban and suburban areas. With current trends and demographics, that seems unlikely.

For 2025, the Republicans have far-right conservative Bil Spadea, who could win a primary but will probably get smoked in the general election in an extremely blue state. There will be no Trump bump to help him. Trump will be one year into his second term in office, and the left will be organized not to lose New Jersey to the likes of Bill Spadea.

Jack Ciattarelli probably has the best shot to win New Jersey in a general election. He’s moderate, if not a left-leaning New Jersey Republican. He has done enough of Trump criticizing and supporting the left’s diversity agenda and immigration agenda to have some street cred with moderate Democrats upset with the far left.

John Bramnick is probably just a plant by the Spadea team to split the Ciattarelli vote. While he’s a funny stand-up comedian, this isn’t comedy hour, and he has no general name recognition outside of the political bubble sphere in New Jersey.

Ed the Trucker, like Spadea, is too far right to win the general despite his KO of State Senator Steve Sweeney, who fell asleep at the wheel, to give Ed a seat at the table. He lost his bid for re-election after Democrats woke up and realized what happened.

The Bottom Line

The idea of New Jersey becoming a swing state—or even trending Republican—makes for an intriguing headline, but the numbers tell a different story. While Republicans have found pockets of success and occasional near-misses, the overall picture remains clear: New Jersey is still solidly blue, and flipping it red will require nothing short of a political earthquake.