TRENTON, NJ – In an unusual shake-up of New Jersey’s electorate, a sweeping purge of inactive voters has slashed the state’s registration numbers and chipped away at the Democrats’ once-comfortable lead over Republicans. State records reveal that nearly 225,000 voters were scrubbed from the rolls since early February 2025, marking the first such overhaul in two years.
The move, targeting those who skipped multiple federal elections, has reshaped the political landscape as the gap between the two major parties narrows.
As of March 1, New Jersey’s voter tally plummeted, with Democrats bearing the brunt of the losses. The party’s registered ranks fell to 2,448,324—a steep drop of 89,607, or 3.53%, since January 1, including 87,174 in February alone. Republicans, by contrast, saw a lighter hit, shedding 37,921 voters in the same month, bringing their total to 1,614,140—a year-to-date decline of just 1.67%, or 27,441. Meanwhile, unaffiliated voters mirrored the Democrats’ losses, dipping by 85,209, or 3.32%, since the year began.
The purge, conducted by election officials to maintain an accurate registry, comes after a period of relative stasis and highlights a shrinking buffer between the state’s political heavyweights.
With Republicans losing nearly 50,000 fewer voters than their rivals in February alone, analysts suggest this could signal shifting dynamics in a state long dominated by Democratic strongholds. As New Jersey’s voter rolls reset, the stage is set for a closer contest in future elections.