TRENTON, NJ – OP/ED – New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy unveiled his final budget proposal this week, a sprawling $58.1 billion plan that promises a lot—record school funding, a hefty pension payment, and a $6.3 billion surplus. It’s a feel-good narrative meant to cement his legacy as a progressive champion.
But dig into the details, and a stark contradiction emerges: while the governor boasts of fiscal responsibility, he’s reportedly earmarking a staggering $7 billion to support illegal immigrants, yet he can’t seem to scrape together a few million dollars to save schools facing closure across the state. This isn’t just a budgeting quirk—it’s a glaring signal of where his priorities truly lie.
Let’s start with the schools. New Jersey’s public education system, often touted as one of the nation’s best, is under strain. Districts are wrestling with rising costs, aging infrastructure, and, in some cases, the threat of consolidation or outright closure.
Parents, teachers, and students have pleaded for help, pointing to the real human cost: disrupted communities, longer commutes for kids, and overburdened classrooms.
The price tag to keep these schools open isn’t astronomical—often just a few million dollars per district. Yet, time and again, these pleas are met with shrugs from Trenton, as if the money simply isn’t there.
Now consider the $7 billion figure tied to illegal immigrants. It’s a number that’s been floating around, sparking outrage among critics on platforms like X and in local news circles. While the exact breakdown of this allocation remains murky—Murphy’s office hasn’t explicitly confirmed it in official budget documents—it’s not hard to connect the dots. New Jersey has long positioned itself as a sanctuary state under Murphy’s watch, with policies limiting cooperation with federal immigration authorities and expanding services for undocumented residents. From healthcare to housing support, these initiatives carry a hefty cost.
If even a fraction of that $7 billion is accurate, it’s a monumental sum—one that dwarfs the modest lifeline our struggling schools need.
The governor’s budget does nod toward education, with $12.1 billion for K-12 schools, a figure he proudly claims fully funds the state’s school aid formula for the first time.
But this topline number masks a deeper issue: the aid isn’t always reaching the districts that need it most. Stabilization funds, meant to cushion schools facing cuts, are a drop in the bucket—$20 million last year, a pittance compared to the scale of the challenge. Meanwhile, the surplus sits at $6.3 billion, a rainy-day fund that’s apparently too precious to tap for the very students it’s meant to serve. Why is there always cash for grand progressive gestures, but never enough to keep a rural school’s lights on?
Murphy’s defenders might argue that supporting immigrants—legal or not—is a moral imperative, a reflection of New Jersey’s diversity and compassion. Fair enough. But compassion shouldn’t come at the expense of our own kids’ futures. Education isn’t a luxury; it’s the backbone of any society that hopes to thrive. When a state can find billions to extend a hand across its borders but can’t muster millions to protect its own classrooms, something’s gone terribly wrong.
This isn’t about xenophobia or pitting one group against another—it’s about accountability.
New Jerseyans deserve a governor who fights for their children as fiercely as he fights for his national image. Murphy’s budget, with its lofty rhetoric and selective generosity, suggests he’s more interested in the latter. As he prepares to exit office, this could be his lasting mark: a state where illegal immigrants get billions, but students get the short end of the stick. If that’s the legacy he wants, he’s well on his way to achieving it.
Richard B., Toms River