New Jersey voters woke up this week to a blistering mailer branding Democrat Mikie Sherrill as the architect of “continued genocide” and a “sicker planet.” The attack lands amid fierce GOP momentum and exposes Sherrill’s alienation from mainstream New Jersey families.
An outside group calling itself the Garden State Fund unleashed the mailer, accusing Sherrill of opposing Medicare for All, rejecting the Green New Deal, and “funding apartheid Israel genocide of the Palestinian people.” Three glaring red X’s drive home each charge—no nuance, no excuse.
Who bankrolls this smear? Thanks to New Jersey’s delayed disclosure rules, donors remain hidden until after Election Day. It’s the same cloak-and-dagger secrecy Democrats champion when it benefits them, and when it doesn’t, they feign outrage over “dark money.”
Meanwhile, in Hudson County, Republican sheriff nominee Elvis Alvarez has taken his campaign on wheels. Massive trucks bear the faces of Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro and radical New York socialist Zohran Mamdani under the warning “SAY ‘NO’ TO SOCIALISM. VOTE COLUMN B.”
On the opposite side of the display, GOP standard-bearer Jack Ciattarelli stands tall with the tagline “Time for a Change” beside “Column B.” The ballot instructions couldn’t be clearer: 1B Ciattarelli for Governor, 4B Alvarez for Sheriff.
Alvarez hasn’t just banked on powerful imagery; he’s secured cross-party endorsements. Hudson County Democrat officials and switch-riding leaders are publicly backing his law-and-order vision. Scott Presler, champion of early voting, threw his weight behind Alvarez night after night.
Jack Ciattarelli’s campaign is riding the same wave of bipartisan discontent. Once written off as a perpetual contender, he’s now the unambiguous choice for voters tired of rising crime, skyrocketing costs, and empty promises from Trenton.
Sherrill’s team has no coherent economic platform. They dodge questions about inflation, property taxes, and small-business survival. Meanwhile, New Jersey families juggle crushing expenses and look to Republicans for real solutions.
This election isn’t about labels—it’s about results. Voters see through phony progressive posturing and hidden PAC cash. They demand secure streets, stable budgets, and leaders who put New Jersey first.
On November 4th, New Jerseyans have a simple decision: reject the radicals on the left and back Republicans who deliver common-sense leadership. Vote Column B.





