Byron Baer

June 27, 2007 - 12:30am

Rob Tornoe

June 26, 2007 - 7:49pm

Remembering Byron Baer

It’s among the most defining relics of Byron Baer’s life: a 1961 mug shot taken in Jackson, Mississippi, just before his 45-day stint at Parchman Penitentiary.   In the black-and-white photo, a 31-year-old Baer, who had just been arrested for being a Freedom Rider, stares at the camera defiantly, with his head cocked slightly to one side.   

Baer had never even seen the picture until he was visited last month by a fellow Freedom Rider who he had taken under his wing back in 1961.  But even in his last days, on painkillers and gradually slipping away, he was visibly pleased to see it, his family said.     

Like that former freedom rider, today dozens of people – politicians and others -- came out to a Hackensack funeral home to show respect to the local politician who, in one way or another, touched them.  They had many stories about them, but there was a common thread to all of them: Baer stood up for the public, and most of all the downtrodden. 

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June 24, 2007 - 4:54pm

Byron Baer: The activist legacy of an open, public life

Byron Baer, 1929-2007

by MAX PIZARRO and MATT FRIEDMAN
PoliticsNJ.com

Byron Baer was a rarity in New Jersey politics: he served time in jail before he took public office, not after.

"I tell people he was a politician who went to jail first instead of the other way around," said his widow, Judge Linda Pollitt Baer.

Pollitt Baer was referring to the 45-day stint that her husband did in a Mississippi jail in 1961, after being arrested as part of the Freedom Riders.

But his civil rights work didn’t end there.

Baer, who died this morning after a long illness, was a pioneering warrior for government transparency during his four decades of service in the Legislature. He passed bills on consumer pricing, toxic waste cleanup and tenant protection. While working on legislation protecting migrant workers, he demonstrated for workers’ rights, getting his arm broken by a south Jersey farmer who tried to hit his head with an iron pipe.

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June 24, 2007 - 6:13am

Legislative giant for four decades dies at 77

Byron Baer, a hardworking and effective legislator who wrote the state's open public meeting law, died early today. He was 77 and had been sick for the last several years.

A Bergen County Democrat, Baer first went to Trenton in after the 1965 election as an aide to Arnold Brown, the first African American to represent Bergen County in the Legislature. Brown lost his bd for re-election in 1967, and Baer won the seat back in a competitive 1971 campaign. He spent 22 years in the Assembly and moved up to the Senate in 1993 when Matthew Feldman retired.

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January 9, 2008 - 1:31pm

In Memorium 2007

PolitickerNJ.com was deeply saddened by the death of Dr. David Rebovich, a prominent, popular and powerful political science professor at Rider University, and the Director of the Rider University Institute for New Jersey Politics, on October 12 . He was among the very best that New Jersey had to offer and it was our considerable honor to run his weekly column for the last six years. We miss him.

Among the favorites of the New Jersey political community who passed away in 2007: Fort Lee Mayor Jack Alter; former State Senator Byron Baer; former Assemblyman Neil Duffy; former Senate President Wesley Lance; former Burlington County Democratic Chairman George Lee; former State Sen. Alexander Menza, a candidate for the Democratic U.S. Senate nomination in 1978; former Bergen County Executive William McDowell; former Plainfield Mayor Albert McWilliams; former Rep. Joseph Minish; former Assemblywoman Angela Perun; Central New Jersey radio personality and former NJSEA spokesman for Bernard Spigner; political strategist Greg Stevens, who served as Chief of Staff to Gov. Thomas Kean former Public Advocate Stanley Van Ness; former Assemblyman Harold Pareti; former State Senator Richard Van Wagner; former Wayne Mayor/Superior Court Judge David Waks; and George Warrington, the former Executive Director of New Jersey Transit and the former President of Amtrak.

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July 3, 2007 - 9:51am

Paul Swibinski's Tribute to Byron Baer

My Tribute to Byron Baer
By Paul Swibinski

I met Byron in 1976, when he ran for Congress against Henry Helstoski, who eventually won after a scandal involving over 2000 altered absentee ballots. I was a young volunteer at that time. Later I became his media consultant and worked on all of his campaigns.

In 1993, Byron and Englewood Mayor Donald Aronson (also a friend and client) both wanted to succeed retiring Senator Matty Feldman and appeared before the District 37 county committee convention seeking the party endorsement.

Paul Fader was working for Don and I was working for Byron. Paul and I were both very intense and we began arguing over where campaign posters would be placed. We had one of those "gentleman square-offs" where we circled each other, both waiting for someone to separate us because neither wanted to throw a punch. Fortunately someone did!

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June 25, 2007 - 11:08am

Baer had arm broken defending migrant workers

Byron Baer was no stranger to run-ins with the law, although his experiences were no exactly typical of many politicians he met during a career in politics and civil rights that spanned nearly half a century.  While Baer is best known for spending time in a Mississippi jail in 1961, when he and other Freedom Fighters were arrested for protesting the treatment of African Americans in the deep south, he was actually arrested again thirteen years later, while serving his second term in the New Jersey State Assembly.

The sponsor of legislation to improve working conditions for migrant workers, Baer was charged with tresspassing after he made a surprise visit to a migrant labor camp in Gloucester County -- and his arm was broken when the crew chief, Marcos Portolatin, hit the legislator with a five-foot board while chasing the group off the property.  Alex Moriarty, the the director of the Farmworkers Cooperative of New Jersey, claimed he was beaten by Portolatin and ten workers.  The windows of Baer's 1970 chevrolet station wagon were also smashed.

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June 25, 2007 - 9:43am

Baer almost went to Congress

One of the great stories about New Jersey politics in the mid 1970's was the one about Byron Baer and how he came excruciatingly close to winning a congressional seat 28 years ago.

The Congressman from the 9th district was Henry Helstoski, a six-term Democrat with a trademark crew cut who made his mark as an opponent of the Vietnam War. Helstoski was the 39-year-old Mayor of East Rutherford when he beat a nine-term Republican incumbent by 2,428 votes in the Democratic landslide of 1964. Amidst the violence of the 1968 Democratic National Convention, Helstoski turned his Chicago hotel room into an infirmary for Eugene McCarthy delegates and volunteers who were injured during the anti-war demonstrations. He ran for Governor in 1969, becoming a candidate just thirty minutes before the filing deadline, and finished second in the Democratic primary for Governor.

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June 25, 2007 - 9:36am

Baer's running mates

During a 34-year career in the New Jersey Legislature, Byron Baer had six Democratic running mates that served with him in Trenton: Albert Burstein, a former Assembly Majority Leader who served from 1972 to 1982; Bennett Mazur, who served from Burstein's retirement until his resignation, due to illness, in 1992; Loretta Weinberg, who had been Mazur's legislative aide, from 1992 until 2005; Charles "Ken" Zisa, who went to the Assembly when Baer moved up to the Senate in 1993 and served until he ran for Bergen County Sheriff in 2001; and Gordon Johnson, who replaced Zisa. During Baer's 22 years as an Assemblyman, he served with State Senator Matthew Feldman, who defeated GOP Senator Joseph Woodcock in 1973.

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September 30, 2006 - 12:16pm

KEAN ON CORRUPTION AND STANDING UP FOR NEW JERSEY

by David P. Rebovich

Polls show that the U.S. Senate race between Democratic incumbent Bob Menendez and Republican State Senator Tom Kean, Jr. is a toss up. Political analysts and party officials in Washington, D.C. and across the country are calling New Jersey the Republican Party's best chance of picking up a Senate seat on November 7th. The GOP may well need this seat to retain its majority in the upper chamber. And, Kean's prospects of winning are being kept alive by more tales of ethical questions and alleged influence peddling that surround his opponent and make the latter vulnerable to charges that he is simply another member of the Democratic Party's ethically-impaired leadership.

It is thus no surprise that Kean is focusing on ethics and corruption as the key issues in this race and trying to drive home the point that Menendez is an inappropriate and ineffective representative of the state in Washington, D.C. Yes, this sounds like negative campaigning, especially when that message is packed into a 30 or 60 second ad. However, it is difficult to criticize a candidate for using his best argument to try to win an election. Indeed, for his part Menendez is spending lots of money and time attacking George W. Bush and Kean for being the unpopular president's lackey, even though the State Senator has never served in federal office.

There is, of course, more to Menendez's point than that cheap shot. More on that later. But Kean's complaint about corruption is also more than just a criticism of his opponent. For the State Senator, "corruption" - defined broadly as not just law-breaking but self-serving behavior, patronage, and political pay-offs - has two serious consequences. One is that it exacerbates people's cynicism about politics and their distrust of government officials at the very time when this state and the United States need an active, engaged citizenry. The second is that corruption costs taxpayers a pretty penny on unnecessary appointed government personnel, bloated contracts with private firms, and ineffective programs.

Kean made these points in a speech on political corruption at Rider University sponsored by the Institute for New Jersey Politics that I head. The GOP U.S. Senate candidate asked the audience of 225 students - most from Rider but some from the College of New Jersey and Rutgers -, faculty and staff, "Can we ever escape the clutch of corruption?" After a brief overview of the history of political corruption in the state, Kean lamented that the twenty-first century has brought even more scandals courtesy of some of the state's highest ranking officials in both parties. Corruption has, he claimed, cost the state billions of dollars, busted budgets and caused big tax hikes and even tuition increases. The State Senator noted that last year over 57,000 New Jerseyans moved out of the state and that high taxes was a reason many cited for their departure.

What does Kean believe that New Jersey should do about political corruption? He recommends that state government pass a comprehensive ban on pay to play and on dual office-holding. In Washington, he would fight for more transparency on donations, lawmakers' relations with lobbyists, and on how federal funds are earmarked for particular projects and contracts. He wants a separate entity to monitor and police the behavior of members of Congress.

Kean also wants vigorous prosecution of those charged with political corruption and lengthy jail sentences for the guilty. But the best protection against government corruption is a vigilant and reform-minded electorate and candidates who genuinely care about more than themselves, are committed to making life better for their constituents, and don't believe that they are entitled to use their offices for material advance.

After the Rider event, several students, faculty and staff members told me that they were impressed with Kean's argument after the effects of corruption and with his passion for reform. However, immediately after his speech several people in the audience had questions about if and how the New Jersey Republican would stand up to leaders in his own party in Washington to reform unsuccessful policies and programs supported by the GOP.

Yes, tales of John Lynch, Wayne Bryant, Sharpe James Jim McGreevey, and Bob Menendez, Democrats all, have dominated the news in recent weeks, and Kean is well-advised to contrast himself with ethically-impaired Democrats. However, polls also show that President Bush's approval rating is down to thirty percent here, a record low for a president in the Garden State. New Jerseyans, including folks at the Rider event, wanted to know what Kean's views are several policy issues, and whether he disagree with the President on some issues and is willing to admit it.

In the question and answer session Kean was asked about the war in Iraq, stem cell research, abortion, tax cuts, homeland security, education, and the minimum wage. On Iraq, Kean unabashedly stated that "horrendous mistakes" have been made and that Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld should resign. But he added that it is ill-advised to issue a definite troop withdrawal date. He surprised many in the crowd by stating that he agreed with former President Bill Clinton that a quick withdrawal of American troops will likely result in a major humanitarian crisis, the further destabilization of Iraq, and the creation of a major haven for terrorists. Rather than serve as an apologist for the President of his own party, Kean advocates a bipartisan approach to foreign policy toward Iraq and other hot spots in the world.

The State Senator also declared his support for stem cell research, a woman's right to choose, full funding for the No Child Left Behind program, more access to higher education and financial aid for college students, and a higher minimum wage. While noting that America is a nation of both immigrants and laws, he accused his opponent of supporting amnesty for illegal immigrants and billion of dollars in benefits that the nation cannot afford. Kean also was highly critical of Menendez's support for higher taxes in New Jersey and opposition to federal tax cuts that have disproportionately benefited New Jerseyans.

After confidently expressing and explaining his issue positions, many of which are consistent with majority sentiment in the state, Kean was asked an especially pertinent question. A Rider history professor politely queried how Kean could expect to succeed as a U.S. Senator given that his party's leaders seem intent on drowning out the voices of moderation. Kean immediately responded that he believes his responsibility in the U.S. Senate will be to stand up for the people of New Jersey and, if necessary, reach across party lines to get things done.

That means, he continued, fighting corruption wherever it exists, preventing drilling off the Jersey Shore, and seeking more funds for education and homeland security for the Garden State. What the 225 folks in a predictably skeptical university audience saw and heard was an intelligent, energetic U.S. Senate candidate who clearly explained his policy positions and stood up for them. He also demonstrated that he is willing to stand up to others in the opposing party, as well as his own, for causes and positions he believes will benefit his constituents. Tom Kean, Jr. scored several points at Rider University among voters whose support Republicans do not get easily but that they typically need to win a statewide race in New Jersey.

David P. Rebovich, Ph.D., is Managing Director of the Rider University Institute for New Jersey Politics (www.rider.edu/institute). He writes a regular column, "On Politics," for NEW JERSEY LAWYER and monthly reports on New Jersey for CAMPAIGNS AND ELECTIONS Magazine. He also is member of CQPOltiics.com's Board of Advisors that provides commentary on national political developments.

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