Is Eric Munoz the smartest legislator?
Assemblyman Eric Munoz (R-Union), 60, is a trauma surgeon and a Professor of Surgery at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey.  He is a graduate of the University of Virginia, and Albert Einstein College of Medicine, and he received an MBA from Columbia University.  He served as a Summit City Councilman before his election to the State Assembly in a 2001 special election convention.

Eric Munoz

October 5, 2008 - 7:22pm

Zimmer and Lance tag team in Summit

Sen. Leonard Lance (R-Hunterdon) in Summit on Friday.: Politicker photoSen. Leonard Lance (R-Hunterdon) in Summit on Friday.: Politicker photoSUMMIT - Coming off a train station rally here for presidential candidate Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), former U.S. Rep. Dick Zimmer and state Sen. Leonard Lance (R-Hunterdon) convened a town hall meeting at the high school, where they brandished their fiscally conservative credentials in a room of about 50 voters.

Now in a race with Assemblywoman Linda Stender (D-Fanwood) to represent the 7th Congressional District, Lance the veteran legislator underscored his tenacity fighting bloated government, including the administration of disgraced former Gov. Jim McGreevey.Former U.S. Rep. Dick Zimmer addresses voters in the Summit High School Library as GOP organizer Kelly Hatfield looks on: Politicker photoFormer U.S. Rep. Dick Zimmer addresses voters in the Summit High School Library as GOP organizer Kelly Hatfield looks on: Politicker photo

"I am the ‘Lance’ of Lance versus McGreevey," the senator said of his suit against the former administration to curb borrowing to balance the state budget.

The New Jersey Supreme Court in 2004 allowed McGreevey to borrow $1.9 billion, or nearly 7 percent of what was then a $28 billion budget, but forbade the governor from borrowing in the future.

Talking to Summit voters Friday evening in the high school library, Lance took pride too in noting how his proposed Constitutional amendment to ban borrowing without voter approval will appear on the Nov. 4th ballot.

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April 30, 2008 - 5:05pm

Munoz is New Jersey's Smartest Legislator

Assemblyman Eric Munoz (R-Union) was voted New Jersey's Smartest LegislatorAssemblyman Eric Munoz (R-Union) was voted New Jersey's Smartest LegislatorCongratulations to Eric Munoz, a trauma surgeon, five-term Assemblyman, and the smartest member of the New Jersey Legislature, according to PolitickerNJ.com readers. Munoz won the Smartest Legislator Tournament, where over 100,000 votes were cast during six rounds over the last two weeks.

Munoz, who was the #4 seed, defeated Barbara Buono in Round 1, John Wisniewski in Round 3, Charlotte Vandervalk in the Sweet Sixteen, Mary Pat Angelini in a controversial Elite Eight that was marred by the presence of a computer robot who cast thousands of votes for Angelini, Bob Gordon in the Final Four, and Pamela Rosen Lampitt in the final round.

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March 1, 2008 - 6:37pm

Union County's version of the ongoing 7th district GOP scrum to succeed Ferguson

Assemblyman Jon Bramnick, Assemblyman Eric Munoz, Sen. Thomas Kean, and U.S. Rep. Mike Ferguson soak in one of the speeches.Assemblyman Jon Bramnick, Assemblyman Eric Munoz, Sen. Thomas Kean, and U.S. Rep. Mike Ferguson soak in one of the speeches.

WESTFIELD - The word going into that first round of voting at the Union County Republican Convention on Saturday was that former Summit Councilwoman Kelly Hatfield and Scotch Plains Mayor Martin Marks would require a second showdown.

"This is going to a runoff between the top two candidates," said John DeSimone, commissioner for the county Board of Elections as he waded into the crowd of delegates. And that’s exactly how it went down at Westfield High School, where Hatfield eventually prevailed over Marks with 60% of the vote in the Union County GOP’s pre-primary battle for the line in the 7th District Congressional race.

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January 30, 2008 - 9:00am

Kean to endorse Lance; Bramnick and Munoz back Hatfield; conservative leader supports Whitman

The Seventh district Republican congressional race saw some new – and in some cases surprising – endorsements this morning.

Today Senate Minority Leader Tom Kean, Jr. will appear with State Sen. Leonard Lance to promote him to replace outgoing Rep. Mike Ferguson.

But Kean’s two Assembly running mates, Minority Whip Jon Bramnick and Dr. Eric Munoz, announced today that they are backing former Summit Council President P. Kelly Hatfield for the seat.

Both Kean and Bramnick were early frontrunners to seek the seat, but they declined.

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November 19, 2007 - 3:26pm

Morin won't seek Ferguson seat

Union County Republican Chairman Philip Morin says he won’t seek the House seat being vacated by Rep. Mike Ferguson.

"I don't see myself as a candidate for Congress in 2008," said Morin, a former Cranford mayor who is a strong backer of GOP U.S. Senate candidate Anne Evans Estabrook.

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September 26, 2007 - 9:15am

Union County: Kean, safe; Lesniak, safe; Scutari, safe

Several months ago, there were suggestions that Genovese might get support -- mostly financial -- from a group of key Democratic insiders who wanted to use the 21st district State Senate campaign as a form of retaliation for Kean's U.S. Senate race against Robert Menendez last year. But Democrats now concede that Genovese has turned out to be a weak and largely unfocused candidate with little chance to score an upset in a legislative district where Menendez won 46% one year ago. Genovese's failure to mount an effective campaign has allowed Kean to spend money in other districts. Kean will likely be re-elected, probably by his usual margins, and seems well positioned to become the next Senate Minority Leader.

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February 20, 2007 - 5:54pm
PRESS RELEASE

LARRY CASHA FOR ASSEMBLY

WWW.CASHAFORASSEMBLY.ORG

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Gregory Andres
February 20, 2007 973-909-4490

NJ Taxing Our Bravest
New Jersey still takes state income tax from military members overseas

(MONTVILLE, NJ) - 26th District Assembly candidate Larry Casha issued the following statement supporting the efforts of Assemblymen Bill Baroni and Eric Munoz to eliminate the withholding of state income taxes from military members serving overseas:

"Why is New Jersey one of only 13 states in the nation to take out state income taxes from a military member serving overseas? Because our state government is simply tax happy. It isn't enough that the Democrats in Trenton already tax nearly every service and product in our state and continue to refuse to deal with the property tax crisis, but they insist on taking money out of our brave service members' pockets each month.

"Currently, servicemen and women in Iraq or Afghanistan are exempt, but those serving in Germany, Iceland or Korea will still see state taxes removed from their paychecks. These brave men and women are already putting their lives on the line for New Jersey and our great nation, and it's time we stop taxing their efforts to protect our freedom.

"I strongly urge Governor Corzine and the Democrats to support the measure brought forth by Assemblymen Baroni and Munoz that would eliminate this unfair tax as soon as possible."

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January 23, 2007 - 12:41pm

Bramnick emerges as leading candidate for Minority Whip

While Assemblyman Eric Munoz struggles to defend himself in credentialsgate, his 21st district running mate seems to have emerged as the front runner for Assembly Minority Whip. Jon Bramnick has been quietly collecting commitments for support and appears to be much more popular among his colleagues than Munoz, who as the fourth ranking member of leadership, was next in line to succeed Frank Blee. Blee is expected to move up to the State Senate next month following the resignation of Bill Gormley.

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January 22, 2007 - 2:20pm

Hey, that's Menendez's move

Assemblyman Eric Munoz told some attendees at a Summit GOP fundraiser on Sunday that the allegations against him by a Delaware Superior Court Judge are politically motivated and that Republicans should pay no attention to them. But the Judge, Peggy Ableman, is a career jurist who spent four years as an Assistant United States Attorney and seventeen years as a Family Court Judge before her appointment to the Superior Court in 2000. One Union County Republican suggested that Munoz's theory that a Judge in Delaware is somehow conspiring to damage his political career "is a testament to his massive ego."

A confident Munoz also told the Summit Republicans that "any press is good press."

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January 22, 2007 - 12:37pm

Judge's ruling in Delaware opens door for cases involving Munoz to be re-litigated

It is rare for a Judge to openly and harshly rip apart a witness in a published court decision, as Delaware Superior Court Judge Peggy Ableman did in 2006 when she attacked the credibility and integrity of Eric Munoz, a UMDNJ trauma surgeon and a four-term Republican Assemblyman from Union County.

Ableman's comments that allegedly sham expert testimony, like the one offered by Munoz, is exactly why states like New Jersey have adopted laws to prevent frivolous medical malpractice lawsuits to keep insurance rates in check. Munoz, a Republican Assemblyman from Union County, has been an outspoken proponent of medical malpractice reform. A few years ago, while escorting the Governor for a speech on the Assembly floor, he wore a doctors gown to show the plights of his fellow physicians.

But at the same time, Munoz was allegedly helping plaintiffs less than credible lawsuits that he was, apparently, not qualified to pass judgment on. This is not something minor. The Delaware court opinion could open the door for other defendants in cases where Munoz acted as an expert, to re litigate. That puts some legitimate victims of medical malpractice in danger, as well as potentially innocent defendants in the medical community.

As a way of cracking down on frivolous lawsuits, a number of states, including New Jersey and Delaware, require plaintiffs in malpractice cases to produce an "affidavit of merit" within a short time period of the lawsuit being filed. The affidavit of merit statute requires the plaintiff to produce an expert professional to give his or her sworn opinion that the lawsuit is legitimate and that malpractice may have occurred. If the plaintiff cannot produce an affidavit of merit, the lawsuit is dismissed.

New Jersey's old affidavit of merit law was singled out for criticism during the recent medical malpractice crisis. The physician community pointed out that the N.J. affidavit of merit statute was too weak, and that many plaintiffs were shopping for "hired guns" around the country who would come in and give affidavits on areas of medicine for areas where they were no experts. For example, there was nothing under New Jersey law to prohibit a family practice physician from filing an affidavit of merit statute in a complicated case involving neurosurgery.

The New Jersey Medical Society and others suggested strongly suggested reforming the law to require that the affidavit of merit include expert testimony from the same specialty or subspecialty of the defendant physician. Under legislation signed into law during the last legislative session, New Jersey strengthened its affidavit of merit law on expert witness testimony. New Jersey -- like Delaware -- now requires the plaintiff's expert to be of the same specialty or subspecialty as the defendant physician. This is to help ensure that the affidavit is produced by a true expert in the field and not a hired gun.

In New Jersey, Munoz was a prime sponsor of legislation that would require experts to be board certified in the area of medicine they were addressing.

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