Politics & Government
Long Branch-Eatontown Voter Guide 2020: What You Need To Know
Patch can help you navigate the challenges of voting during the coronavirus outbreak.
LONG BRANCH, NJ — In Long Branch, there is a Board of Education election in 2020. In Eatontown, there is an election for town council.
Eatontown: Two Council seats are open; four candidates running:
Mark Regan, Jr., Republican, running to keep his seat
Find out what's happening in Long Branch-Eatontownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Jim Corcoran, Republican, running to keep his seat
Danielle Jones, Democrat
Find out what's happening in Long Branch-Eatontownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Marielle Hufnagle, Democrat
Long Branch BOE: There are three seats open and five candidates.
- Tasha Youngblood Brown, Lucille Perez and Armand Zambrano are running for re-election as a team
- Joseph M. Ferraina is running. As the Asbury Park Press reported, Ferraina is the former Long Branch superintendent of schools accused of keeping his secretary as a "sex slave." She filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against him and the district, and the Long Branch school district settled with her for $600,000.
- Kristopher Soto is running
This is in addition to statewide questions such as whether New Jersey voters want to legalize marijuana and whether to make peacetime veterans eligible to receive the veterans' property tax deduction.
Presidential race: Residents can either cast a write-in vote or choose, among the major parties, between Republican President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence, or Democratic former Vice President Joe Biden and US Sen. Kamala Harris. Also running are: Don Blankenship/William Mohr (Constitution Party); Howie Hawkins/Angela Nicole Walker (Green); Jo Jorgensen/Spike Cohen (Libertarian); Gloria La Riva/Sunil Freeman (Party for Socialism and Liberation); Roque De La Fuente/Darcy Richardson (The Alliance Party) and Bill Hammons/Eric Bodenstab (Unity Party).
Congress: One U.S. Senate seat is up for vote: Incumbent Democrat Cory Booker will face Republican Rik Mehta. Middletown's two longtime Congress reps are also running for re-election: Republican Rep. Chris Smith is being challenged by Democrat Stephanie Schmid, and Democrat Rep. Frank Pallone (he represents Long Branch) is being challenged by Republican Christian Onuoha.
How to vote: Due to COVID, Gov. Murphy ordered that the Nov. 3 presidential election be vote by mail in New Jersey.
You cannot machine vote at the polls on Nov. 3 unless you have a documented disability. Monmouth County Clerk Christine Hanlon has said that the best way to vote is dropping your sealed ballot in a ballot drop box — Don't forget to sign it. Monmouth County installed these boxes in Long Branch-Eatontown:
- Eatontown Borough Municipal Building 47 Broad Street Eatontown, NJ 07724 Back entrance
- Long Branch City Hall 344 Broadway Long Branch, NJ 07740
Ballot drop boxes are collected and returned directly to the Monmouth County Board of Elections office. These ballots are only handled by designated Board of Elections representatives.
- Election date: Nov. 3
- Check if you are registered to vote.
- Where can I drop off my ballot?
- Track my mail-in ballot.
- Where can I vote in person?
- Postmarked by deadline: Nov. 3
- Received by deadline: Nov. 10
Since the change to this year's election was announced by Murphy, there have been many questions about how the process will work. Below is some further reading on the Nov. 3 election process:
- Here's How NJ's Mail-In General Election Will Work: What To Know
- What's A NJ Provisional Ballot? How Does It Work? Patch Found Out
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