CAWP’s annual New Jersey County Report Card shows that women’s representation remains fundamentally stalled in New Jersey counties. While women made incremental gains as county commissioners and in municipal council offices, they lost ground as mayors in New Jersey since our previous report card in 2021. Union County continues at the top spot in our overall county rankings – which is determined via an average of rankings for women’s representation in mayoral, county commissioner, and municipal council offices – while Salem County is this year’s lowest-ranked county for women’s representation among the 21 counties of New Jersey.
With a gain of just two seats in county commissioner (formerly freeholder) offices, women now hold 36% of these seats statewide, up from 35% in 2021. Women gained a total of 26 seats on city and town councils, but, with 3,109 such seats statewide, women’s share of these municipal council offices remained essentially unchanged at 30%. Meanwhile, women lost ground as mayors between 2021 and 2022, losing eight mayoralties and falling from 18% of mayoral seats to 16.6%.
“The coming year will see the return to an in-person format for our annual Ready to Run® campaign training program in New Jersey,” CAWP associate director Jean Sinzdak said in a press release. “We strongly encourage any woman in the Garden State with political aspirations, ambitions, or even curiosity, to attend Ready to Run® 2023 and take advantage of the knowledge and networking the program offers. New Jersey needs you.”
Find the full 2022 New Jersey County Report card here and read an op-ed from Sinzdak about its findings in The Star-Ledger.
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