This contest has now acquired a new dimension since Mayor Michael Wildes, a one-time thorn in Ferriero's side, joined the boss’s team. Having strengthened his hold on the County, Ferriero is more determined than ever to crush his remaining opposition. Local activists narrowly defeated controversial changes to Party rules that would place every municipal election under Ferriero control.
A Power
Shift
Until a year ago, the Ferriero faction, including
Jack Drakeford, Vernon Walton and Doug Bern, formed
the controlling majority of Englewood's City
Council.
With the replacement of Bern by Ken Rosenzweig in
January of 2006, the control changed. And
following the replacement of Walton by Gordon Johnson
in January of 2007, Jack Drakeford remains the sole
Ferriero ally on the Council.
This power shift has been accomplished in successive
June Democratic Primaries. Since there is no
effective Republican Party in Englewood, the November
General Election is normally irrelevant locally (the
recent Independent challenge to Mayor Wildes being an
exception). The June Primary Election each
year, generally ignored by most of the voting
public, has thus become the main political
battleground. It is reasonable to expect that
June of this year will see one, or perhaps two, more
hotly contested primary contests, as
Charlotte Bennett Schoen’s Second Ward
seat and Jack Drakeford’s Fourth Ward seat,
will be on the ballot.
2007
Primaries
Englewood is part of the 37th New Jersey State
Legislative District, including twelve largely
Democratic towns, and we will also be voting in June
for a State Senator and two State Assembly members to
represent us in Trenton. Incumbents Senator Loretta
Weinberg of Teaneck, and Assembly members Valerie
Vainieri Huttle and Gordon Johnson of Englewood, have
rejected Ferriero’s backing and expect to face
opposition from his hand-picked
candidates, including Wildes.
Violet
Cherry
Another aspect of this power contest has been the
long and fruitless
action against Violet Cherry, who until
recently had been both Director of the Englewood
Department of Health and Chair of the Englewood
Democratic Municipal Committee. Under Cherry's
leadership, the Englewood Municipal Committee
warred continually with Ferriero and his County
organization. When the opportunity arose,
Ferriero’s Council allies appointed persons to the
Board of Health who prioritized punishing the
Boss's Englewood critics. After
considerable turmoil and over a quarter of a
million dollars in taxpayer expense, the Board of
Health failed to exact any penalty, leading
the Bergen Record to conclude that
the case against Cherry was weak or incompetently
(though expensively) presented.
It is our
opinion that the punishment to the innocent party --
the taxpayers -- did not match the offense. It is bad
enough that the shameless pay-to-play
machine raids the public treasury to reward
friends with patronage jobs and contracts. It is
even more outrageous to have agents of the machine
hypocritically raid our treasury to engage
pay-to-play lawyers like Wilfredo Ortiz and John Carbone to attack an
opponent for doing a pale imitation of what the
machine practices as a
virtue.








