In addition to the Todd
Christie scandals and the Ashcroft and Kelley payoffs, Chris
Christie has another problem: his tax plan would create a $4
Billion state deficit which would erase any possibility of
continuing the homestead tax rebates.
“Income tax cuts are a nice
idea, but we are in the middle of the worst recession in
fifty years; we need to be responsible in what we propose,”
said Traditional Republican Assembly candidate Don Lombardi.
Use The Money From Job Cuts To
Keep Rebate Program
|

Steve Lonegan |
“Candidate for Governor Steve
Lonegan has a program that spells out how more than 15,000
jobs could be cut from the padded state payroll to produce
$1.5 Billion in added cash flow,” Lombardi noted.
Continue Rebates With Real
Money
“I think this money should be
used to continue the homestead tax rebates,” Lombardi said,
adding "the governor candidates can posture all they want,
but the legislature will not kill the tax rebates as long as
the funding can be made available.
Maximum Pension Should Be
$60,000 - Eliminate Gimmicks
Lombardi and Traditional GOP
candidates for county offices also proposed a plan to reform
the NJ pension system corrupted by politicians like Boss
Gilmore, Freeholder John Bartlett and TR School
Superintendent Michael Ritacco.
|

TR Schools
Superintendent Ritacco
|
Maximum Pension Should Be
$60,000
“The maximum state pension
should be set at no more than $60,000, and gimmicks like
“unused sick time" should be prohibited as part of the
pension calculations. If Bartlett, Gilmore and Ritacco want
more, let them set up a 401K like everyone else,” Lombardi
said.
Lombardi Pension Reforms Would
Save $1 Billion
"These reforms would save
another $1 billion a year and keep greedy fingers out of the
pension pie," Lombardi added.
Column “C”-
Lombardi & The Traditional
Republican Ticket:
Rage
Against The Machine!
Don Lombardi is running on
Steve Lonegan's Conservative Republicans Putting Taxpayers
First ticket
along with fellow Traditional
Republicans Suzanne Penna, Pete McCarthy and Alex Pavliv on Column “C” on Tuesday’s election ballot.