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New Jersey's 6th Congressional District election, 2022

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2024
2020
New Jersey's 6th Congressional District
Ballotpedia Election Coverage Badge.png
Democratic primary
Republican primary
General election
Election details
Filing deadline: April 4, 2022
Primary: June 7, 2022
General: November 8, 2022
How to vote
Poll times: 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Voting in New Jersey
Race ratings
Cook Partisan Voter Index (2022): D+8
Cook Political Report: Solid Democratic
Inside Elections: Solid Democratic
Sabato's Crystal Ball: Safe Democratic
Ballotpedia analysis
U.S. Senate battlegrounds
U.S. House battlegrounds
Federal and state primary competitiveness
Ballotpedia's Election Analysis Hub, 2022
See also
New Jersey's 6th Congressional District
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New Jersey elections, 2022
U.S. Congress elections, 2022
U.S. Senate elections, 2022
U.S. House elections, 2022

All U.S. House districts, including the 6th Congressional District of New Jersey, held elections in 2022. The general election was on November 8, 2022. The primary was scheduled for June 7, 2022. The filing deadline was April 4, 2022.

The outcome of this race affected the partisan balance of the U.S. House of Representatives in the 118th Congress. All 435 House districts were up for election.

Republicans won a 222-213 majority in the U.S. House in 2022.

Daily Kos calculated what the results of the 2020 presidential election in this district would have been following redistricting. Joe Biden (D) would have received 59.0% of the vote in this district and Donald Trump (R) would have received 39.7%.[1]

For more information about the primaries in this election, click on the links below:

Candidates and election results

General election

General election for U.S. House New Jersey District 6

Incumbent Frank Pallone Jr. defeated Susan Kiley, Tara Fisher, Inder Soni, and Eric Antisell in the general election for U.S. House New Jersey District 6 on November 8, 2022.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Frank Pallone Jr.
Frank Pallone Jr. (D)
 
57.5
 
106,238
Image of Susan Kiley
Susan Kiley (R)
 
41.0
 
75,839
Image of Tara Fisher
Tara Fisher (L)
 
0.7
 
1,361
Inder Soni (New Jersey First)
 
0.5
 
947
Image of Eric Antisell
Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward) Candidate Connection
 
0.3
 
534

Total votes: 184,919
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Democratic primary election

Democratic primary for U.S. House New Jersey District 6

Incumbent Frank Pallone Jr. advanced from the Democratic primary for U.S. House New Jersey District 6 on June 7, 2022.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Frank Pallone Jr.
Frank Pallone Jr.
 
100.0
 
30,534

Total votes: 30,534
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Republican primary election

Republican primary for U.S. House New Jersey District 6

Susan Kiley defeated Rik Mehta and Tom Toomey in the Republican primary for U.S. House New Jersey District 6 on June 7, 2022.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Susan Kiley
Susan Kiley
 
56.8
 
10,076
Image of Rik Mehta
Rik Mehta
 
26.7
 
4,735
Image of Tom Toomey
Tom Toomey
 
16.4
 
2,913

Total votes: 17,724
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Voting information

See also: Voting in New Jersey

Election information in New Jersey: Nov. 8, 2022, election.

What was the voter registration deadline?

  • In-person: Oct. 18, 2022
  • By mail: Postmarked by Oct. 18, 2022
  • Online: Oct. 18, 2022

Was absentee/mail-in voting available to all voters?

N/A

What was the absentee/mail-in ballot request deadline?

  • In-person: Nov. 7, 2022
  • By mail: Received by Nov. 1, 2022
  • Online: N/A

What was the absentee/mail-in ballot return deadline?

  • In-person: Nov. 8, 2022
  • By mail: Received by Nov. 8, 2022

Was early voting available to all voters?

Yes

What were the early voting start and end dates?

Oct. 29, 2022 to Nov. 6, 2022

Were all voters required to present ID at the polls? If so, was a photo or non-photo ID required?

N/A

When were polls open on Election Day?

N/A


Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey responses

Ballotpedia asks all federal, state, and local candidates to complete a survey and share what motivates them on political and personal levels. The section below shows responses from candidates in this race who completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

Survey responses from candidates in this race

Click on a candidate's name to visit their Ballotpedia page.

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.

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Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

Each member of Congress can afford to devote 30 minutes to public engagement with constituents on-record, several times per week. I am doing so on my campaign Instagram account, instagram.com/antisell.nj, for 150 minutes per week. I will continue to do so for all 104 weeks of the term in the House of Representatives that I seek. This way, the national agenda is not simply set by Elites like the Speaker of the House, the Senate Leader, the President, or the media privileged to be the ones who can challenge them or suggest to them new ideas on-record. "One never knows from where the next great leap forward is going to come, or from whom." There are 330,000,000 of us. More Voices.

I propose a Clear New Deal. We must not place faith in The Democrats LLC to "take Climate Change seriously" vis-a-vis the Republicans. I do support taxing greenhouse-gas pollution. I believe in legalizing LSD-25 to help us cultivate at least 10 different "Steve Jobs" of technology to engineer reductions in greenhouse-gas levels in the atmosphere. These include next-generation power grids, next-generation nuclear energy, next generation meat and dairy alternatives, agriculture architecture, machinery to help Earth's inhabitants better adjust to the Global Climate that has already changed. Let us not just leave it to the algae and trees to break down the Carbon Double-Oxygen molecules in the air after 150 years of industrialization.

I have a Permanent Alliance with no one. I have faith in Rehabilitation, although in certain cases I believe the path to recovery is more straight-forward than in other cases. I believe the Democrats who are pro-choice on abortion can come to see they must necessarily be pro-choice on adult narcotics use and supply chains (which can be brought out of the profitable, unsafe, violent monopolistic de-jure underground). I believe Republicans who are pro-child-autonomy rights can come to love the G-Spot in the Rear that can prevent the Rearing of Unwanted Children, and can apply their objection to assaulting children as their parents "choose" to in hospitals seeking federal appropriations that perform nonconsensual, cosmetic foreskin amputation.
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Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

That Unfeeling Nixon. Well, I guess he did feel some things, but nothing like what he could have felt if Pat Nixon gave it to him with a strap-on for once. He felt frustration with the "hippies" following the likes of Harvard Psychologist Richard Alpert and ingesting LSD-25, smoking grass, and protesting the doomed War in Vietnam. He didn't like "those moon-crickets" smoking "jazz cigarettes". I don't know if the Betty Ford Center advocates for the recovery of people who were in pain—personal trauma that could not be properly contextualized by the pre-frontal cortex of the human brain, perhaps because of activity in the amygdala or fear center of the brain, which perhaps, as Bill Wilson got the nerve to come to think in the 1950s, can prevent the Admitting of Problem(s) and the taking of a Fearless Moral Inventory, or perhaps fundamental frustrations that never arise to the surface, but rather remain buried under layers of internal conceptions in an environment wherein an internal world exists as well as an external one that we evolved as Social Animals to be able to navigate for survival and flourishing—and turned to Sniffing Glue , but Betty Ford lived through the 80s when that Other California Republican Mr. Reagan wanted to keep the powder-cocaine sniffing to his big-wig donors in the Southern State of Florida, and inadvertently through his lack of imagination about the Wonders of Market Action, gave us "cheap" crack-cocaine, and Cough-Syrup Rationing. Biden just as bad.
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

My biggest role model in life is Andrew Garfield. I have listened to and watched every interview he has ever done (except the ones after all the press junkets for tick, tick...BOOM!, you know what I mean if you know what I mean), and read with such blissful satisfaction every word that's come from his brain that's been recorded in print media. He has a heart as big as Jesus of Nazareth's, and I think Jesus would agree. He'd be like, damn, they don't know me like you know me, Andrew Garfield. Although, I think the two would disagree a bit about politics. Andrew Garfield said in 2015, something to the effect of, "Bernie Sondurs really resonates with me, but Hillary, wow, what history that would make, on so many levels." Because Jesus said, look, a carpenter comes into town, not particularly notable as a carpenter, can't get into the special Skilled-Carpenters' Union, that carpenter might end up being a "Scab" in the terminology of Bornie Sondurs and his Union-Thug Democrat supporters (some of whom being fellow Rutgers New Brunswick 2013 graduates as this Psychedelic Republican Eric Antisell, who sent your agent Joel Lubin some unsolicited fan mail with no obvious commercial value his Senior Year of studies there, as essentially, that student in class who has "the most interesting argument [the professor] believes he has ever heard" and insists "I'm right!"). And Hillary? She supports Fatherhood Nullification, like she does Motherhood Nullification? At least deadbeat dads don't invade their unwanted kids' nerve endings, or blood vessels, or physically alter their children in any way—they just go about their business, maybe going to a Hands-On-A-Hardbody type competition to win a truck somewhere around The People's Republic of Austin, Texas.

Another role model is Jane Aronson. Andrew vouches for her as a no-nonsense, no-f*ckin nonsense pediatrician and international adoption specialist. However, Jane is not the "voice inside my head".

Rick Doblin is a third hero.
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

Ability to fearlessly seek the truth. Humility to accept ourselves at times may be an obstacle to our finding the truth, or getting closer to truth. We often need each other. A U.S. Representative needs to represent everyone's voices as thoroughly as possible without devolving into the silly.
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

I am honest. I like people. I like learning. I know I was not born with perfect knowledge. I want to be proven wrong—sooner rather than later. I dislike nonsense when there are important things to be done. I do not fall for bullshit like many do. Frank Pallone attempted to "outsmart" me in dodging my question, time and time again, about safe, legal heroin use with a doctor. I documented it in uploads to instagram.com/antisell.nj (one upload is a 02:19 video, and one is a 00:39 reel). I am loyal, like a wolf. I do not mind being a lone wolf. I'm the hunter; I bring back the goods. But I don't know when.
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

Make sure you read every part of the legislation you are going to vote on. Make sure you can explain how you are voting on legislation. If you are part of a Committee Hearing, don't just share on social media your 5-Minutes Of Fame at that Committee that day without sharing where those interested can watch the whole thing. Don't be slimey. Be honest.
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Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

He really, earnestly took this 2-year term seriously. He did not want to have this title of Former U.S. Representative; he would have been happy to pursue his other interests without serving that 2-year term. There was no one else around for the job.
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

At Kindergarten graduation, June of 1998 at the old West Freehold School, when it was my turn to take the mic and tell God my plan for my life for Him to laugh at, I boldly proclaimed, "I wanna be the President...and a comedian."

I had no idea the scandal going on wherein Bill Clinton did the despicable in not standing up for Monica Lewinsky, which inspired Hillary Clinton not to stand up for Monica Lewinsky, but rather, to run for U.S. Senator for Wall St. In doing so, she became the candidate for President in the year 2008 with more Corporate Donations than all other candidates received, combined. When Obama got people excited because of yes his articulacy—which was not that much better than Dennis Kucinich's, in my opinion—but also the complexion he got from his biological father who rode an airplane to Hawaii and, well, put what Margaret Sanger would call a "dark-skinned" into his mama's Sovereign Body—which Obama would argue she can take and secede from Civilization and declare an Autonomous Zone wherein she could put Obama's skull into the equivalent of a vice (like in the 1995 film "Casino") and squeeze it until his future-President brains spew out, to be "scraped" out my the abortionist and placed into a Medical Waste bucket, from whence Little Obama would have no right to "pester" the adults in the room with any annoying indication of agony (i.e. screaming and crying), or have his demise as a fetal baby ensured through chemical poisoning.

Well, this Obama character who thought himself (a State Senator of Illinois with 2 years experience in the federal legislature when he announced his candidacy for POTUS) a 21st-Century Abraham Lincoln, wasn't gonna pull a What Do We Do With H.W., she got to be Secretary of State—enforcing de-jure discrimination against Africans who cannot afford plane tickets to U.S. soil, against "darkies" from elsewhere in the Americas, against the Asians with the cheap tire imports he slapped tariffs on and bragged about it. 2016.
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

I worked the front register at Wendy's the Summer of 2006 from June to September at the Freehold Raceway Mall. The guidance office at Barkalow Middle School said they would not give me my Working Papers until I turned 14, which was June 8th. I lied about my age so I could complete the on-boarding process and start as soon as I turned 14.

I was delighted to work with native Spanish-speakers. I was very serious about developing fluency in Spanish. I had bought 501 Spanish Verbs, a Spanish-English dictionary, Don Quixote in Spanish, and Mi Vida by Bill Clinton. It was an opportunity to learn whatever I would have studying Spanish as my single foreign-language option in high school, and more. It thus encouraged me even more to start studying French in high school, with the hope of being fluent in all 3 de-facto official languages of North American governments.

I quit so as to not interfere with my high school studies. Big mistake. I ended up not being able to find a job in 2007, when my legal guardians were trying to get me to go to Summer School, because I resented high school and did poorly there academically. I got C's and D's and a few F's in all subjects except Volleyball Class and French 1. I should have been able to start at French 2 after demonstrating my ability to pass on the first day of high school the French 1 final exam on Scantron. French 2 my sophomore year, yikes, a lot of tension between me and a very cool guy who worked in a building I simply did not want to be in, except in my first period class with a fellow male student I was fond of, and in my last period class with that student in it.

It was this 2007-2008 year of high school that I discovered myself to be "A Man's Man". I took this newfound clarity about who I was into the Burger King on Schanck Rd and filled out the tiny application on *a piece of paper*, as opposed to a 12-page internet application for BK Corporation. I wrote my cellphone digits at the top—like, "I don't mess around."
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

The audiobook for James Joyce's "Ulysses". It is like listening to a radio play—a radio play written by James Joyce.
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

Professor McGonagall. I don't want to be type-cast for too long as Slytherin.
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

"Nobody" by Mitski.
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

It was intended to be The People's Chamber, as opposed to the Chamber representing the States' governments. I approve of its 2-year terms. I approve of its duties under the 12th Amendment.
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Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

We are failing to be educated and to educate others. There are far too few life-long learners in America. The other night I was at a gas-station convenience store. I looked at the people who were working there that night. Around my age, maybe 8 years my junior. I started crying. I was crying because I cannot even get a job like they have. I cannot compete in today's world. Not because they have skills I lack, but because I am literally not typical enough. And in America 2022, to be typical is to not be qualified to be a U.S. Representative.

Stop scapegoating immigrants. I am a native-born American who can't get a job because native-born and immigrant employers have equally bizarro-world abilities to gauge a prospective employee's potential.

I would be a great busser at a restaurant.

I would make a great cashier. ALDI USA told me they reviewed my application and they said I wasn't qualified enough.

Fine. I'll make my own industry.
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

House Subcommittee on Health. Whereas: Drug Rehabs are often shams; Mental Healthcare is often ineffective; Psychiatry needs to enter the 21st Century and accept Psychedelics as Medicine; Insurance and Medicaid/Medicare are subsidizing Psychiatric Malpractice; we need to encourage Psychiatric Innovation; we need to point out that there is no medical need for the painful surgery on children that removes their foreskin for life, and that there are ways to keep foreskin clean like there are ways to keep one's eyelids clean. We have a Mass Mental Illness problem in America. Its expressions include assault, self-harm, addiction, and immense underproductivity.

House Subcommittee on Early, Elementary, and Secondary Education. Sex ed isn't working, look at all the paychecks to abortionists in America. Let's talk about Intimacy, not just "Pounding Vadj". Let's have a national forum for ideas to innovate how we become educated. Foreign Languages classes, wherein you learn 2 foreign languages besides your native tongue, grammar in all 3 languages, how to use those languages effectively through speaking, writing, and communicating visually and musically. Visual Literacy. Language Arts that include film and Multimedia. Example: RUSSIAN 101/GERMAN 101 (PROPOGANDA).

Example: SPANISH 201/LATIN 201 (ALMODOVAR/THE BIBLE).
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

Yes. Although I would accept a shorter one if Frank Pallone stepped down before November 8th and we had a Special Election in New Jersey this year.
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Eric_Antisell_2025.jpg

Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

Do we need them on the President? If yes, then on Congress too.

We should have fewer megalomaniacal Americans, and reduce the magnitude thereof in those we cannot resist at the ballot box, which would render moot the question of term limits. Regular, on-record public engagement—try digital town halls—can expose reason for doubt in the justice of a public official's legal powers or power to be influential.

We don't have term limits on the Vice-President. This could be put to good use for stabilization purposes over the years.

Brett Kavanaugh should end his term.

If Rand Paul didn't make such a fool out of himself during Covid, I'd say, Rand, term limit yourself to 2 terms in the U.S. Senate, then run in the 2024 presidential election—on a ticket with Mike Lee. Now we're getting Condi. I'm sorry, you have to win an election, and you have just Zero Chance of getting elected, if you are in a debate against Amy Klobuchar or the opponent in your worst political nightmare Sherrod Brown.

Fine. If Justin Amash sucks it up and gets Governor Gary Johnson as his Vice-Presidential running mate, I'm still probably gonna vote Not-Neocon. You blew it, Rand. You don't have Asperger's like your dad probably would have been diagnosed with.

But, seriously, Rand Paul should term-limit himself if there is someone as much Not-Mitch McConnell as Rand Paul is, to free Rand up to do international, volunteer ophthalmology (removing cataracts from thankful patients in Central and South America, for example). There's a big world out there. You must...find an 'eir. To serve Kentucky in the U.S. Senate! Can Jackie from TX CD-14 pull a Bobby Kennedy in 2024? All the Students for Ron Paul phonebanking in New Hampshire agreed: she should run to be Ron's successor. Don't let your successor be like that guy. Jackie showed me a picture of him on her phone. Unless your successor is like that in his personal life, with good contributions to make to federal policy like Peter Schiff has.
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Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

Justin Amash posted to Facebook explanations for every single vote he took for the 10 years he served, which he says helped him hold himself to a higher standard of consistency based on reason and anticipation of re-evaluation of past reasoning throughout his tenure of service. He came very close to having perfect attendance for congressional votes.
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Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

I know a man who was discharged from a Philosophy Prison, a New Jersey psychiatric hospital, to a homeless shelter in Asbury Park. I know a man who was detained by a psychiatric hospital, for profit, for wanting to commit suicide; he planned to move to New York City upon release and try to make ends meet as an actor. I know a woman with XY chromosomes who was forcibly removed from her residence on a stretcher because her parents said she was suicidal.

I do not know if any of them are still alive.

This is the world that Health Subcommittee Chair Frank Pallone knows nothing of.
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Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

Knock Knock. Who's there. It's Grandma! Grandma who. Woht do you mean? It's your Grandma. Open the door. Why did you just punch the door? Open up the door and let me inside, please.
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Eric Antisell (Move Everyone Forward)

Members of the House of Representatives need to be able to make amendments to legislation from the floor. Speaker Ryan was the first (in U.S. history, I believe) to prohibit it. Speaker McCarthy continued it, as did Speaker Pelosi. "No legislation gets a vote except through me, because my Party has at least one more seat in the House than yours does for the next 2 years." Thus I believe it necessary for desirable policymaking not to let any of the past 3 Speakers of the House ever become Speaker again.



Campaign finance

This section contains campaign finance figures from the Federal Election Commission covering all candidate fundraising and spending in this election.[2] It does not include information on fundraising before the current campaign cycle or on spending by satellite groups. The numbers in this section are updated as candidates file new campaign finance reports. Candidates for Congress are required to file financial reports on a quarterly basis, as well as two weeks before any primary, runoff, or general election in which they will be on the ballot and upon the termination of any campaign committees.[3] Click here to view the reporting schedule for candidates for U.S. Congress in 2022.

U.S. Congress campaign reporting schedule, 2022
Report Close of books Filing deadline
Year-end 2021 12/31/2021 1/31/2022
April quarterly 3/31/2022 4/15/2022
July quarterly 6/30/2022 7/15/2022
October quarterly 9/30/2022 10/15/2022
Pre-general 10/19/2022 10/27/2022
Post-general 11/28/2022 12/08/2022
Year-end 2022 12/31/2022 1/31/2023


Name Party Receipts* Disbursements** Cash on hand Date
Frank Pallone Jr. Democratic Party $3,144,740 $3,795,593 $2,686,743 As of December 31, 2022
Susan Kiley Republican Party $399,477 $399,477 $0 As of December 31, 2022
Rik Mehta Republican Party $182,778 $182,734 $597 As of December 31, 2022
Tom Toomey Republican Party $124,657 $124,657 $0 As of November 3, 2022
Tara Fisher Libertarian Party $0 $0 $0 Data not available***
Eric Antisell Move Everyone Forward $0 $0 $0 Data not available***
Inder Soni New Jersey First $0 $0 $0 Data not available***

Source: Federal Elections Commission, "Campaign finance data," 2022. This product uses the openFEC API but is not endorsed or certified by the Federal Election Commission (FEC).

* According to the FEC, "Receipts are anything of value (money, goods, services or property) received by a political committee."
** According to the FEC, a disbursement "is a purchase, payment, distribution, loan, advance, deposit or gift of money or anything of value to influence a federal election," plus other kinds of payments not made to influence a federal election.
*** Candidate either did not report any receipts or disbursements to the FEC, or Ballotpedia did not find an FEC candidate ID.

General election race ratings

See also: Race rating definitions and methods

Ballotpedia provides race ratings from four outlets: The Cook Political Report, Inside Elections, Sabato's Crystal Ball, and DDHQ/The Hill. Each race rating indicates if one party is perceived to have an advantage in the race and, if so, the degree of advantage:

  • Safe and Solid ratings indicate that one party has a clear edge and the race is not competitive.
  • Likely ratings indicate that one party has a clear edge, but an upset is possible.
  • Lean ratings indicate that one party has a small edge, but the race is competitive.[4]
  • Toss-up ratings indicate that neither party has an advantage.

Race ratings are informed by a number of factors, including polling, candidate quality, and election result history in the race's district or state.[5][6][7]

Race ratings: New Jersey's 6th Congressional District election, 2022
Race trackerRace ratings
November 8, 2022November 1, 2022October 25, 2022October 18, 2022
The Cook Political Report with Amy WalterSolid DemocraticSolid DemocraticSolid DemocraticSolid Democratic
Inside Elections with Nathan L. GonzalesSolid DemocraticSolid DemocraticSolid DemocraticSolid Democratic
Larry J. Sabato's Crystal BallSafe DemocraticSafe DemocraticSafe DemocraticSafe Democratic
Note: Ballotpedia reviews external race ratings every week throughout the election season and posts weekly updates even if the media outlets have not revised their ratings during that week.

Ballot access requirements

The table below details filing requirements for U.S. House candidates in New Jersey in the 2022 election cycle. For additional information on candidate ballot access requirements in New Jersey, click here.

Filing requirements for U.S. House candidates, 2022
State Office Party Signatures required Filing fee Filing deadline Source
New Jersey U.S. House Ballot-qualified party 200 N/A 4/4/2022 Source
New Jersey U.S. House Unaffiliated 50 N/A 6/7/2022 Source

District analysis

Click the tabs below to view information about voter composition, past elections, and demographics in both the district and the state.

  • District map - A map of the district before and after redistricting.
  • Effect of redistricting - How districts in the state changed as a result of redistricting following the 2020 census.
  • Competitiveness - Information about the competitiveness of 2022 U.S. House elections in the state.
  • Presidential elections - Information about presidential elections in the district and the state.
  • Demographics - Information about the state's demographics and how they compare to the country as a whole.
  • State party control - The partisan makeup of the state's congressional delegation and state government.

District map

Below was the map in use at the time of the election, enacted as part of the 2020 redistricting cycle, compared to the map in place before the election.

New Jersey District 6
until January 2, 2023

Click a district to compare boundaries.

New Jersey District 6
starting January 3, 2023

Click a district to compare boundaries.


Effect of redistricting

See also: Redistricting in New Jersey after the 2020 census

The table below details the results of the 2020 presidential election in each district at the time of the 2022 election and its political predecessor district.[8] This data was compiled by Daily Kos Elections.[9]

2020 presidential results by Congressional district, New Jersey
District 2022 district Political predecessor district
Joe Biden Democratic Party Donald Trump Republican Party Joe Biden Democratic Party Donald Trump Republican Party
New Jersey's 1st 61.5% 37.1% 62.1% 36.6%
New Jersey's 2nd 46.9% 51.8% 47.9% 50.8%
New Jersey's 3rd 56.3% 42.3% 49.2% 49.4%
New Jersey's 4th 38.1% 60.6% 44.1% 54.6%
New Jersey's 5th 55.6% 43.2% 51.9% 46.7%
New Jersey's 6th 59.0% 39.7% 57.2% 41.5%
New Jersey's 7th 51.1% 47.3% 54.2% 44.3%
New Jersey's 8th 72.1% 26.8% 71.8% 27.2%
New Jersey's 9th 58.9% 40.0% 62.2% 36.8%
New Jersey's 10th 80.6% 18.6% 84.2% 15.0%
New Jersey's 11th 57.8% 40.9% 52.7% 46.0%
New Jersey's 12th 66.6% 32.1% 67.3% 31.4%

Competitiveness

See also: Primary election competitiveness in state and federal government, 2022

This section contains data on U.S. House primary election competitiveness in New Jersey.

Post-filing deadline analysis

The following analysis covers all U.S. House districts up for election in New Jersey in 2022. Information below was calculated on May 16, 2022, and may differ from information shown in the table above due to candidate replacements and withdrawals after that time.

Fifty-five candidates filed to run for New Jersey’s 12 U.S. House districts, including 20 Democrats and 35 Republicans. That’s 4.58 candidates per district, more than the 4.17 candidates per district in 2020 and the 4.08 in 2018. This was the first election to take place under new district lines following the 2020 census. New Jersey was apportioned 12 districts, the same number it was apportioned after the 2010 census.

The 55 candidates that ran in 2022 are the highest number of House candidates since at least 2014, the earliest year for which we have data.

Rep. Albio Sires (D) did not file for re-election, making the 8th district the only open seat this year. That’s one more than in 2020, when there were no open seats, and one less than in 2018, when the 2nd and the 11th districts were open. Nine candidates — seven Republicans and two Democrats, including incumbent Rep. Tom Malinowski (D) — filed to run in the 7th district, the most running for one seat this year. That’s two more than in 2020, when seven candidates ran in the 2nd district, and one less than in 2018, when 10 candidates ran in the 11th district.

There were six contested Democratic primaries this year, the lowest number since 2016, and 10 contested Republican primaries, the most since at least 2014. Five incumbents — all Democrats — did not face any primary challengers this year. That’s one more than in 2020, when four incumbents did not face any primary challengers.

Candidates filed to run in the Republican and Democratic primaries in all 12 districts, so no seats were guaranteed to either party this year.

Presidential elections

Partisan Voter Index

See also: The Cook Political Report's Partisan Voter Index

Heading into the 2022 elections, based on results from the 2020 and 2016 presidential elections, the Cook Partisan Voter Index for this district was D+8. This meant that in those two presidential elections, this district's results were 8 percentage points more Democratic than the national average. This made New Jersey's 6th the 142nd most Democratic district nationally.[10]

2020 presidential election results

The table below shows what the vote in the 2020 presidential election would have been in this district. The presidential election data was compiled by Daily Kos.

2020 presidential results in New Jersey's 6th based on 2022 district lines
Joe Biden Democratic Party Donald Trump Republican Party
59.0% 39.7%

Presidential voting history

See also: Presidential election in New Jersey, 2020

New Jersey presidential election results (1900-2020)

  • 15 Democratic wins
  • 16 Republican wins
Year 1900 1904 1908 1912 1916 1920 1924 1928 1932 1936 1940 1944 1948 1952 1956 1960 1964 1968 1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2020
Winning Party R R R D R R R R D D D D R R R D D R R R R R R D D D D D D D D


Demographics

The table below details demographic data in New Jersey and compares it to the broader United States as of 2019.

Demographic Data for New Jersey
New Jersey United States
Population 9,288,994 331,449,281
Land area (sq mi) 7,354 3,531,905
Race and ethnicity**
White 65.5% 70.4%
Black/African American 13.4% 12.6%
Asian 9.7% 5.6%
Native American 0.3% 0.8%
Pacific Islander 0% 0.2%
Other (single race) 6.4% 5.1%
Multiple 4.8% 5.2%
Hispanic/Latino 20.4% 18.2%
Education
High school graduation rate 90.3% 88.5%
College graduation rate 40.7% 32.9%
Income
Median household income $85,245 $64,994
Persons below poverty level 9.7% 12.8%
Source: population provided by U.S. Census Bureau, "Decennial Census" (2020). Other figures provided by U.S. Census Bureau, "American Community Survey" (5-year estimates 2015-2020).
**Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.


State party control

Congressional delegation

The table below displays the partisan composition of New Jersey's congressional delegation as of November 2022.

Congressional Partisan Breakdown from New Jersey, November 2022
Party U.S. Senate U.S. House Total
Democratic 2 10 12
Republican 0 2 2
Independent 0 0 0
Vacancies 0 0 0
Total 2 12 14

State executive

The table below displays the officeholders in New Jersey's top four state executive offices as of November 2022.

State executive officials in New Jersey, November 2022
Office Officeholder
Governor Democratic Party Phil Murphy
Lieutenant Governor Democratic Party Sheila Oliver
Secretary of State Democratic Party Tahesha Way
Attorney General Democratic Party Matt Platkin

State legislature

The tables below highlight the partisan composition of the New Jersey State Legislature as of November 2022.

New Jersey State Senate

Party As of November 2022
     Democratic Party 24
     Republican Party 16
     Vacancies 0
Total 40

New Jersey General Assembly

Party As of November 2022
     Democratic Party 46
     Republican Party 34
     Vacancies 0
Total 80

Trifecta control

As of November 2022, New Jersey was a Democratic trifecta, with majorities in both chambers of the state legislature and control of the governorship. The table below displays the historical trifecta status of the state.

New Jersey Party Control: 1992-2022
Eleven years of Democratic trifectas  •  Eight years of Republican trifectas
Scroll left and right on the table below to view more years.

Year 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Governor D D R R R R R R R R D D D D D D D D R R R R R R R R D D D D D
Senate R R R R R R R R R R S S D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D
Assembly R R R R R R R R R R D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D

District history

2020

See also: New Jersey's 6th Congressional District election, 2020

New Jersey's 6th Congressional District election, 2020 (July 7 Democratic primary)

New Jersey's 6th Congressional District election, 2020 (July 7 Republican primary)

General election

General election for U.S. House New Jersey District 6

Incumbent Frank Pallone Jr. defeated Christian Onuoha in the general election for U.S. House New Jersey District 6 on November 3, 2020.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Frank Pallone Jr.
Frank Pallone Jr. (D)
 
61.2
 
199,648
Image of Christian Onuoha
Christian Onuoha (R)
 
38.8
 
126,760

Total votes: 326,408
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Democratic primary election

Democratic primary for U.S. House New Jersey District 6

Incumbent Frank Pallone Jr. defeated Russell Cirincione and Amani Al-Khatahtbeh in the Democratic primary for U.S. House New Jersey District 6 on July 7, 2020.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Frank Pallone Jr.
Frank Pallone Jr.
 
79.2
 
56,660
Image of Russell Cirincione
Russell Cirincione
 
17.0
 
12,139
Amani Al-Khatahtbeh
 
3.8
 
2,743

Total votes: 71,542
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Republican primary election

Republican primary for U.S. House New Jersey District 6

Christian Onuoha defeated Sammy Gindi in the Republican primary for U.S. House New Jersey District 6 on July 7, 2020.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Christian Onuoha
Christian Onuoha (Write-in)
 
100.0
 
508
Sammy Gindi (Write-in)
 
0.0
 
0

Total votes: 508
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

2018

See also: New Jersey's 6th Congressional District election, 2018

General election

General election for U.S. House New Jersey District 6

Incumbent Frank Pallone Jr. defeated Rich Pezzullo in the general election for U.S. House New Jersey District 6 on November 6, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Frank Pallone Jr.
Frank Pallone Jr. (D)
 
63.6
 
140,752
Image of Rich Pezzullo
Rich Pezzullo (R)
 
36.4
 
80,443

Total votes: 221,195
(100.00% precincts reporting)
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Democratic primary election

Democratic primary for U.S. House New Jersey District 6

Incumbent Frank Pallone Jr. defeated Javahn Walker in the Democratic primary for U.S. House New Jersey District 6 on June 5, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Frank Pallone Jr.
Frank Pallone Jr.
 
86.2
 
23,621
Javahn Walker
 
13.8
 
3,770

Total votes: 27,391
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Republican primary election

Republican primary for U.S. House New Jersey District 6

Rich Pezzullo advanced from the Republican primary for U.S. House New Jersey District 6 on June 5, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Rich Pezzullo
Rich Pezzullo
 
100.0
 
9,827

Total votes: 9,827
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

2016

See also: New Jersey's 6th Congressional District election, 2016

Heading into the election, Ballotpedia rated this race as safely Democratic. Incumbent Frank Pallone Jr. (D) defeated Brent Sonnek-Schmelz (R), Judi Shamy (L), and Rajit Malliah (G) in the general election on November 8, 2016. No candidate faced a primary opponent in June. Pallone won re-election in the November 8 election.[11][12][13]

U.S. House, New Jersey District 6 General Election, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.pngFrank Pallone Incumbent 63.7% 167,895
     Republican Brent Sonnek-Schmelz 34.9% 91,908
     Green Rajit Malliah 0.7% 1,912
     Libertarian Judi Shamy 0.7% 1,720
Total Votes 263,435
Source: New Jersey Division of Elections

Primary candidates:[14]

Democratic

Frank Pallone Jr. - Incumbent[11] Approveda

Republican

Brent Sonnek-Schmelz[11] Approveda

2014

See also: New Jersey's 6th Congressional District elections, 2014

New Jersey's 6th Congressional District held an election for the U.S. House of Representatives on November 4, 2014. Incumbent Frank Pallone Jr. (D) defeated Anthony Wilkinson (R) and Dorit Goikhman (L) in the general election.

U.S. House, New Jersey District 6 General Election, 2014
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.pngFrank Pallone Incumbent 59.9% 72,190
     Republican Anthony Wilkinson 38.9% 46,891
     Libertarian Dorit Goikhman 1.1% 1,376
Total Votes 120,457
Source: New Jersey Division of Elections

June 3, 2014, primary results

Republican Party Republican Primary

Democratic Party Democratic Primary


See also

New Jersey 2022 primaries 2022 U.S. Congress elections
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External links

Footnotes

  1. Daily Kos, "Daily Kos Elections' 2020 presidential results by congressional district, for new and old districts," accessed September 15, 2022
  2. Fundraising by primary candidates can be found on the race's respective primary election page. Fundraising by general election candidates can be found on the race's general election page.
  3. Federal Election Commission, "2022 Quarterly Reports," accessed March 2, 2022
  4. Inside Elections also uses Tilt ratings to indicate an even smaller advantage and greater competitiveness.
  5. Amee LaTour, "Email correspondence with Nathan Gonzalez," April 19, 2018
  6. Amee LaTour, "Email correspondence with Kyle Kondik," April 19, 2018
  7. Amee LaTour, "Email correspondence with Charlie Cook," April 22, 2018
  8. Political predecessor districts are determined primarily based on incumbents and where each chose to seek re-election.
  9. Daily Kos Elections, "Daily Kos Elections 2020 presidential results by congressional district (old CDs vs. new CDs)," accessed May 12, 2022
  10. Cook Political Report, "The 2022 Cook Partisan Voting Index (Cook PVI℠)," accessed February 6, 2023
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 New Jersey Division of Elections, "Candidates for House of Representatives for Primary Election 6/7/2016," accessed April 5, 2016
  12. New Jersey Secretary of State, "Candidates for House of Representatives," accessed September 7, 2016
  13. CNN, "New Jersey House 06 Results," November 8, 2016
  14. Candidates are listed by party and alphabetically within each party.
  15. 15.0 15.1 State of New Jersey Department of State, "Candidates for House of Representatives," accessed April 22, 2014


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Vacancies (1)