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Swapan Basu

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Swapan Basu
Image of Swapan Basu
Personal
Profession
Educator

Swapan Basu was a candidate for at-large representative on the Newark Public Schools Board of Education in New Jersey. Basu was defeated in the at-large general election on April 25, 2017.

Biography

Basu taught science for 12 years in public schools. He also heads a nonprofit called Rhyming Poets International, which makes use of poetry to inspire students.[1]

Elections

2017

See also: Newark Public Schools elections (2017)

The Newark Unity slate of candidates—Reginald Bledsoe, Josephine Garcia, and Flohisha Johnson—was victorious in the general election on April 25, 2017. This was the last election the Newark Public Schools Board of Education held before the board regains local control of the district. The board has held advisory status since it was taken over by the state of New Jersey in 1995. A total of 16 candidates filed to run for three seats up for at-large election, including one incumbent. Three of these candidates made up the Newark Unity slate, which was endorsed by Newark Mayor Ras Baraka. Three other candidates formed the Community Team slate. Following the 2016 election, all nine members of the board were Baraka-endorsed candidates and had been members of either the Children First Team or the Newark Unity slate.
Besides board incumbent Philip Seelinger, the candidates who filed to run in this election were Swapan Basu, Reginald Bledsoe, Patricia Bradford, Denise Cole, Anthony Diaz, Josephine Garcia, EZDehar Hatab, Jameel Ibrahim, Flohisha Johnson, Charles Love, Sheila Montague, Ryan Talmadge, Deborah Terrell, and Jimmie White. Bledsoe, Garcia, and Johnson ran as a part of the Newark Unity slate. Cole, Seelinger, and Talmadge made up another slate called the Community Team. Sixteenth candidate Sharon Smith filed for election but later decided she did not want to run in the race. Her name still appeared on the ballot. Diaz's name did not appear on the ballot.[2][3][4]

Results

Newark Public Schools,
At-Large General Election, 3-year terms, 2017
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Josephine Garcia 17.93% 3,595
Green check mark transparent.png Reginald Bledsoe 17.01% 3,411
Green check mark transparent.png Flohisha Johnson 13.66% 2,740
Charles Love 7.82% 1,568
Deborah Terrell 7.45% 1,494
Patricia Bradford 7.30% 1,465
Philip Seelinger Incumbent 5.88% 1,180
Denise Cole 5.25% 1,053
Sheila Montague 3.79% 761
Swapan Basu 3.65% 732
Jimmie White 2.99% 599
Ryan Talmadge 2.37% 475
Sharon Smith 2.28% 458
EZDehar Hatab 1.55% 311
Jameel Ibrahim 0.91% 182
Anthony Diaz 0.00%
Write-in votes 0.15% 31
Total Votes 20,055
Source: Essex County Clerk, "2017 School Board Election," accessed May 26, 2017

Funding

Campaign Finance Ballotpedia.png
See also: Campaign finance requirements in New Jersey and List of school board campaign finance deadlines in 2017

School board candidates in New Jersey had to file reports of their campaign financial activity with the New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission. Each candidate is required to appoint a treasurer (a candidate may serve as his or her own treasurer) and create a campaign depository (a bank account) and file this information with the commission. Candidates must establish a reporting committee, which has the sole name under which a candidate receives contributions, makes expenditures, labels his or her political identification statements, or otherwise does business. No later than 10 days after establishing a candidate committee, the candidate must file the Single Candidate Committee Certificate of Organization and Designation of Campaign Treasurer and Depository form.[5][6]

A candidate must begin filing reports with the commission on a date that depends upon when the committee's financial activity begins. If a candidate committee is set up within five months or less of the due date of the 29-day pre-election report, the committee must file a 29-day pre-election report as the initial election fund report. If the committee is established more than five months prior to the due date of the 29-day pre-election report, the committee must file a quarterly report as its initial election fund report. Beginning the 13th day before the election day and ending on election day, if a candidate receives more than $1,600 from a single source, the committee must file a report within 48 hours.[7]

There were five campaign finance reporting deadlines in 2017 for this school board election. Each deadline required the candidate to file a cumulative campaign report.

  • March 20, 2017 (29th day pre-election report)
  • April 5, 2017 (48-hour reporting began)
  • April 7, 2017 (11th day pre-election report)
  • April 18, 2017 (48-hour reporting ended)
  • May 8, 2017 (20th day post-election report)[8]

Basu had not reported any campaign contributions or expenditures to the commission as of April 12, 2017.

See also

External links

Footnotes