From Politico:
Mikie Sherrill puts fiscal restraint at center of her first budget for New Jersey
Gov. Mikie Sherrill entered office promising a more affordable New Jersey. Her first major test of that is here.
The Democratic governor on Tuesday unveiled a $60.7 billion state spending plan — which includes $2 billion in cuts and is $980 million more than the state’s current budget. Among the largest reductions is $500 million from New Jersey’s property tax relief program for seniors — a move that could challenge her campaign pledges of affordability.
The spending plan comes as Democrats across the country are focusing on an affordability message headed into the midterms — hoping it will secure majorities in Congress and down-ballot victories in Statehouses. And it comes as polling shows voters don’t trust President Donald Trump’s handling of pocketbook issues.
But promises of affordability are quickly running into the reality of choppy economic waters and rising costs of running the government. Sherrill said her cuts are needed to prevent New Jersey’s financial decline — recently, she warned that the state is projected to spend $3 billion more than it received in revenues. That gap is now expected to be $1.7 billion for the upcoming fiscal year under Sherrill’s plan.
“It’s time to close the deficit the right way, structurally, so we’re not just plugging new holes every year,” Sherrill said in her first budget address. “It’s a simple lesson we learn as kids: You can’t spend more than you earn.”
The high-profile speech also previewed the legislative agenda for the new governor. She promised to address rent-setting algorithms and a will usher through a “historic” reform bill on pharmaceutical middlemen known as pharmacy benefits managers (former Gov. Phil Murphy also made PBM reform a focus during his second term in office).
Sherrill’s push to cut funding for the senior property tax relief program, known as Stay NJ, could become an early political battle with the Democratically-controlled Legislature. Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin, a Democrat, is the largest supporter of the tax program, which provides a maximum of $6,500 in property tax relief for seniors making up to $500,000 in the state. It was expected to cost the state about $1.2 billion a year.
Sherrill’s plan includes $700 million for Stay NJ, and would reduce the eligibility threshold to $250,000 and reduce the maximum benefit to $4,000 across the board.
And while lawmakers traditionally include last-minute add-ons to the state budget — amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars in special line item spending — Sherrill vowed to end that practice. She called out legislative leaders who sat behind her and Murphy — albeit not by name — for approving billions in new tax credits and new spending items last year.