From NJ.com:
Gov. Murphy bids farewell after 8 tumultuous years. N.J. is ‘stronger and fairer.’
Gov. Phil Murphy gave a celebratory goodbye speech to New Jersey on Tuesday, painting his administration as one that brought big changes despite tumult — and lived up to his sweeping campaign slogan from eight years ago.
“Together, we have built a New Jersey that is stronger and fairer than ever before,” the 68-year-old Democrat said in his final State of the State address, recalling his longtime pledge to make his adopted home state both those things.
“We were who we said we’d be — and we did what we said we’d do.”
Speaking to an audience of officials and dignitaries at the Statehouse in Trenton a week before he’s set to leave office, Murphy touted what he sees as the major moments of his two terms as the Garden State’s 56th governor.
That included managing the uncertainty of COVID-19 and installing progressive policies that pushed the state decidedly leftward — while still reshaping the state’s economy, he argued.
Murphy also said his administration pushed back against Republican President Donald Trump’s “attack” on democracy and immigration.
And he thanked Jerseyans for “joining me in this journey to ensure we leave our children a state that is better than we found it.”
Term-limited Murphy delivered the roughly hour-and-a-half, 7,300-word speech as he prepares to hand the state’s torch to Gov.-elect Mikie Sherrill, a fellow Democrat who will take office next Tuesday after easily winninglast year’s election to succeed him. It will mark the first time since 1961 that one party has held the governor’s office in New Jersey for three straight terms.
Democrats also strengthened their grip on Trenton’s lawmaking body. Hours before Murphy’s speech, the state Assembly class of the 222nd New Jersey Legislature was sworn in — including 12 new members, all Democrats, five of whom who ousted Republican incumbents.
The party now has a 24-seat advantage in the lower chamber, on top of its control of the state Senate. It’s Democrats’ biggest Assembly majority since 1974, when Watergate upended Republicans.
