Republican Jack Ciattarelli is leaning on his endorsement from President Donald Trump to win next month’s GOP prim for governor in New Jersey, pledging support for the president and saying during a debate Tuesday that he would not challenge Trump’s executive orders in court.
“I’m going to continue to work with the president. We spoke about that last week when we spoke about making the country and New Jersey safe again. We do that by getting rid of sanctu cities, by getting rid of our sanctu state status,” Ciattarelli said during an exchange on immigration policy.
“I told him my attorney general will not be suing the White House for executive orders. We’re not going to waste taxpayer dollars,” Ciattarelli said, later adding that he would “follow [Trump]’s lead” on deportations and that criminals should be deported.
“At the end of the day, if he’s going to deport all 14, 15 or 16 million, I support the president,” Ciattarelli said. “He was elected on the promise of making the country safe again.”
Ciattarelli went on to defend his support for giving drivers licenses to undocumented immigrants, saying, “If by chance there are people he is not going to deport, we have to know who they are.”
Ciattarelli touted Trump’s endorsement multiple times throughout the debate, at which he faced off against former radio host Bill Spadea, a staunch Trump supporter, and state Sen. Jon Bramnick, a Trump critic. Two other GOP candidates on the ballot for the June 10 prim did not meet the fundraising threshold to qualify for the debate, which was hosted by On New Jersey, the New Jersey Globe, Rider University and Save Jersey.
Ciattarelli, a former state assemblyman who narrowly lost in the general election against Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy in 2021, has been leading the prim field in limited public polling and campaign spending. Ciattarelli’s campaign also launched a TV ad Tuesday that highlighted Trump’s endorsement.