Woodbridge’s McCabe falls short in bid for county Democratic chairman

Kevin McCabe in a 2004 file photo.
Committee members from each of the county’s municipalities chose the retired FBI agent over former state labor secretary by a vote of 517 to 412.
Barnes’ running mate, Perth Amboy Democratic chairwoman Leslie Dominguez-Rodriguez, was elected vice chairwoman of the organization.
The two Democrats, and the party factions behind them, began clamoring for control of the powerful organization soon after retired Sheriff Joseph Spicuzzo resigned as chairman March 7 — the same day he turned himself in on charges of corruption.
Woodbridge Mayor John E. McCormac campaigned intensely for McCabe and managed to bring out 139 of the township's 146 committee seats to the convention. But the numbers were not enough to counter the pull of state Sen. Bob Smith of Piscataway and Woodbridge nemesis John Wisniewski, the state party chairman and assemblyman from Sayreville.
McCabe, 38, is a former labor secretary under Gov. Jim McGreevey and served as Democratic chairman in Woodbridge, where he lives in the Sewaren section, and as the chief of staff to McGreevey when he was mayor of Woodbridge.
Barnes, 82, a former FBI agent and assemblyman from 1996 to 2007, served as chairman of the New Jersey State Parole Board and had been police director in Edison and East Brunswick. His son, Peter J. Barnes III, succeeded him in the assembly.













Tom Maras 1:01 pm on June 15, 2011 Permalink
By all accounts, Peter Barnes, Jr., is a man of great integrity and high moral character. The Middlesex County Democrats were fortunate to have him as a candidate for the Chairmanship and wise enough to elect him to the positions.
Perhaps some, be they Democrat, Republican or other, reading the above article, and in particular the following, “Woodbridge Mayor John E. McCormac campaigned intensely for McCabe and managed to bring out 139 of the township’s 146 committee seats to the convention. But the numbers were not enough to counter the pull of state Sen. Bob Smith of Piscataway and Woodbridge nemesis John Wisniewski, the state party chairman and assemblyman from Sayreville”, will see the McCabe/McCormac loss as a shift away from the McCormac style of politics.
It would be hard to imagine McCormac’s power and influence within his party has not be greatly diminished by the McCabe loss. Perhaps, it is a sign of things to come for McCormac, even in Woodbridge.