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In August, Adler told the Courier-Post: "I know we weren't part of it." Runyan said his campaign was looking into whether there's any legal action that could be taken against Adler. The operatives told the Courier-Post that the plan was shared with members of the South Jersey Young Democrats, and some in that group gathered signatures for DeStefano
-- while others didn't because they thought the plan was unethical. Republicans started raising suspicions about DeStefano months ago when they found many of the signatures on his nominating petitions were from Democrats, including a former Adler campaign staffer. The campaign has been nasty and not especially focused on policy issues.
Adler has criticized Runyan for eschewing open-format debates, keeping donkeys on his property to qualify part of it for a lower agricultural tax rate and not denouncing spending by independent conservative groups that have targeted Adler. Runyan, meanwhile, has expressed outrage, claiming Adler falsely tried to link him with Republicans who want to privatize Social Security. He also filed charges accusing an Adler campaign volunteer of harassing his 8-year-old daughter while she played outside Runyan's home.
[Associated
Press;
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