At
a press conference in Raritan, his hometown, Ciattarelli said he
had congratulated Murphy on his victory and assured supporters
his concession was justified.
"I called Governor Murphy earlier today and congratulated him on
his re-election and wished him well in serving people of New
Jersey," the former state senator said.
"There does not appear to be a path to victory or the basis for
a recount. Nor do we know of any systemic or widespread fraud,"
he told his supporters. "So no, I see no proof that this
election was stolen."
Ciattarelli, 59, prompted cheers from the audience when he
announced he would run for governor again in four years.
The Republican candidate had campaigned against high taxes and
sought to label Murphy, a wealthy former Goldman Sachs
executive, as out of touch.
New Jersey has trended Democratic in recent years. President Joe
Biden carried the state over former President Donald Trump last
year by more than 15 percentage points.
Murphy, 64, is the first Democratic governor in four decades to
win re-election in New Jersey, even though registered Democratic
voters outnumber Republicans by more than 1 million in the
densely populated state.
(Reporting by Katharine Jackson in Washington; Editing by Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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