Sen. Robert Menendez of New Jersey to seek reelection as independent
TRENTON, N.J. — U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat who is on trial on federal bribery charges in New York, has filed to run for reelection as an independent candidate.
Menendez, 70, said this year that he would not seek the Democratic nomination to pursue a fourth term. On Monday, he filed paperwork with the state to launch an independent bid. He had previously said an independent run for office was under consideration.
Asked on his way into court Monday if he’s changing political parties, Menendez said in Spanish, “No, independent doesn’t mean I’m changing.”
Menendez listed his party in documents filed with the state as “Menendez for Senate.”
The stakes are high, given the Democrats’ narrow control in the Senate, where New Jersey is normally safely in Democratic hands. It’s unclear how much support Menendez could siphon from U.S. Rep. Andy Kim, who is in a favorable position to win the Democratic primary, which ends Tuesday. The GOP hasn’t won a U.S. Senate election in the state since 1972.
For the second time in a decade, Sen. Bob Menendez is finding his political career and freedom on the line in a federal criminal case.
Kim, a three-term congressman from the 3rd District, said Menendez was running for himself, not the public.
“Americans are fed up with politicians putting their own personal benefit ahead of what’s right for the country,” Kim said.
Menendez, his wife, Nadine, and three business associates were charged last year by federal prosecutors in New York with running a scheme in which he promised to use his office to help the associates in return for gold bars, cash, a mortgage payment on his wife’s house and a luxury car. The Menedezes and two of the associates have pleaded not guilty; the third pleaded guilty and agreed to testify.
In court, prosecutors have argued that Menendez sought to sell his office to enrich himself, helping business associate Wael Hana get a lucrative monopoly on certifying meat exports to Egypt as meeting Islamic guidelines, and assisting Fred Daibes with investments linked to a member of the Qatari royal family.
Menendez has denied there was any corrupt scheme. His attorneys said his conduct constituted carrying out diplomacy and working on behalf of constituents. The gold bars belonged to his wife, and having cash around his house was a longtime habit stemming from his parents’ escape from Communist Cuba, according to his attorney.
Daibes and Hana are on trial alongside Menendez. Nadine Menendez is undergoing treatment for breast cancer, the senator has said, and is expected to go on trial later this summer.
Sen. Robert Menendez is skipping New Jersey’s Democratic primary while he fights federal corruption charges, but he’s open to an independent run for Senate if exonerated.
Menendez has held elected office for most of his life, joining the Union City, N.J., school board just two years out of high school. Since then, he has been elected to the Legislature, as a U.S. representative and, in 2006, as a U.S. senator.
He survived politically another federal trial, in 2017 in New Jersey, on charges that he used his office to help a friend defraud Medicare. The trial ended in a deadlocked jury, and prosecutors declined to hold another one. In 2018, with the backing of the state’s Democratic establishment, Menendez won reelection.
But his political fortunes turned after the September 2023 indictment, when allies across the state, including Gov. Phil Murphy, and in the Senate called for his resignation.
Menendez vowed to beat the charges against him and, like the previous time, promised to stick around. But he didn’t appear on ballots for Tuesday’s primary. By filing as an independent, he’s aiming for November instead.
Two Republican candidates, Curtis Bashaw and Christine Serrano Glassner, have garnered the most attention. Bashaw, a southern New Jersey hotel developer, has won significant county party support, while Serrano Glassner has former President Trump’s endorsement.
Catalini writes for the Associated Press. AP writer Larry Neumeister in New York contributed to this report.
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