Local government The township operates within the
Faulkner Act under the
Council-Manager form of government (Plan 3), implemented in its current form based on a direct petition as of January 1, 1990; the citizens of Aberdeen Township voted in November 1964 to change from the traditional
Township Committee form of government, which had been in force since 1857. The township is one of 42 municipalities (of the 564) statewide that use this form of government. The governing body is comprised of the Mayor and the Township Council. In this Council-Manager form, all policy making power is concentrated in the council. The Mayor is a member of the council and presides over its meetings. The Manager, appointed by and reporting to the council, is the chief executive and oversees the day-to-day operation of the borough. A seven-member Township Council is elected at large for staggered, four-year terms of office in partisan elections held every in odd-numbered years as part of the November general election; four seats are up together, followed two years later by the mayoral seat and the two other council seats. The mayor is directly elected, while the council selects a deputy mayor from among its members. , the
Mayor of Aberdeen Township is
Democrat Fred Tagliarini, whose term of office ends December 31, 2025. Members of the Aberdeen Township Council are Deputy Mayor Margaret Montone (D, 2025), Greg J. Cannon (D, 2027), Arthur S. Hirsch (D, 2027), Concetta B. Kelley (D, 2027), Joseph J. Martucci Sr. (D, 2025) and Robert L. Swindle (D, 2027).
Federal, state and county representation Aberdeen Township is located in the 6th Congressional district and is part of New Jersey's 13th state legislative district.
Politics As of March 2011, there were a total of 11,162 registered voters in Aberdeen Township, of which 3,145 (28.2%) were registered as
Democrats, 1,988 (17.8%) were registered as
Republicans and 6,021 (53.9%) were registered as
Unaffiliated. There were 8 voters registered as
Libertarians or
Greens. The township had been reliably Democratic in federal elections until Republican Donald Trump won it by 51.5% (5,600 votes) in the
2024 United States presidential election. This was the first time a Republican candidate had won Aberdeen Township and achieved over 50% of votes cast since at least
1992. Republican United States Senate candidate Curtis Bashaw simultaneously won the township with 49.4% of the vote (5, 124). In the
2020 presidential election, Democrat
Joe Biden received 53.7% of the vote (5,989 votes), ahead of Republican
Donald Trump with 45% (5,021 votes), and other candidates receiving 1.3% (150 votes), among 11,160 votes cast by the township's 14,130 voters for a turnout 80%. In the
2016 presidential election, Democrat
Hillary Clinton received 49.5% of the vote (4,328 votes), ahead of Republican Donald Trump with 47.2% (4,126 votes), and other candidates receiving 3.3% (284 votes), among 8,738 votes cast. In the
2012 presidential election, Democrat
Barack Obama received 56.7% of the vote (4,109 cast), ahead of Republican
Mitt Romney with 42.1% (3,054 votes), and other candidates with 1.2% (85 votes), among the 7,298 ballots cast by the township's 11,602 registered voters (50 ballots were
spoiled), for a turnout of 62.9%. In the
2017 gubernatorial election, Democrat
Phil Murphy received 50.5% (2,583 votes), ahead of Republican
Kim Guadagno with 47.2% (2,418 votes), and other candidates receiving 2.3% (119 votes). In the
2013 gubernatorial election, Republican
Chris Christie received 64.8% of the vote (3,085 cast), ahead of Democrat
Barbara Buono with 33.7% (1,603 votes), and other candidates with 1.6% (74 votes), among the 4,814 ballots cast by the township's 11,686 registered voters (52 ballots were spoiled), for a turnout of 41.2%. In the
2009 gubernatorial election, Republican Chris Christie received 55.7% of the vote (3,140 ballots cast), ahead of Democrat
Jon Corzine with 36.3% (2,048 votes), Independent
Chris Daggett with 5.7% (322 votes) and other candidates with 1.1% (63 votes), among the 5,642 ballots cast by the township's 11,371 registered voters, yielding a 49.6% turnout. == Education ==