2004 House of Representatives campaign In 2004, Spadea was the Republican nominee for the
U.S. House of Representatives in
New Jersey's 12th congressional district. During the campaign, he walked 200 miles to each of the 44 towns in the district. He polled over 40% of the vote on Election Day, and was ranked 17th out of 157 GOP challengers nationwide. Spadea’s campaign underperformed the top of the ticket - while George Bush lost by 9%, Spadea lost by 19%. Spadea was successful in raising more money than any other Republican challenger in New Jersey in 2004. He was considered a possible candidate for the United States Senate in 2006. Spadea served as a surrogate speaker for former
New York City Mayor and
presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani in New Jersey.
2012 New Jersey State Assembly campaign In 2012, Spadea ran for the state legislature, running for the
16th District's Assembly seat that was vacant after the death of Assemblyman
Peter J. Biondi. In the convention to appoint a replacement, he lost by a three to one margin, earning 52 votes, behind
Readington Township Committeewoman
Donna Simon with 155 votes. Spadea lost his own hometown of Princeton. Spadea failed to top 40% of the vote in his first two political campaigns - a trend that would continue in his third campaign.
Political organizations Spadea has also started a
political action committee called Elect Common Sense, which was announced in 2023. Along with this, he has created an independent expenditure organization named Common Sense Wins, and a nonprofit called the Common Sense Club, in support of conservative policies and "common sense" Republican candidates. Spadea's leadership of the Common Sense Club has been criticized, as the organization contributed less than one percent of the money it raised to support candidates, instead funneling hundreds of thousands into paying Spadea and the consultants who would work on his campaign for governor.
2025 New Jersey Governor campaign Spadea hinted that he would seek the 2025 GOP nomination for NJ Governor in late 2022, and announced in June 2024 that he is running. Spadea debated three other leading candidates in the Republican primary for the gubernatorial race on February 4, 2025. Spadea fought with candidate Jack Ciatterelli over their support for
Donald Trump, with both men accusing the other of inconsistent or insufficient support. Ciatterelli gained Trump's endorsement later in the race, and he eventually won the Republican primary on June 10th. Spadea lost to Ciattarelli, winning about 22% of the vote - continuing his streak of failing to receiving 40% in his elections for office. == Broadcasting ==