Local government Lower Township operates within the
Faulkner Act, formally known as the Optional Municipal Charter Law, under the
Council-Manager form of government, which was adopted in 1984. The township is one of 42 municipalities (of the 564) statewide that use this form of government. The council is comprised of five members—the Mayor, the Council Member-at-Large and three
Ward seats—each elected on a partisan basis to four-year terms on a staggered basis, with either two seats (mayor and council at-large) or the three ward seats up for election in even-numbered years on an alternating basis as part of the November general election. Erik Simonsen won a special election in November 2013 to fill the seat of Glenn Douglass, who had resigned two months earlier and whose seat had been filled on an interim basis by Jackie Henderson. In January 2017, Roland Roy was selected from three candidates nominated by the Republican municipal committee to fill the Third Ward seat vacated by Erik Simonsen when he took office as mayor; Roy served on an interim basis until the November 2017 general election, when he was elected to serve the balance of the term through December 2018. In February 2020, the Township Council selected Keven Coombs to fill the Ward II seat expiring in December 2022 that became vacant when David Perry was chosen to serve as deputy mayor. Earlier that month, Perry had been shifted to deputy mayor after Frank Sippel was selected as mayor to replace
Erik K. Simonsen, who resigned to take office in the
New Jersey General Assembly.
Federal, state, and county representation Lower Township is located in the 2nd Congressional District and is part of New Jersey's 1st state legislative district.
Politics As of March 2011, there were a total of 14,612 registered voters in Lower Township, of which 3,000 (20.5%) were registered as
Democrats, 5,902 (40.4%) were registered as
Republicans and 5,702 (39.0%) were registered as
Unaffiliated. There were 8 voters registered as
Libertarians or
Greens. In the
2012 presidential election, Republican
Mitt Romney received 52.6% of the vote (5,493 cast), ahead of Democrat
Barack Obama with 46.2% (4,823 votes), and other candidates with 1.1% (120 votes), among the 10,534 ballots cast by the township's 15,217 registered voters (98 ballots were
spoiled), for a turnout of 69.2%. In the
2008 presidential election, Republican
John McCain received 52.2% of the vote (5,831 cast), ahead of Democrat
Barack Obama, who received 45.1% (5,040 votes), with 11,177 ballots cast among the township's 14,435 registered voters, for a turnout of 77.4%. In the
2004 presidential election, Republican
George W. Bush received 54.3% of the vote (5,951 ballots cast), outpolling Democrat
John Kerry, who received around 44.1% (4,830 votes), with 10,961 ballots cast among the township's 14,709 registered voters, for a turnout percentage of 74.5. In the
2013 gubernatorial election, Republican
Chris Christie received 70.8% of the vote (4,909 cast), ahead of Democrat
Barbara Buono with 27.6% (1,913 votes), and other candidates with 1.7% (115 votes), among the 7,142 ballots cast by the township's 14,910 registered voters (205 ballots were spoiled), for a turnout of 47.9%. In the
2009 gubernatorial election, Republican Chris Christie received 51.6% of the vote (3,712 ballots cast), ahead of both Democrat
Jon Corzine with 40.1% (2,882 votes) and Independent
Chris Daggett with 6.0% (433 votes), with 7,190 ballots cast among the township's 14,989 registered voters, yielding a 48.0% turnout. ==Education==