In the days following Hurricane Sandy, Hoboken was one of those places that made it into every network’s video package of hard-hit areas, as thousands of people remained trapped by flood waters for days. Since then, Governor Christie waged, and won, a hard-fought battle to secure federal relief for the state, but in light of the Bridgegate revelations, Hoboken Mayor Dawn Zimmer wondered if her city was shortchanged when it came time to dole out those dollars simply because she wished to remain neutral in the gubernatorial election. Now, she says the motive was a redevelopment deal, and the payback scheme was much more explicit.
In his opening
According to an entry in Zimmer’s personal diary, Guadagno pulled her aside after a political event in Hoboken, “and says I need to move ahead with the Rockefeller project. The word is you’re against it and you need to move it forward or we’re not going to be able to help you. I know it’s not right. These things should not be connected but they are. If you tell anyone I said that, I will deny it.”
Zimmer also says that New Jersey Department of Community Affairs Commissioner Richard Constable told her, of the Rockefeller Group project and the Sandy relief, “If you move that forward, the money would start flowing to you.”
Here’s the portion of the segment regarding Mayor Zimmer’s diary:
During their exclusive interview, Kornacki first read statements from Christie’s office, and from Richard Constable. Christie spokesman Michael Drewniak, on behalf of Christie and Guadagno,
Constable’s statement read “I doubt that Mayor Zimmer would say such a thing, because that statement is categorically false.”
Kornacki also displayed some of that effusive praise, from Zimmer’s Twitter feed, and asked her how she’d respond to critics who ask “How can you believe her if she’s saying those nice things then, and this terrible thing happened before?”
“Of course I’m thankful for every penny we receive for Hoboken, our city was completely devastated,” Zimmer said. “I’m thankful for whatever we received. But the fact is that the Lieutenant Governor came to Hoboken, she pulled me aside in the parking lot, and she said, ‘I know it’s not right,I know these things should not be connected, but they are, and if you tell anyone, I’ll deny it.’ I mean, the bottom line is, it’s not fair for the governor to hold Sandy funds hostage for the City of Hoboken because he wants me to give back to one private developer.”
Kornacki also asked why she waited until now
Mediaite contacted Mayor Zimmer’s office on Monday to request documents related to Sandy relief, which they were then “compiling,” and have yet to provide us. Mayor Zimmer’s seriously damning accusations, personal diary notwithstanding, currently amount to her word against the Christie administration’s. On Monday, Mediaite filed a FOIA request with the State of New Jersey for documents and emails related to Hoboken’s Sandy relief aid, and any internal communications regarding Mayor Zimmer or the City of Hoboken in the period following the storm. That request is still pending.