According to more than half a dozen of them, they had been promised $20 apiece for their enthusiasm.
"I don't know a whole lot about who is running, but they are offering $20 and I came out to work for whoever needs help," said Sheree Baker, 50, of Newark.
Shakirah Jones, 22, also said she was promised $20 "to scream out his name, I guess."
Lest you think this is just some sort of stupid conspiracy theory, the Forrester campaign admitted paying the attendees.
But that's not what the attendees said.
One woman who asked her name not be used said, "they told us we were going to come down here for an hour and we would get paid, period. I have a family to get home to."
Those of you not too familiar with New Jersey politics may roll your eyes and figure this is just typical Republican shenanigans, but nothing too worrisome. However, handing out money in traditionally Democratic disadvantaged areas is nothing new here. The state's Republicans have a history of using cash to depress the urban vote.
Columnist Errol Louis told the infamous story in a New York Daily News column last summer. It's worth noting that Louis was making the point that this is still a practice the GOP still practices, and not just in New Jersey.
Boasting to reporters, Rollins said the GOP margin of victory came from the payment of $500,000 in "street money" to African-American ministers who agreed to "forget" to urge black voters to go to the polls.
Rollins quickly recanted his statement, particularly when federal investigators began asking questions, but many people believe to this day that he wasn't kidding.
So this is what Jon Corzine and New Jersey's Democrats are up against. If Forrester and the Republicans can't win the urban vote, they figure they can just buy it. And if they can't buy votes for their own guy, they can at least pay people to stay home.
The only good thing about this story is that it's coming out a week before the election rather than a week too late.
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