The district had 149,156 registered voters as of December 1, 2021, of whom 53,472 (35.8%) were registered as
unaffiliated, 73,283 (49.1%) were registered as
Democrats, 20,031 (13.4%) were registered as
Republicans, and 2,370 (1.6%) were registered to other parties.[5]
The district includes New Jersey's capital, Trenton and a number of its comparatively wealthier suburbs to the north. The district has the smallest population of any district in the state, and has a comparatively higher percentage of
African-American residents and a notable percentage of children in the
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program. Registered Democrats outnumber Republicans by an almost 3 to 1 margin.[6][7]
In the interim period after the 1964
Supreme Court decision Reynolds v. Sims which required the creation of state legislature districts to be made as equal in population as possible and the 1973 creation of the 40-district map, the 15th district was based in the rural northwestern counties of the state. In the 1967 and 1969 elections, the district consisted of all of Hunterdon,
Warren, and
Sussex counties which sent one senator and two Assembly members to the legislature, elected
at-large.[9][10] For the 1971 election, the district was made up of only Warren and Sussex counties, again electing one senator and two Assembly members.[11] Republican
Wayne Dumont won both Senate elections for the 15th district in this period.[12][13] In the Assembly elections, Republican
Robert Littell won one seat in each of the three Assembly elections in the 15th district. Incumbent Republican assemblyman from Hunterdon County
Douglas E. Gimson won re-election to the Assembly in 1967 from this district but died on May 15, 1969.[12][14] Republicans chose
Walter E. Foran to be the other Republican candidate in 1969's general election resulting in a lawsuit from third-place finisher
Walter C. Keogh-Dwyer. Foran was elected to the other seat in 1969 and served one term until his home county was moved to the
6th district in 1971.[10][11] Keogh-Dwyer sought election to the Assembly again in 1971 but was successful in this election.[13]
Election history since 1973
In the 40-district legislative map created in 1973, the 15th district consisted of all of Warren and Sussex counties and
West Milford and
Ringwood in
Passaic County.[15] With the exception of the district electing one Democrat to the Assembly in the 1973 general election, the district had been solidly Republican until 1982. When redistricting following the
1980 United States census shifted the district to the Trenton area, the 15th district became a strongly Democratic district. The new 15th district consisted of Trenton, Ewing, Lawrence Township, West Windsor,
Princeton Township and
Princeton Borough.[16] The 1981 elections brought in Democrats
Gerald R. Stockman in the Senate, along with
Gerard S. Naples and
John S. Watson in the Assembly. The trio remained together in office for a decade.
No changes were made to the district boundaries following the
1990 census and 1991 redistricting.[17]New Jersey Lottery television host
Dick LaRossa ran as a Republican in 1991, having registered with the party only five days before that year's filing deadline. He defeated incumbent Gerald R. Stockman by a narrow 50.9%-49.1% margin.[18] His Republican running mate
John W. Hartmann knocked off Naples, while Democrat Watson was narrowly re-elected to a sixth term in office. Hartmann, a 24-year-old student at the
Seton Hall University School of Law, became the youngest Republican ever elected to the Assembly.[19]
In the 1993 elections, Democrats sought to recoup their losses suffered in the 1991 Republican landslide. In the Assembly,
Shirley Turner and
Joseph Yuhas ran for office, winning back Hartmann's seat from the Republicans. LaRossa faced Stockman for a second time in 1993, with the incumbent receiving endorsements from the
AFL-CIO, locals of the
Communication Workers of America and the New Jersey State Patrolmen's Benevolent Association.[20] LaRossa won re-election despite the challenge.[21] Yuhas stepped down after a single term in office and was replaced on the ballot in 1995 by
Reed Gusciora.[22] In the next election, Turner defeated LaRossa in the Senate election while
Bonnie Watson Coleman replaced her in the Assembly.
Following the
2000 census and the
2001 legislative redistricting, West Windsor was shifted to the
14th district but added were Hopewell Township and its two
enclave boroughs, Pennington and Hopewell.[23] This addition led to longtime Republican legislator and Pennington resident
William E. Schluter to retire from the state senate and run as an
independent in the
gubernatorial election that year.[24] For the entire decade, Turner, Gusciora, and Watson Coleman were all reelected to their seats. In the
2011 redistricting, the 15th regained West Windsor and picked up East Amwell, West Amwell, and Lambertville in Hunterdon County, but lost the Princetons to the Republican-leaning
16th district. Gusciora, then a Princeton Township resident, moved to a house in Trenton to continue representing the district.[25] The trio were elected twice more but Watson Coleman was elected to
Congress in
2014. To replace Watson Coleman, Mercer and Hunterdon County Democrats chose Mercer County Democratic Party Chair and former
FreeholderElizabeth Maher Muoio.[26]
Muoio was nominated by Governor
Phil Murphy to serve as the
Treasurer of New Jersey. She resigned from office effective January 15, 2018, as well as from her position as director of economic development for Mercer County in order to begin work in the executive branch, in advance of her April 12 confirmation by the
New Jersey Senate; her resignation came less than a week after being sworn into office for her second full term in the Assembly.[27][28] Trenton Councilwoman and Mercer County Democratic Committee chair
Verlina Reynolds-Jackson was chosen at a February 10 convention on the second ballot from a field of three candidates to succeed Muoio until a November 2018 special election, and was sworn in on February 15.[29][30]
Gusciora was elected
Mayor of Trenton on June 12, 2018.[31] Prior to being sworn in, he resigned from the Assembly on June 30. Mercer County Freeholder
Anthony Verrelli, who finished runner-up to Reynolds-Jackson at the previous convention, was chosen at a special convention held on July 26 on the second ballot from a field of four candidates to fill Gusciora's seat; he was sworn in on August 6. Both Reynolds-Jackson and Verrelli will compete in a November 2018 special election to complete the unexpired terms.[32][33]
^Jackson, Herb (April 21, 2001).
"Score one for New Jersey Democrats".
North Jersey Media Group. Retrieved July 19, 2015. The new map puts maverick state Sen. Bill Schluter, R-Mercer, in a district that includes Trenton. Schluter has said he would consider running for governor if his once-safe district was altered.
^Curran, Phillip Sean.
"Assemblywoman Muoio resigns, creating vacancy in legislature", CentralJersey.com, January 17, 2018. "State Assemblywoman Liz Muoio, a Democrat who represented parts of Mercer and Hunterdon counties since 2015, resigned her seat to join the Murphy administration, thus creating a vacancy that many Democrats want to fill.... But she submitted her resignation to the Assembly clerk on Friday to become acting state Treasurer until she gets confirmed by the Democrat-controlled state Senate. Her resignation took effect at the end of business Monday, according to an aide. She also left her job as the Mercer County director of economic development."