Ralph DeRose
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ralph_DeRose an entity of type: Thing
Ralph C. DeRose (September 7, 1928 – December 21, 2011) was an American Democratic Party official who served in the New Jersey Senate and twice sought the Democratic nomination for Governor of New Jersey. DeRose was elected to the state senate in 1971. He was a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor in 1973, finishing third with 95,085 votes (22%), behind Brendan Byrne with 193,120 votes (45%) and Ann Klein with 116,705 (27%). Byrne later appointed him to serve as a Commissioner of the Waterfront Commission of New York and New Jersey. In 1975, Byrne tried to remove DeRose from the post, and cut DeRose's $30,500 salary. DeRose resigned in 1977 to challenge Byrne in the Democratic gubernatorial primary; he finished third with 99,948 votes (17%). Byrne won with 175,448 (30%), an
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Ralph DeRose
rdf:langString
Ralph C. DeRose
rdf:langString
Ralph C. DeRose
rdf:langString
Secaucus, New Jersey, U.S.
xsd:date
2011-12-21
rdf:langString
Newark, New Jersey, U.S.
xsd:date
1928-09-07
xsd:integer
41444927
xsd:integer
1072873804
xsd:date
1974-01-08
xsd:date
1972-01-11
xsd:date
1928-09-07
rdf:langString
Ralph C. DeRose
xsd:date
2011-12-21
rdf:langString
Member of the New Jersey Senate from the 11th District
rdf:langString
Multi-member district
rdf:langString
District abolished
rdf:langString
Ralph C. DeRose (September 7, 1928 – December 21, 2011) was an American Democratic Party official who served in the New Jersey Senate and twice sought the Democratic nomination for Governor of New Jersey. DeRose was elected to the state senate in 1971. He was a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor in 1973, finishing third with 95,085 votes (22%), behind Brendan Byrne with 193,120 votes (45%) and Ann Klein with 116,705 (27%). Byrne later appointed him to serve as a Commissioner of the Waterfront Commission of New York and New Jersey. In 1975, Byrne tried to remove DeRose from the post, and cut DeRose's $30,500 salary. DeRose resigned in 1977 to challenge Byrne in the Democratic gubernatorial primary; he finished third with 99,948 votes (17%). Byrne won with 175,448 (30%), and U.S. Rep. Robert Roe finished second with 134,116 (23%). U.S. Rep. James Florio finished fourth with 87,743 votes (15%), followed by ex-State Labor Commissioner Joseph Hoffman with 58,835 (10%) and State Sen. Raymond Garramone with 6,602 (1%).
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
2994
rdf:langString
Ralph C. DeRose