Throughout the budget process — from Governor Murphy's proposal to the public hearings to the revenue projections — one major threat loomed over state lawmakers: the federal reconciliation bill’s cuts to Medicaid, food assistance, and other critical programs. Given their public statements opposing these cuts, the state budget should have been an opportunity to build defenses against these cuts, begin raising revenues from wealthy individuals and corporations, and avoid short-term giveaways.
Instead, the budget process went on autopilot. Leaders cut back revenue increases and dipped deeper into the state's cash reserves, as though there would be no federal cuts at all. As has happened in prior years, new expansions in corporate tax credits sailed through committee hearings while the expensive Stay NJ senior homeowner subsidy was preserved without even modest changes to reduce its overall cost to the state. The budget also continued the unfortunate tradition of using dedicated funds to patch one-year budget gaps, including an expanded raid of the Clean Energy Fund to fund both New Jersey Transit’s general operating expenses and the General Fund.
This budget could and should have been a moment of courage — a governor’s final budget, a legislature that has stated its desire to protect the state’s residents from devastating cuts. But instead, the state’s leaders delayed any preparation for federal cuts until after they had already become law. The difficult decisions will not be easier later.
Below is a short summary of NJPP’s budget priorities and their final status in the Appropriations Act.
NJPP FY26 Budget Priority
Was it included in the Governor’s Budget?
Protect the surplus and close the deficit | ![]() |
Fully fund pensions and schools |
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Raise revenues to balance the budget |
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Maintain StayNJ’s guardrails, specifically the original spending rules that require a healthy budget surplus | ![]() |
Maintain funding for services for immigrants | ![]() |
Expand and improve tax credits for working families |
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Increase benefits in WorkFirst NJ to reduce poverty | ![]() |
Expand affordable health insurance options | ![]() |
Keep the Corporate Transit Fee funding transit |
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Use the Clean Energy Fund only for clean energy projects |
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End predatory prison communication fees | ![]() |
All citations to the Appropriations Act (A-5800/S-2026) and Scoresheet unless otherwise indicated.
To learn more about policy solutions that NJPP recommends to build a more equitable state, read Blueprint for a Strong and Resilient New Jersey.