Gov. Phil Murphy will unveil his final budget proposal Tuesday, offering a plan to meet a legally mandated balanced budget while not knowing when or if billions of dollars in federal funds will show up.
In his final budget before leaving office, Gov. Phil Murphy is again raising taxes on New Jersey residents. Eric Scott explores how much more you will be paying on the New Jersey 101.5 Morning Show.
Gov. Phil Murphy will deliver his New Jersey budget proposal for fiscal year 2026 at about 3 p.m. Tuesday. You can watch the budget address live in the video above, on YouTube, or on our Facebook and Twitter accounts. Check back later for the full text of the address, as well as guides for what each of the major proposals means for you.
Across New Jersey, all the leaves are brown and the sky is grey, but for many in the state, Governor Phil Murphy's California dreaming has
Republican members of the New Jersey Senate are threatening legal action against Governor Phil Murphy’s administration, alleging
Gov. Phil Murphy has proposed a $3 million allocation for the 2026 budget to support phone-free schools across the state. The funding aims to provide grants to school districts to invest in tools and policies that limit phone-related classroom distractions.
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Courier-Post (Cherry Hill, NJ) on MSNSchool cellphone bans: Gov. Murphy visits South Jersey to promote the conceptNew Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy has continued his efforts to support cellphone bans in New Jersey schools. On Feb. 19, Murphy toured Woodbury Junior-Senior High School to learn more about their cellphone policy. He's announced that his proposal for the 2026 fiscal year would dedicate $3 million to support phone-free grants for New Jersey schools.
5don MSNOpinion
New Jersey needs a governor who will prioritize taxpayers, make the tough decisions Phil Murphy cowardly avoided and restore fiscal stability.
New York Post on MSN10dOpinion
Common sense prevails in New Jersey as school districts allowed to drop trans student policy after years-long fightScore another win for parental rights and common sense. Three school districts in New Jersey were given the green light to drop a controversial transgender student policy after years of legal wrangling.
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