Before the Governor’s budget address for Fiscal Year 2026, New Jersey Policy Perspective produced a preview to evaluate whether the budget sufficiently advances economic, social, and racial justice.
With the release of the Governor’s budget in brief, the Governor’s budget met some important key benchmarks but fell short in other areas. (All citations refer to the Fiscal Year 2026 Budget in Brief unless otherwise noted.)
Below is a short summary of how the governor’s budget measured up.
NJPP FY26 Budget Priority
Was it included in the Governor’s Budget?
Protect the surplus and close the deficit | ![]() |
Fully fund pensions and schools |
![]() |
Raise revenues to balance the budget |
![]() |
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 |
![]() |
Increase benefits in WorkFirst NJ to reduce poverty | ![]() |
Expand affordable health insurance options | ![]() |
Keep the Corporate Transit Fee funding transit |
![]() |
Use the Clean Energy Fund only for clean energy projects |
![]() |
End predatory prison communication fees | ![]() |
With budget negotiations ahead, lawmakers must prioritize solutions that center the experiences of working- and middle-class New Jerseyans by strengthening economic security, protecting public services, and ensuring long-term fiscal stability. NJPP has released a full report outlining additional progressive revenue solutions that would reduce the need for budget cuts that will hurt working-class families, reduce the need to raid other funds to balance the books, and better insulate New Jersey from looming federal budget cuts.
To learn more about policy solutions that NJPP recommends to build a more equitable state, read Blueprint for a Strong and Resilient New Jersey.