Home All NewsBreaking NewsIn Phil Murphy’s Equitable New Jersey, Homeless Veterans Rate Lower Than Illegal Migrants – OP-ED

In Phil Murphy’s Equitable New Jersey, Homeless Veterans Rate Lower Than Illegal Migrants – OP-ED

In Phil Murphy’s “Equitable” New Jersey, American Citizens Are Left Behind

by Breaking Local News Report

Look at what is happening around New Jersey. Homelessness is on the rise, and in the state that touts itself as the most diverse and equitable, American citizens most in need are the ones being left behind and outside in the heat.

This happens as America’s crackdown on illegal immigration escalates. Instead of bragging about housing a homless American veteran in his garage attic apartment, Governor Phil Murphy boasted about giving shelter to an illegal migrant.

Phil Murphy distracted

In Governor Murphy’s vision of an “equitable” New Jersey, a troubling paradox has emerged: American citizens, including homeless veterans and struggling families, are left to fend for themselves while undocumented migrants receive prioritized access to state resources.

This misalignment of priorities not only undermines the principles of fairness but also erodes trust in a government that claims to champion all its residents.

New Jersey’s homelessness crisis is stark.

Over 8,000 individuals, including veterans who served our nation, sleep on the streets or in shelters on any given night. These citizens often lack access to basic healthcare, stable housing, or consistent food assistance. Yet, the Murphy administration has rolled out programs that provide undocumented migrants with medical coverage, housing support, and food aid—resources that many citizens can only dream of. For instance, the state’s expansion of Medicaid to cover undocumented immigrants, coupled with local initiatives offering rental assistance to newcomers, highlights a clear disparity in treatment.

Phil Murphy can’t house and feed 8,000 homeless people, but has the budget and the desire to assist hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants, many with criminal records.

Murphy’s own rhetoric doesn’t help. He has spoken sympathetically about undocumented immigrants, even referencing one who purportedly lives above his garage, while rarely addressing the plight of homeless veterans or struggling citizens with the same urgency.

This creates a perception—fair or not—that the governor values the well-being of those who arrive unannounced at the border over those who have long called New Jersey home.

The issue isn’t about denying compassion to migrants; it’s about fairness.

Why should a homeless veteran, who risked their life for this country, have to navigate a labyrinth of bureaucracy for basic services while others receive swift aid? Why should a citizen family, scraping by in a state with sky-high costs, be deprioritized?

New Jersey’s budget is not infinite, and every dollar spent on one group is a dollar not spent on another. Murphy’s policies suggest a choice, and it’s one that leaves many citizens feeling abandoned.

Equity, as Murphy often touts, should mean lifting everyone up, not picking winners and losers based on status or narrative.

In this case, American citizens and veterans are the losers while Murphy placates to his far-left base and picks illegal migrants as the winners under his twisted form of equity.

It’s 8,000 people. Murphy should be ashamed that he can’t fix this problem.

If New Jersey is to be truly equitable, the governor must address the needs of its most vulnerable citizens—homeless veterans, struggling families, and others—before extending resources to those who, by law, bypassed the legal immigration process. Anything less is not equity; it’s favoritism.

The people of New Jersey deserve a government that prioritizes its own citizens while addressing immigration with fairness and order.

Governor Murphy, it’s time to rethink your approach. Our veterans, our homeless, and our struggling families deserve better than to be left behind in their own state.

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