Toms River recall ‘hoax’ collapses as petition drive fizzles and fails

TOMS RIVER, NJ – The highly hyped effort to recall Toms River Mayor Dan Rodrick has come to an abrupt end after the petition committee, led by Toms River Municipal Utilities Authority (MUA) Commissioner Phil Brilliant, failed to collect enough signatures to meet the legal threshold.

“No other local administration in New Jersey has done what we’ve done,” he said. “We’ve reduced spending, fought overdevelopment, and kept taxes flat every year. That’s why this small group of political insiders want me out.”

Despite weeks of public claims that the group was nearing its goal, organizers have now refused to submit their petitions to the township clerk for verification—effectively acknowledging the recall’s failure by failing to submit the signatures prior to the state mandated deadline of January 26th.

The collapse of the recall marks the latest episode in a bitter political feud that has dominated local headlines for months, driven by a small group of individuals, many with personal grievances witht he mayor.

Brilliant, who serves as an appointed MUA commissioner, has been under increasing scrutiny for receiving full-time taxpayer-funded healthcare benefits while attending just one one-hour meeting per month. His company, Brilliant Environmental, previously filed for bankruptcy, adding to questions about his public credibility and financial management.

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Throughout January, Brilliant and his supporters insisted they had “almost enough” signatures to force a recall election, claiming they were close to reaching their goal.

However, sources within the recall committee have since confirmed that the actual total fell drastically short. Several members privately told township officials that the group collected far fewer signatures than advertised by Brilliant.

Mayor Dan Rodrick, who had largely remained silent during the petition drive, spoke publicly on Saturday to denounce the campaign. Calling it “a hoax on the people of Toms River,” Rodrick said the effort was orchestrated by a “small group of political insiders” angry over his cost-cutting measures and anti-development stance.

“They never came close to the number they claimed, and they knew it from the beginning,” the mayor said. “This was a sham meant to mislead residents and distract from our record of results.”

Rodrick revealed that he had hired a private investigator, paid personally, to attend the recall’s signing events around town.

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Multiple petition signers have also reached out to Shore News Network this week, saying they signed the petition multiple times with fake names, and often signed other people’s names at the request of the petitioners, a clear violation of the law surrounding political petitions, which require the signature to be in-person and by an authorized petitioner.

A private investigator, according to the mayor, found that turnout was sparse and that organizers allowed people to sign on behalf of others who were not present—a violation of state election law.

“There is video evidence of recall committee members admitting they didn’t have anywhere near enough signatures,” Rodrick said. “If they truly had 17,000, they would have submitted them for verification.”

The mayor suggested that the recall effort was driven by figures connected to what he called “the Mo Hill gang,” a term he uses to describe local political insiders and former officials seeking to preserve their influence and the legacy of former Toms River Mayor Mo Hill.

Since taking office, Rodrick’s administration has cut the municipal budget by 9%, saving $11 million annually, paid down millions in debt, and blocked plans for large-scale high-rise developments in downtown Toms River.

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“These insider folks are mad because we’re making the cuts the people elected us to make at town hall,” Rodrick said.

Rodrick also touted his success in reducing the township’s state-mandated affordable housing requirement to just 184 units through the use of deed restrictions and $9 million from the town’s housing trust fund.

He accused the recall organizers and their media allies of spreading misinformation, aligning them with national-style political tactics.

“They use the same language and smear campaigns you see against conservative leaders across the country,” Rodrick said. “This was about power, not the people.”

By the end of the week, the recall committee had gone silent, declining to turn in any paperwork to the clerk’s office. What began as a political showdown has now ended in embarrassment for its organizers—and a renewed sense of confidence inside Rodrick’s administration.

  • Recall petition led by MUA Commissioner Phil Brilliant fails to meet requirements
  • Mayor Dan Rodrick denounces effort as a “hoax on the people of Toms River”
  • Investigators say recall events drew minimal turnout and possible irregularities

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