Tuesday, May 25, 2010

30,000 in NJ protest state budget cuts

Public employees, nonprofit groups face cuts

Image: New Jersey protest
Thousands of people fill the street near the New Jersey Statehouse on Saturday in Trenton, N.J., to protest Gov. Chris Christie's proposed budget cuts.
Mel Evans / AP



TRENTON, N.J. - A crowd estimated at 30,000 to 35,000 people gathered Saturday near New Jersey's Statehouse to protest Gov. Chris Christie's proposed budget cuts.

State police, who gave the crowd estimate, said no problems were reported.

The crowd is believed to be one of the largest ever to protest in state history. It was mostly comprised of public employee union members and several community and nonprofit groups that would lose some or all their funding if Christie's plans are adopted.

Christie has called for workers to accept wage freezes, and he's pushed for them to contribute toward their health benefits. The governor was not in the Statehouse on Saturday and was not at the rally.

He has said that protesters have a right to speak their minds.

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