Recall organizers say petition gathered thousands; mayor calls effort a hoax and demands proof
Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts
SubscribeSummary
Recall organizers told the council they collected thousands of petition pages in an effort to recall Mayor Daniel Roderick; the mayor responded that the effort 'never came even close' and said he hired a private investigator who found little turnout at signing events.
Organizers of a recall drive told the Toms River Township Council they gathered a substantial volume of completed petition pages during a months-long campaign, while Mayor Daniel Roderick disputed the effort and urged petitioners to present their evidence.
Phil Brilliant, who said he helped circulate petitions that began on Aug. 19, 2025, told the council the drive collected large numbers of signed pages and that volunteers followed the law. "These signatures represented neighbors, parents, seniors, small business owners, lifelong residents," he said, arguing the committee would not submit petitions for verification and would instead press its message to voters in the next mayoral election.
Dana Tormolin, a named petitioner, said the committee found thousands of residents who shared concerns about the administration’s decisions and said the effort reflected widespread dissatisfaction.
Mayor Daniel Roderick delivered a lengthy rebuttal, calling the recall "a massive hoax," saying he personally paid for a private investigator to attend signing events and asserting that investigators observed low attendance and even illegal signing practices. "This recall effort was a massive hoax solely meant to discredit my administration," the mayor said, and he challenged organizers to bring signatures forward for verification.
Speakers on both sides offered numbers and counterclaims. The recall committee cited a large buffer above the statutory minimum of 18,464 signatures, which the committee said would be required for submission, while the mayor said committee members previously admitted to smaller totals. Neither side produced validated, clerk-certified totals during the meeting; organizers said they would not submit petitions for verification at this time.
The exchange highlighted deep political divisions in Toms River. Councilors and residents reacted loudly during the remarks; the mayor ended the meeting after his statement and an adjournment vote.
