New Jersey is a Democratic-leaning state, but Republicans are far from obsolete in the Garden State.
The GOP is outnumbered by registered Democrats by nearly 840,000 people, according to the latest statistics from the state's Division of Elections. As of the end of April, New Jersey had 2,048,311 registered Democrats and 1,209,127 Republicans.
But registered Republicans outnumber Democrats in six of the state's 21 counties, and there several other counties that are pretty evenly split. While Donald Trump lost New Jersey by 14 points to Hillary Clinton last year, nine counties tipped in the Republican's favor.
The largest number of New Jersey voters — 2,402,244 to be exact — have not formally claimed any party affiliation. But pollsters who know such things say the breakdown of these unaffiliated voters is pretty close to the Democrat/Republican split.
"Among the Independents, when asked if they 'lean' one direction or another, 14 percent go (Democratic), 9 percent go (Republican) and 18 percent remain Independent," Krista Jenkins, director of Fairleigh Dickinson University's PublicMind Poll, said based off the last statewide poll the group took in March.
So how may of your neighbors break blue or lean right?
Here is a county-by-county breakdown of which political party rules in each of New Jersey's 21 counties.