Sheila Oliver, NJ lieutenant governor, dies at age 71

  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.

Lt. Gov. Sheila Oliver, the first Black woman to serve as the state's Assembly speaker and as lieutenant governor, died Tuesday at the age of 71.

The cause of death was not immediately disclosed, but Oliver had been in the hospital in recent days.

"It is with incredible sadness and a heavy heart that we announce the passing of the Honorable Sheila Y. Oliver, Lieutenant Governor of the State of New Jersey,” Gov. Phil Murphy said in a statement announcing Oliver's death. "Tammy and I, and our children, are incredibly saddened and distraught to learn of the passing of our dear friend, colleague, and partner in government."

The Lt. Governor of New Jersey, Sheila Oliver being interviewed in her Trenton office on May 30, 2019.
The Lt. Governor of New Jersey, Sheila Oliver being interviewed in her Trenton office on May 30, 2019.

The Oliver family said in a separate statement that Oliver "was not only a distinguished public servant but also our cherished daughter, sister, aunt, friend, and hero. As we come to terms with this profound loss, we kindly request that you respect the privacy of the Oliver family during this difficult time as they grieve their beloved Sheila."

Acting Gov. Nicholas Scutari, filling the role while Murphy is out of the country, confirmed Tuesday afternoon that flags would be ordered to half-staff in memory of Oliver. Murphy is expected to return early from a vacation in Italy. He was originally scheduled to come home to New Jersey on Aug. 13.

'Trailblazer in every sense of the word'

Oliver was the first Black woman to be speaker of the General Assembly in New Jersey and the second in the nation’s history to lead a house of a state legislature, with Karen Bass of California being the first. She was also the second Black person to serve as New Jersey's Assembly speaker, following S. Howard Woodson in the 1970s. Marion West Higgins, a Bergen County Republican, was the first woman to hold that role, in 1965.

Throughout her tenure, Oliver stepped up to serve as acting governor when Murphy was out of state or otherwise unavailable. Those responsibilities took on a new meaning in March 2020. With Murphy receiving treatment for his bout with cancer, Oliver provided a steadfast poise for residents to follow as the first cases of COVID-19 were diagnosed.

Murphy said Tuesday that when he selected Oliver to be his running mate in 2017, she was “already a trailblazer in every sense of the word.”

“I knew then that her decades of public service made her the ideal partner for me to lead the State of New Jersey. It was the best decision I ever made," said Murphy in his statement.

"As someone who was born and raised in Newark, and who has called East Orange home for more than 40 years, Sheila did not view these issues in the abstract because she lived with them every day of her life.  She brought a unique and invaluable perspective to our public policy discourse and served as an inspiration to millions of women and girls everywhere, especially young women of color,” Murphy said. "Beyond all of that, she was an incredibly genuine and kind person whose friendship and partnership will be irreplaceable."

Sheila Oliver recalls profiling: NJ leaders recall times they faced racial profiling by law enforcement

Newark native served in Essex County posts

Oliver was born in Newark. Her family first settled in East Orange for a few years before moving to Newark. She graduated from Newark's Weequahic High School in 1970 and went on to receive a bachelor's degree from Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, a historically Black university. She was in the third class of women at Lincoln, after it became a coeducational institution.

She later earned a master’s degree in planning and administration from Columbia University, and, by the late 1970s, her family moved back to East Orange, where Oliver began her career in politics and established her base for the next four decades.

Oliver moved up the political ladder, serving as a member of the East Orange Board of Education from 1994 to 2000 and landing on the Essex County Board of Chosen Freeholders (now Board of Commissioners). She lost a bid to win a second term in the 1999 Democratic primary.

In what would be part of career priority, Oliver had ambitions to be a first in a succession of positions, and maintained that focus in the face of defeat. In 1997, she ran for East Orange mayor and lost the Democratic primary by 52 votes to Robert Bowser.

More: When Phil Murphy is out of state, here is the line of succession for acting governor

On the ballot with her that year was Assemblyman LeRoy Jones, D-East Orange, who would become one of Oliver's closest and most enduring political allies. Jones would later become her biggest champion for the lieutenant governor's candidacy, and she came to Jones' defense in a bitter internal Democratic Party battle for the state chairmanship in 2021. Jones eventually won the seat in an agreement that allowed him eventually to succeed the incumbent, John Currie of Passaic County.

"Who came out for me? My partner," Jones said, holding back sobs in a telephone interview. "She had an incredible career."

Oliver was first elected to the Assembly in 2003, and in 2010 she became the state's 169th speaker, succeeding Camden County's Joe Roberts. Her rise was to the top post was fueled, in part, by a deal to ensure stronger North Jersey representation. And it was backed by Essex County Executive Joe DiVincenzo Jr., whom Oliver also served as an assistant county administrator.

Oliver's tenure as leader of the Assembly was rocky. Her ascendancy occurred just as Gov. Chris Christie came to power. Christie, with the support of then-Senate President Stephen Sweeney, a Gloucester County Democrat, sought cuts in pension and health care benefits for public employees, a core Democratic constituency.

Oliver eventually agreed to marshal the votes in the Assembly that helped win passage, giving Christie a major political victory that turned him into a national rising star in Republican Party circles. Oliver faced heated backlash from union officials but defended the move as a necessary.

“I was demonized, but I never regretted it because I know that I was able to save jobs," she said in a 2019 interview with NorthJersey.com.

Yet the backlash within the party's grassroots fueled talk of a "coup" attempt that quickly faded. Oliver was reelected in 2011. And in 2013, Oliver threw her name into consideration for the Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate — even though Newark Mayor Cory Booker was the clear favorite among party leaders.

“I was not happy that immediately after Senator Lautenberg passed away and New Jersey had no women in its congressional delegation that there was never even a discussion about a woman being supported,” Oliver said in 2019. “I was making a statement and demonstrating that women have to be considered for these roles.”

That same year, Oliver was succeeded as Assembly speaker by Vincent Prieto of Secaucus, and she would hold her post as a 34th Legislative District Assemblywoman until Murphy selected her as his running mate for lieutenant governor in 2017.

The political climate proved opportune for Oliver. Murphy ran as a progressive Democrat, promising to create one of the most diverse Cabinets in state history.

It also came at a time when Democratic leaders across the country had become concerned about the lower-than-expected turnout of Black voters for Democrat Hillary Clinton in her loss the year before to Donald Trump for president. Turnout in Essex County, home to the largest cache of Democrats in New Jersey, was also down in 2016.

“Sheila Oliver shares my vision for a state that once again is fair, is just, is welcoming, is inclusive," Murphy said when he announced Oliver as his running mate in 2017 in Newark. After their election, Murphy tapped Oliver to lead the Department of Community Affairs.

Earlier: With Murphy out of state and Oliver under medical care, Scutari is NJ's acting governor

Scutari is acting governor

Oliver's death came a day after Murphy's office announced that Oliver would be unable to discharge her duties as acting governor because she was “receiving medical care at Cooperman Barnabas Medical Center in Livingston," a spokesperson for the governor said. The line of temporary succession fell to Scutari, the Union County Democrat and Senate president, who will remain acting governor until Murphy returns.

Under the constitution, Murphy has 45 days as of Tuesday to appoint a replacement for Oliver. The replacement does not require Senate confirmation.

This article originally appeared on NorthJersey.com: Sheila Oliver, NJ lieutenant governor, dies suddenly