From left, Chamber President David Allegretto, Mayor Jay Gillian, Congressman Jeff Van Drew and Chamber Executive Director Michele Gillian.
By MADDY VITALE
Newly minted Republican Congressman Jeff Van Drew opened up at the Ocean City Regional Chamber of Commerce meeting Thursday about why he switched parties, voted against the impeachment of President Trump and wants South Jersey residents to know he is on their side.
“There are good Republicans and bad Republicans. We are all in this together,” Van Drew said of changing parties as he addressed more than 100 business leaders and officials at the monthly Chamber meeting. “This is why I made the decision I did.”
Van Drew, formerly a Democrat, told the crowd at the Flanders Hotel that when he was asked to speak at the meeting, he thought hard about whether he should address the issues of parties and impeachment.
Michele Gillian, executive director of the Chamber of Commerce, said in an interview that Van Drew has always been "a good friend of the Ocean City Chamber of Commerce and Ocean City.”
Among issues Van Drew has helped with are sick leave and new minimum wage requirements and small businessowner issues, Gillian said.
“He understands the issues of the small businesses and how they are important for a strong community.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21KnUiZeJpE
Van Drew said he had to make his view and reasoning clear.
“I didn’t vote for the impeachment,” Van Drew said. “I thought it would get us further down the rabbit hole. I thought it would split us even more … that it would make people angrier rather than bring us together.”
President Trump will be arriving in Wildwood on Jan. 28 for a rally to support Van Drew, a former state assemblyman and senator who will be seeking the Republican nomination for Congress.
The push by the Democratic Party for impeachment of the president was something that sent him over the political line, Van Drew noted.
“A congressman is supposed to bring people together and in no way did I see this,” he said of voting to impeach the president.
He said how a person votes in the 2020 election could change the political tide.
“America is a great place. This is a flashpoint -- compassionate capitalists or the socialists route,” he said of the political climate.

From left, Chamber President David Allegretto, Mayor Jay Gillian, Congressman Jeff Van Drew and Chamber Executive Director Michele Gillian.