In this episode of New Jersey Exit Interviews, I sit down with Dr. Brad Cohen — the current mayor of East Brunswick, New Jersey and a candidate in the Democratic primary for NJ's 12th Congressional District — for a wide-ranging conversation about New Jersey, public service, affordability, health care, immigration, science, and the future of the district. We talk about Dr. Cohen’s path from medicine into public life, how he got involved in school board politics during the Christie era, and how he thinks about local government as a problem-solving job rather than a performative one. We also get into housing and redevelopment in East Brunswick, the tension between local control and state housing reforms, first-time homeownership, health care reform, physician shortages, immigration, ICE, vaccines, life sciences in Central New Jersey, and what kind of Democrat he believes can actually win and govern. If you care about New Jersey politics, the NJ-12 primary, or the bigger policy debates shaping the state and the country, I think you’ll enjoy this one. Topics include: Dr. Cohen’s New Jersey roots and medical career Why he ran for school board and then mayor Redevelopment, affordability, and housing in East Brunswick Local control vs. state mandates Federal ideas to improve affordability Health care reform, single-payer, and physician shortages Immigration reform and ICE Vaccines, science, and New Jersey’s life-sciences economy The crowded NJ-12 Democratic primary and his lane in the race Subscribe for more long-form conversations with New Jersey candidates, officials, thinkers, builders, and organizers.