Category Archives: Delaware

Democratic Skunks in the Middle of the Road Not Dead Yet

Anybody who wants to see progressive government should realize that Republicans, who hate all Democrats, are not the people working hardest to block the path to progress. That distinction goes to the so-called “moderate” Democrats, who are nothing but pro-business shills who lack the sadistic streak necessary to win GOP primaries.

This has been obvious in Delaware for more than a decade, ever since the Tea Party loons purged the GOP of their Mike Castle-style moderates. In the years since, we’ve seen imposters who run as Democrats but get lots of campaign donations from Castle Republicans (looking at you, Matt Meyer), as well as self-interested pro-business labor organizations like those represented by Aunt Jemima-loving James Maravelias.

Instead of offering voters a clear choice between a GOP that serves the rich and a populist party that holds the rich accountable, so-called centrists want to do the same thing Republicans do: Lie to voters about whose interests they’re really out to protect.

You can’t find clearer evidence of this than an event held in South Carolina earlier this month by Third Way, the “moderate” bunch who still think we’re living in the Bill Clinton era. American Prospect published a report on it a couple of days ago.

A group of Democratic Party moderates gathered in Charleston, South Carolina, last Sunday and Monday for an [invitation-only} event organized by Third Way, an influential group in the party’s moderate wing.

The event, entitled “Winning the Middle,” brought together elected officials, prominent pundits, data gurus, communication savants, and industry figures with one goal in mind: how to block a progressive from winning the party’s nomination for president in 2028.

What is immediately apparent watching the event is a total lack of any positive vision. Rather than propose a worked-out centrist platform, or even suggest opposition to the Trump administration, the event largely defined itself in opposition to the progressive wing of the Democratic Party.

Third Way president Jonathan Cowan gave a speech that focused not on what Republicans are doing to destroy the country but all the progressive things his group opposes.

Explaining their health care vision, Cowan said that the assembled luminaries stood for “universal health care under the ACA, not Medicare for All and the end of private insurance.” While Cowan adopted the left’s rhetoric of “universal health care,” he failed to note that the Affordable Care Act not only has not achieved universal health care, but also only became net popular seven years after its passage, following an attempted repeal by the first Trump administration. The ACA was an improvement in many ways, but it was hardly the easy messaging win Cowan was making it out to be.

On work in the 21st century, the assembled moderates “believe in the dignity of work, not UBI [universal basic income]. And for that work to lead to wealth, we desperately need a new economic bargain for the working class.” On energy issues, Cowan outlined a 2010-vintage vision of “all of the above on clean energy, not just wind and solar,” as if renewables were not the cheapest form of power in history, and oil now shooting past $100 a barrel.

As if the speech were not already vague enough, on cultural issues Cowan stated that “we know we must be reasonable and normal,” and that “we can respect the humanity of transgender Americans while enforcing strict rules to protect kids.” What rules, precisely? Are we talking about right-wing gender inspectors at every middle school track meet? Because that’s how those “strict rules” tend to work out in practice.

Though the affirmative vision for the world may have been lacking, confidence in their diagnosis of the problem was not. The fact that the Democratic Party is more unpopular than ever before—even among its own base—was repeated ad nauseam, proof that the party had drifted so far left it had alienated even its own voters. The solution to this historic unpopularity? Coordination between the invitees to lock progressive candidates and groups out of the party.

I’ve probably exceeded fair use limits as it is, so to quote El Somnambulo, read the whole thing.

General Assembly Post-Game Wrap-Up/Pre-Game Show: Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Today’s a huge committee day in Dover.  But first, yesterday’s Session Activity Report.  It was comity all around as all the legislation passed unanimously.

OK, deep breath, and more caffeine, as we review today’s chock-full schedule of committee meetings.  I flipped a coin, and have decided to start with today’s Senate committee meeting highlights.

SB 196 (Mantzavinos) ‘requires long-term care facilities to fully disclose ownership information for the facility and disclose ownership information to residents prior to the transfer of ownership of a facility.’  The bill is better than the rather confusing synopsis in that it requires the full disclosure of ownership information in all cases, not just when there’s a proposed transfer of ownership.  Yet another good bill dealing with long-term care.  Health & Social Services.

SB 226 (Pinkney) ‘provides that health care facilities must permit patients who have been issued and possess a valid registry identification card for the medical use of marijuana and have a terminal illness to use medical marijuana on the health care facilities’ premises, subject to certain restrictions.’  Health & Social Services.

SB 238 (Townsend) is a little complicated, but it appears to encourage the expansion of insurance coverage for certain chiropractic and PT services.  Let me know if I got that wrong. Health & Social Services.

SB 231 (Pinkney) has a synopsis which I don’t think is a sentence:  “This Act provides that School Social Workers who have successfully passed the Association of Social Work Boards National Clinical Examination and hold a Licensed Clinical Social Worker License with a salary supplement.” Probably need a substitute bill since I don’t think you can amend the synopsis.  Sunset.

SB 239 (Hansen).  I’m a functional illiterate (I know, I should just stop right there) on public utility policy.  This bill ‘removes the 8% cap on net energy metering for customer-generation.’  Don’t know what that means, but, with Frank Burns and Eric Morrison on the bill, I assume it’s a ‘net’ positive. Environment, Energy & Transportation.

SB 241 (Walsh) ‘requires that a contract advertised after September 30, 2026, relating to a public works project (project) with an aggregate cost of $5 million or more must include a project labor agreement with the Delaware Building and Construction Trades Council…’.  There was a time when I was much more supportive of bills like this.  Now is not that time. Labor.

SB 243 (Cruce) supposedly ‘cleans up antiquated portions of The Liquor Control Act, under Title 4, by updating provisions that have been in the Code since the 1930s…’.  There’s a lot of, um, stuff, in this bill, and it’s not at all clear to me that this merely excises out-of-date provisions.  Read and react.  Elections & Government Affairs.

As you know, I generally only cover Senate bills in the Senate committee previews and House bills in the House committee previews since I’ve previously covered bills when they were in their chamber of origin.  There are exceptions, and this one surfaces every two years.  Yes, we’re talking Stephanie Bolden’s Incumbency Protection legislation.  It has once again passed the House, where members hate the idea of facing potential primaries every two years, and is in the Senate Executive Committee, which has effectively killed the bill in (at least) three consecutive legislative sessions.  Let’s hope that wiser heads prevail once again.

Before we head over to the House, there is a brief Senate Agenda, featuring a Senate bill that was returned to the Senate with a House Amendment, and three reappointments.

Today’s House Committee highlights:

HB 265 (Ross Levin) ‘provides limited immunity from prosecution for persons who seek to report a sexual offense. Under this Act a person who is a victim or witness or otherwise seeks law enforcement assistance in relation to a sexual offense may not be charged, arrested, or prosecuted, or issued a civil citation for low-level crimes relating to drug or alcohol use or possession.’  Judiciary.

HB 293 (Morrison) ‘ adds any act that contains the characteristics of a hate crime to the definitions of crimes for the purposes of the Victims Compensation Assistance Program.’ Judiciary.

HB 186 (Hensley) ‘ incentivize(s) the construction and operation of a limited number of high-efficiency Combined-Cycle Gas Turbine (CCGT) electrical generation facilities, with an output of between 100 MW and 500 MW, by creating an Electricity Production Tax Credit (EPTC) and bonus credits. These credits would offset state corporate tax liability while facilitating the increased availability of clean, cost-effective, high-efficiency, and energy production.’  Pardon my suspicion, but when the only two D’s on the bill (along with virtually every R) are Walsh and Osienski, and when ‘Combined-Cycle Gas Turbines’ are defined as clean energy, I think I’ve earned my skepticism.  Revenue & Finance. 

While HB 283 isn’t a major bill, what is realtor Kevin Hensley doing sponsoring a bill on the realty transfer tax?

HB 237 (M. Smith) ‘encourage(s) jobs creation, artistic endeavors and investment in the film, television, esports and videogame industry in the State of Delaware, and the attendant benefits for the economy and job growth. Delaware is one of the only states in the Mid-Atlantic and country without some form of tax credit at a time when production of original content for streaming and at theaters is at an all-time high.’  Revenue & Finance.

HB 188 (M. Smith) ‘allows Delaware voters who are not affiliated with a political party to vote in a political party’s primary election.’  Raising the question (and answer) to the following:  When is a political party’s primary election not a political party’s primary election?  BTW, WTF is Kim Williams doing on this bill as a sponsor? Elections & Government Affairs.

HB 301 (Morrison) ‘updates the existing crime of “breach of peace or violence on election day.” As rewritten, both of the following actions taken on election day or during the counting of ballots are class G felonies: (1) The use of any violence or threats of violence at or near a polling place, a Department of Elections office, or a meeting of the Board of Canvass; and (2) A breach of peace intended to impede, hinder, or interfere with the peaceful conduct of the election or reading and counting of ballots.’  Elections & Government Affairs.

HB 73 (Bush) ‘raises the Senior property tax credit cap from $500 to $1000.’  Do we really need to short the budget another $17.7 mill annually? Which indeed is the Controller General’s estimate.  I say no.  Administration.

Hope that gives you something to chew on.

Delaware General Assembly Pre-Game Show: Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Back in session for three weeks.  We reported yesterday on a bill designed to reduce hospital healthcare costs.  The irony of two legislators who have carried ChristianaCare’s water, and who are endangered incumbents, co-sponsoring the bill is not lost on me.  I would have expected quite a few more sponsors, surprised that there are so few.  Does that speak to the bill’s prospects? Time will tell.

Before we get into the agendas and committee meetings, just an example of the (literally) toxic nature of agricultural pollution.  Allen Harim has once again been in violation of Delaware’s wastewater requirements since late January.  You will recall that, when Rep. Larry Lambert passed his legislation increasing fines for environmental pollution, he had to exclude agriculture interests from the bill in order to get it passed.  He instead introduced a companion bill to address this.  The bill passed the House, 24-15.  It has also been released from the Senate Executive Committee.  It’s time for the President Pro-Tem to place this bill on a Senate Agenda to finally address these corporate scofflaws once and for all.

Not much on today’s Senate AgendaSB 223 (Sturgeon) ‘updates the requirements for Department of Education’s regulations for personnel records to include charter schools.’

Today’s House Agenda features SS1/SB 230 (Mantzavinos), which appears related to the reassessment issue.  The bill ‘expressly authorizes the county authority to compel the production of testimony and documentary evidence whenever a county relies upon, or defends its reliance upon, the income approach or cost comparison approaches to assess the fair market value of real property.’

There are no Senate committee meetings scheduled for today.  Today’s House Committee highlights:

HB 277 (Neal) ‘codifies the Delaware State Police program that makes available a “blue envelope” for use by a person with a disability. The intent of this program is to increase safety for both officers and persons with a disability during a traffic stop.’ Public Safety & Homeland Security.

HB 306 (Romer) ‘makes it an unlawful practice to engage in a commercial transaction with a consumer who interacts with computer technology, under circumstances where a reasonable person would believe that person is engaging with an actual human, without notifying the consumer that the consumer is communicating with a computer and not a human being.’  Hey, with a synopsis like that, how could I not include it?  Technology & Telecommunications.

HB 258 (Bolden) ‘allows any municipality with a population of 50,000 or more to establish by ordinance rules for the location of liquor stores that are more restrictive than state law, and requires the Alcoholic Beverage Control Commissioner to refuse a license for any new establishment that does not comply with those rules.’ Economic Development/Banking/Insurance & Commerce.

HB 315 (K. Williams) ‘prohibits payment card networks from establishing or charging transaction fees on tips on credit card transactions. Violations are punishable by a penalty of $1,000 per electronic transaction and the wrongful fees must be refunded.’  Economic Development/Banking/Insurance & Commerce.

HS1/HB 84 (Morrison) ‘prohibits employers from requiring meetings or communications the purpose of which is to convey the employer’s political or religious views, including views regarding unionization.’ Labor.

A decent way and day to ease back into session.

Delaware Political Weekly: Week Ending March 5, 2026

“We are kings of our bikes. So, we are again really lucky to live in Rehoboth, when we park a car, we have to get back into the car. We can hop on our bikes and our ritual is that we are always biking from our home to L(ewe)s. We do a little bit of walking around, a little bit of margarita, a little bit of good food – there’s amazing food then bike right back. So the ritual, on our bikes, every chance we can, any place we can go, and eliminate the cars.”–Dan Cruce. 

1.  Kim Williams Gets A Challenger–A Great Challenger!  Just when I thought perhaps the dance card was almost full.  I’m psyched!  The name?: Will Imbrie-Moore.  He has filed his committee to run as a Democrat in RD 19, currently held by Kim Williams.  St. Andrews and Harvard alum.  Was on research policy staff for the Biden/Harris campaign.  What I like best about him can be found in his writings (well, since I haven’t yet met him, his writings are pretty much all I have).  Check these out:

Reclaiming The Built Environment.

How Urbanism Will Help Solve Climate Crisis.

A Call For Intersectional YIMBYism.

Here’s a speech he delivered at St. Andrew’s for Diversity Weekend.

Kim Williams is one of Speaker Mimi Minor-Brown’s ‘mean girls’.  She had an adversary tossed off her committee by Speaker Mimi.  And just this past year, she bragged about how she killed school lunches for students against the objections of the legislator she got tossed from her committee.  You can read about both of them here.  Only person who doubts that Imbrie-Moore would be a major upgrade is Speaker Mimi, because she wants to remain Speaker Mimi.  That’s what Phil Shawe’s handing her a $50,000 slush fund is all about.  Some of which will no doubt find its ways into Williams’ campaign coffers.  Even by Delaware Way standards, this stinks.  As does the object of Shawe’s designs.

We’ll have lots more on this race in the next couple of weeks.  It immediately becomes one of the most notable races of the cycle.

2.  Questions For The Barristers Amongst Us–Are these legal?

a. The Mimi Minor-Brown Slush Fund.  It looks like nothing more than a gift to the grifter to spend the money as she likes.  It far exceeds the limit on campaign donations. Yet, that’s really what it is.  I’ve never seen even her most amoral predecessors try to do anything like this.  Not Speaker Pete. Not Our PAL Val. Sure, they had large campaign war chests, and they indeed shared the proceeds with others in their caucus and/or those running to get elected.  However, those funds were accrued one legal contribution at a time.  This was just a Golden Shower from Phil Shawe which, to push the analogy perhaps too far, pisses in the face of campaign finance law. Is this legal?

b. John Atkins’ Candidacy.  He did jail time for beating up a woman.  He had at least two other recorded incidents of beating up women.  Yes, he got the one he did jail time for reduced from a felony to a misdemeanor, but he beat up women and was sanctioned for it.  I know he claims to have found Jesus and a ‘good woman’, not in that order.  But, since he is a serial liar, who can possibly believe him?  Oh, did I mention he beat up women?  I want to hear from the AG on this.  Is the standard still being adjudicated for an ‘infamous crime’?  If so, either beating women is not an infamous crime, or he’s ineligible to run.

3.  We Have the Democratic Race for State Treasurer That Nobody Wants. Other than the two candidates who are just looking to jump-start their political careers.  Democrat-In-Name-Only Ted Lauzen and the guy whose Mumsy and Daddy set him up with his own phony not-for profit, The Other Mike Smith.  Come back, Ken Simpler.  All is forgiven.  No, not you, the Honorable Chipman L. Flowers, Jr.

4.  Filings.  D Mara Gorman for SD 8.  Gorman is seeking the seat currently held by retiring State Senator Dave Sokola.  She is currently State Rep. in RD 23.  Two candidates, LuAnn D’Agostino and Dan Seador, have filed in the D primary there.  I, uh, sincerely hope that they’re not the only ones.

That’s all I’ve got this week.  What’d I miss, and whaddayathink?

DL Open Thread Friday, Feb. 20, 2026

Spotlight Delaware unveiled a major project yesterday that assesses the statewide reassessment that has gored many an ox. Not surprisingly, it found that poor people and minorities got hit the hardest.

The data, compiled through Freedom of Information Act requests by Spotlight Delaware and mapped in partnership with Tech Impact’s Data Lab, show that in most areas of the state, property wealth and subsequent taxation moved to areas where they would largely be expected.

In Sussex County, the Rehoboth Beach area saw the median property assessment rise more than 5,000% while much of the more agrarian western Sussex land saw median assessments rise just 1,700%.

In Kent County, growing Dover-area suburbs like Magnolia and Cheswold, along with recreational areas like Bowers Beach and Kitts Hummock, saw median assessments increase more than 1,000%, while downtown Dover areas saw increases only about half as large.

In New Castle County, however, the largest increases came in less likely places: some of Wilmington’s poorest neighborhoods. Communities like Hilltop, Eastside, Riverside and Southbridge saw increases between 700% and 1,000%. Meanwhile, chateau country communities like Centreville, Greenville and Hockessin and the booming Middletown-Odessa-Townsend corridor saw increases of 300% to 450%.

Also:

[T]he homes in Hilltop and other impacted communities were assessed against comparable sales that primarily featured renovated homes being sold by flippers. The median assessment in Hilltop now sits north of $180,000, but recent sales of unimproved properties have fallen far under their assessed values.

• A four-bedroom townhome on West Third Street sold three months ago for $125,000 – or about 46% less than its $234,800 assessed value.

• A five-bedroom row home on North Harrison Street, whose bones date back some 136 years to before cars even traveled the city’s streets, was assessed by Tyler Technologies to be worth more than $250,000. It was sold last month to investors for just $140,000, or 44% less than its assessed value.

• Another five-bedroom home on West Third Street sold for $130,000 – or about 46% less than its $214,700 assessment.

Each of those sales seemingly demonstrates that longtime residents of Hilltop who have not invested in significant renovations are likely paying more than their fair share in property taxes.

BTW, this is the kind of work the state’s largest newspaper used to do before it decided to devote its energies to high school sports and restaurant openings and closings.

By the time you read this Trump might have started another attack on Iran. Or maybe not, he hasn’t decided yet, perhaps because he hasn’t come up with a better excuse than We have to dismantle their nuclear program” – you know, the nuclear program he claimed to have destroyed in a bombing raid last year.

I don’t want to say that Trump is the highest-rising Dunning-Kruger bozo in history, but I have to, because he is. The Mango Moron, acting on the class notes someone took for him when he pretended to go to the University of Pennsylvania, keeps insisting his illegally imposed tariffs would alter the U.S. trade deficit. Guess again, Stinky. It reached new highs in 2025.

The rise emerged despite a sharp drop in trade with China, one of the earliest targets of the tariffs. The gap runs counter to one of the White House’s key aims which is to reduce the deficit, arguing that US reliance on overseas goods has hollowed out the country’s production abilities and put national security at risk.

Imports of goods – some of which US firms had rushed at the start of last year to get ahead of Trump’s tariff regime – reached a record $3.4tn, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Business investment in artificial intelligence helped drive demand, as US imports of computer parts and equipment surged. Exports also hit a new high, despite a drop in shipments of US food, cars and car parts, two of the sectors most exposed to the trade changes.

A lot of news outlets sanewashed Trump’s demented babbling at the first meeting of his Board of Peace, but I recommend not reading them unless you’re in need of an emitic.

The floor’s yours.

Delaware Political Weekly: Week Ending Feb. 12, 2026

“We are kings of our bikes. So, we are again really lucky to live in Rehoboth, when we park a car, we have to get back into the car. We can hop on our bikes and our ritual is that we are always biking from our home to L(ewe)s. We do a little bit of walking around, a little bit of margarita, a little bit of good food – there’s amazing food then bike right back. So the ritual, on our bikes, every chance we can, any place we can go, and eliminate the cars.”–Dan Cruce. 

1.  John Atkins Finds G-d, and perhaps political salvation, in the bosom(s) of a Good Christian Woman.

I hear you naysayers, you non-believers, snickering out there.  Do not count me amongst you.  I truly believe that this man, who has long wandered in the spiritual wilderness, has finally made the journey from (allegedly) copping cheap feels at soft-core lingerie parties to yearning but to ‘touch the hem of His garment’ (no, not in that way, ya sickos).  I believe this man has sincerely, profoundly, changed.  So much so that any perceived sins should not be held against him as he is called to selflessly seek political office yet again, this time guided by the Lord…unless the AG decides otherwise.

I am so moved by his selfless motivation to serve that the Spirit has impelled me to pair this deeply-moving song with his sincere and humble missive.  To fully partake of his powerful prose, please play this song while reading his words.  Feel free to repeat the song if you read slowly:

It’s time we talk about the elephant in the room- my PAST.

I was in a marriage that eventually ended in divorce unfortunately like so many others. Heather and I have remained friends and great parents to our boys. From the start Heather has welcomed Jennifer Lea and I into her home many times. She is an awesome mother and a good person.

After my marriage ended, I got into a relationship that quickly became unhealthy. Many of my closest friends knew this but most in the public didn’t. I became good at putting on a smile and hiding it in public. My private life spiraled out of control and spilled into the public.

It’s possible that people get addicted in these bad relationships and I had a hard time finding my way out.

I paid the price for my actions, legally, financially, but most of all the embarrassment that I caused my boys, family and many of you. Let me be clear- I’m not proud of any of this. I was wrong.

About 4 months ago when many of you started to urge me to run again, I was hesitant because of what happened almost 10 years ago. I wasn’t sure I wanted to relive that time in my life. My priority was to protect Jen and our boys through what was the lowest time in my life.

Jen has become my biggest supporter and I tell people all the time God used her to save me and show me that I’m still worthy, loved and part of this community.

She gave me the encouragement to get back in the ring and go another round because she has seen my passion to help others even after I left office.

I want to thank all of you from my kindergarten friends, people that influenced me while growing up here, my church community, to people I may have met yesterday, for the forgiveness and kind words that together we can do this. I’m so grateful for all of you that never gave up on me.

About 3 months ago I said to Jen, “If I’m going to ask people to forgive me, then I need to forgive people that I’m upset with”. Not for political gain (they don’t even live in the 41st) but I called them and we put the past behind us and decided to have lunch.

I know negative things are going to be said about me and our campaign. I’m not going to worry about that because I know where I’ve been and I know where I am now in my life. I’m at peace.

I still have that passion to serve you and together we will continue to get things done for our community.

This is my promise.

God Bless you,

John.

G-d bless you too, John.

2.  Kira Alejandro Announces Her Candidacy.  With one of the best intros I’ve read in recent years:

YORKLYN, DE – Community advocate and working-class Democrat Kira Alejandro has announced her candidacy to represent District 3 of New Castle County Council, which includes Pike Creek, Hockessin, North Star, Yorklyn, and parts of Newark.

If elected next fall, Alejandro would be the youngest member of County Council, at 30 years old, and would bring one of the strongest track records of community advocacy to the Council. As a Yorklyn resident in the northwest corner of the county, Alejandro has led the effort to prevent overdevelopment in the environmentally sensitive Yorklyn valley, which experienced disastrous flooding during Tropical Storm Henri in 2003 and which contains an underground aquifer that supplies millions of gallons of drinking water each year to New Castle County residents. 

As a co-founder of the Yorklyn Community Association, Alejandro helped block a 6-story luxury condo building proposed next to Auburn Valley State Park, addressed a legal loophole that developers were exploiting, and helped secure a $6.4 million investment from the state to preserve 30 acres of open space in District 3.

“I’m running because too many Council Members have become complacent at a time when we need fearless leadership more than ever,” said Alejandro.

Like Council Member Dee Durham in her neighboring district, Alejandro is running to rein in the influence of real estate developers and to fight for more responsible land use. Her candidacy marks a clear break from incumbent Janet Kilpatrick, who has long been criticized for her close ties to developers.

To maintain her independence, Alejandro has pledged to reject campaign donations from developers, land use lawyers, corporations, and corporate PACs.

Alejandro is already enjoying a swell of grassroots support from concerned residents who have recognized her local leadership.

Sandra Finsel, a retired teacher and longtime District 3 resident, said, “Kira has been a powerful advocate for the community of Yorklyn, exploring every avenue to protect the interests of all of us who live here. Her ability to find solutions that no one else has considered is a valuable asset.”

Alejandro has also gained support from residents in other county council districts who have confronted the same developers, including Drake Cattermole, who bought the historic Gibraltar Mansion in Wilmington and let it fall into disrepair.

“We need strong, intelligent voices in our county,” said Maggie Mesinger, a Highlands resident involved in the community response to the Gibraltar fiasco. “Kira Alejandro is exactly the kind of voice we need. She’s not afraid to ask hard questions, she believes in community engagement, and she works hard to protect the quality-of-life issues that strengthen and unite communities.”

About Kira Alejandro

Alejandro was born and raised in the 3rd Council District. She grew up on Brackenville Road in Hockessin and now lives with her husband near the former NVF factory in Yorklyn. Alejandro has a background as a musician and works as a barista. She attended Cab Calloway before transferring to Interlochen Arts Academy, a world-renowned music and art school in Michigan. Later, she attended UD for three years before pursuing music professionally.

For the past decade, Alejandro has worked in the specialized coffee industry, primarily at Philter Coffee in Kennett Square. Her experience as a working-class woman anchors her commitment to policies that will help middle-class and working-class families. If elected, she plans to use her role on County Council to fight for lower utility costs and lower housing costs.

About County Council District 3

District 3 stretches along the DE-PA border from Yorklyn to UD. It includes State House District 22 (Smith-R), and parts of State House Districts 12 (Griffith-D), 21 (Burns-D), and 23 (Gorman-D).

The district features key corridors that face heavy commercial and commuter traffic, including Routes 7, 41, and 48. Areas in Pike Creek, Hockessin, and Yorklyn are also experiencing new development pressure, with roads and infrastructure struggling to keep up. Recent development proposals threaten to bring further congestion and encroach on open space and natural resources in a district that is home to two state parks (White Clay and Auburn Valley) and natural gems like Mt. Cuba Center, Ashland Nature Center, and Middle Run Valley Natural Area.  

District 3 has been represented by Janet Kilpatrick since 2010 and by Republicans for as long as New Castle County Council has existed. Kilpatrick has faced Republican primary challengers in the past but no Democrats since 2010. Kilpatrick has been rumored to retire for many years but is now mired in Delaware’s data center controversy. Kilpatrick recently moved to weaken a proposed ordinance that would regulate data center expansion. In contrast, Alejandro has called for common-sense data center regulations to protect Delawareans from skyrocketing utility costs and environmental harms.

For more information, visit kiraforcouncil.com,  Yes, you can donate to her campaign right there!

3. Another D Files In County Council District 3. One Kyle Grantham. A photographer and, to my eyes, a real good one.  He’s the Deputy Director For Strategic Communications For New Castle County. He manages ‘digital communications and multimedia production’ for the county in that role.  Also very involved with the Newark Country Club.  He has filed his committee, I’ll link when he posts a campaign page.

4.  We Have A D Primary in RD 23.  Wouldn’t be shocked if it was more than a two-way before the filing deadline.  LuAnn D’Agostino had previously filed.  This week she was joined by one Dan Seador.  At first glance (meaning, if I have the right Dan Seador),  he is the President of the Aetna Hose, Hook & Ladder Fire CompanyHe also was a long-serving EMT with the NCC Emergency Services Division Based on this article, I doubt that he’ll be a rubber-stamp for the University Of Delaware.  I consider that, at least, to be a plus.  RD 23 is currently represented by first-termer Rep. Mara Gorman, who will be seeking the Senate seat currently held by Dave Sokola, who has announced his retirement at the end of his term.

5. Incumbent Filings: Rep. Melanie Ross Levin (D-RD 10);  NCC Sheriff Scott Phillips (D).

Now, that’s more like it!  Here’s hoping for a few more weeks like this one.

That’s all I’ve got. What’d I miss, and whaddayathink?

Taxpayer-Funded Bribes Could Only Keep Incyte Here–Until Today

Breaking News from WDEL:

Less than two years after buying two downtown Wilmington properties known as Bracebridge I and III on 11th Street at King and French streets, Incyte Corporation announced on Tuesday afternoon, February 11, 2026, that they are selling the buildings to Buccini Pollin Group (BPG).

WDEL learned in early December that work had stopped on the two projects, however, neither Incyte nor the City of Wilmington or State of Delaware would confirm the work stoppage.

According to a WDEL news story in May, 2024, the biotech company headquartered in Alapocas was due to receive nearly $15 million in state grant funding in support of the expansion: $9 million is through a Jobs Performance Grant from the Council on Development Finance; and, over $5.5 million from the Delaware Strategic Fund for a Graduated Lab Space Grant.

WDEL has requested comment from the Governor’s Office if any of the money had been distributed and if so, if the state would attempt to claw any funding back.

According to Incyte the company will contribute toward the development costs of both buildings and will then lease approximately 80,000 square feet of space across two floors in Bracebridge I.

The sale is expected to close in the first quarter of 2026.

This grant was the result of (Delaware’s Worst Governor Ever) John Carney’s scheme to ‘privatize’ state economic development, including, but not limited to, exemptions from FOIA.

Matt Meyer has indicated, but hasn’t acted on it yet, that he wants less of this quasi-governmental largesse when it comes to doling out tens of millions of public dollars to corporations.

Anyone surprised that Buccini-Pollin is buying these properties? Certainly not John Carney, the Mayor of Buccini/Pollinville, and only Buccini/Pollinville.

Call it what it is: Delaware Way shit with someone (not you) pocketing a lot of your taxpayer dollars.

DL Open Thread Sunday Magazine: Feb. 8, 2026

Why the Internet sucks, and what we can do about it.  A real deep dive,  perfect for a lazy Sunday morning:

It’s clear something has gone so wrong. But what do we do about it?

My guests today have two theories. Cory Doctorow is a longtime blogger, an activist with the Electronic Frontier Foundation and a science fiction writer. His new book is “Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It.”

(Are You With Me, Dr. ) Tim Wu worked as a special assistant to President Joe Biden for technology and competition policy. He’s a professor at Columbia Law School and the author of several influential books on technology, including his latest, “The Age of Extraction: How Tech Platforms Conquered the Economy and Threaten Our Future Prosperity.”

Enshittification and extraction, those are the ideas I wanted to put in play together here — and also to think about what solutions they might present.

At which point Ezra Klein’s conversation with the two experts begins.

What feels bad to the guests:

Doctorow: What I would do is contrast what happens when things aren’t great now with how I felt about what happened when things weren’t great before. So I think when I was a larva on the early internet, and I saw things that sucked, I would think: Someone is going to fix this, and maybe it could be me.

Now when I see bad things on the internet, I’m like: This is by design, and it cannot be fixed because you would be violating the rules if you even tried.

Wu: I feel it’s like a tool I cannot trust. I feel like the tools I like in my life, like a hammer — I swing it, and it does something predictable.

The internet seems like it’s serving two masters. I search for something, I get a bunch of stuff I don’t really want, and I don’t really know what I’m getting. I want to write one email or check one thing. I end up in some strange rabbit hole, and three hours go by, and I don’t know what happened.

So I feel like I’m constantly at risk of being manipulated or taken from, and I don’t trust the tools to do what they say they’re going to do. And I feel that makes using it kind of like living in a fun house.

That’s just the beginning.  If you read the entire transcript (or listen to the podcast), you will go down a rabbit hole.  But I think you’ll find it worthwhile. Plus, you’ll learn stuff. Stuff you might even use.

I found the artwork in this music video stunning.  Thought I’d share:

How Geothermal Energy Saved A College Millions:

The discussions started roughly a decade ago, when an account manager at Xcel Energy, the electricity and gas utility provider, expressed confusion, officials at Colorado Mesa University recalled.

A public school on the state’s remote western slope, Colorado Mesa had recently doubled in size, but its energy usage had hardly budged as it began installing an advanced geothermal heating and cooling system.

Since its geothermal buildout began in 2008, the university has saved more than $15 million in energy costs, money it has passed on to students through lower tuition and more scholarship funding.

Hundreds of boreholes drilled approximately 500 feet beneath athletic fields and parking lots tap low-temperature thermal energy to help heat and cool campus buildings in what is now one of the largest such networks in the nation.

The system’s high efficiency—later confirmed in an independent analysis by Xcel —means campus buildings require about half as much energy for heating and cooling as similar buildings, allowing the university to expand its campus without a corresponding increase in energy usage.

As the Trump Administration targets renewable energy sources such as wind and solar, developing highly efficient thermal networks like Colorado Mesa’s offers another path for communities to transition away from fossil fuels.

“It’s been the best-kept secret in all of western Colorado for a long time,” Kent Marsh, vice president of capital planning, sustainability and campus operations for Colorado Mesa, said. “We just have never really done a good job of tooting our horn.”

Toot-toot.

Lotsa Pictures Of Owls.  Owls Be Seeing You…:

A snowy owl glides over a snow-covered field.
Chi Shiyong / VCG / Getty
A snowy owl glides over the snow-blanketed grasslands at Hadatu Ranch on a cold day in Hulunbuir, Inner Mongolia, China, on December 22, 2025.
An owl tucks its wings as it soars past evergreen trees.
Scott Suriano / Getty
A boreal owl tucks its wings as it soars past evergreen trees in Minnesota.

I included these two pictures b/c it never had dawned on me that, when they fly, owls are like blimps with wings.

I gave away today’s musical outro, didn’t I?  At least you’ll know where to substitute ‘owls’ for ‘I’ll’:

Delaware Political Weekly: Week Ending Feb. 5, 2026

“We are kings of our bikes. So, we are again really lucky to live in Rehoboth, when we park a car, we have to get back into the car. We can hop on our bikes and our ritual is that we are always biking from our home to L(ewe)s. We do a little bit of walking around, a little bit of margarita, a little bit of good food – there’s amazing food then bike right back. So the ritual, on our bikes, every chance we can, any place we can go, and eliminate the cars.”–Dan Cruce. 

1. Will THIS GUY be the Rethug Candidate For US Senate?  The Rethug monicker certainly applies:

Delaware Native

Dedicated over 28 years to defending American interests abroad and leading Soldiers at home.

Leadership Experience

Citizen Soldier from Tank Platoon Leader in South Korea, Planner in Iraq, Brigade Command in Iowa, U.S.-Russia talks in Geneva, and AI-Data policy at the Pentagon.

Education

BS in Aviation Computer Science from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and Masters in International Relations from the University of Oklahoma. Graduate of the U.S. Army War College.

His Platform–Trumpian All The Way.  Some samples:

Stabilize the dollar, root out fraud-waste-abuse, and slash energy regulations to lower the price of gas, groceries, and transport – attacking inflation at the source. Per President Trump’s plan, cap credit card rates at 10%.

Using federal incentives and conditioning certain federal funds, eliminate residential property taxes and all inheritance taxes to preserve family wealth and inter-generational stability, shift the tax burden away from home owners to tariffs.

Unleash American oil, natural gas, and coal (“Drill, Baby, Drill”); fund a Manhattan-style program for a high-energy industrial and manufacturing superpower and to also power an AI and Bitcoin economy.

End the crypto crackdown; defend the right to self-custody and mine; and establish a Strategic National Bitcoin Stockpile to serve as a hedge against inflation and a defensive asset for national financial security and thermodynamic, digital defense against malign AI algorithms.

Ban taxpayer funding for gender transition surgeries; keep men out of women’s sports; promote fatherhood and family flourishing through child tax credits and pro-family zoning laws.

There’s more, but I’ve seen enough.  Bet you have too.

He’s also running against the ‘leftists’ who control the Delaware Democratic Party.  Raising the question, has he ever met Chris Coons?

2.  There IS no #2.  No filings, no new committees, no nothing.  Hey, I can only work with the material that presents itself to me.

That’s all I’ve got this week.  What’d I miss, and whaddayathink?

BREAKING BIG NEWS!!: DNREC Says That Proposed Data Center Violates Coastal Zone Act

Reader Drew Knox (hmmm, Drew Knox–I wonder…Sen. Andy Knox was a key proponent, and sponsor, of The Coastal Zone Act) beat me to it.  But it is, in fact, true.  From the Spotlight Delaware report:

Delaware’s environmental agency ruled Wednesday morning that a plan for a massive data center near Delaware City is not allowed under the state’s Coastal Zone Act.

This decision could stop the project from moving forward entirely, unless developer Starwood Digital Ventures wins an appeal or makes major changes to its design.

The Delaware General Assembly passed the Coastal Zone Act in 1971 to protect the state’s coastal areas from the impacts of heavy industry.

The Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC) decided that the proposed data center near Delaware City, dubbed Project Washington, is not allowed under the law primarily because of its diesel generators.

The data center plan calls for 516 backup diesel generators that would operate in the case of a power outage. They would together need 2.5 million gallons of stored diesel, which DNREC Secretary Gregory Patterson called “entirely unprecedented” in his ruling. 

“The large tank farm that is incorporated into this proposal will pose exactly the types of risks that justify the categorical exclusion of such a tank farm from the Coastal Zone,” Patterson wrote.

The most backup generators currently at a facility in the Coastal Zone is eight, he wrote.

A major shout-out to DNREC Secretary Patterson.  And, yes, to the Governor who appointed him.

BREAKING: Bill Stevenson Charged With Wife’s Murder

From NBC News:

Former first lady Jill Biden’s ex-husband was arrested and charged with murder in the death of his current wife, officials said Tuesday.

William Stevenson, 77, was taken into custody Monday and is facing a charge of first-degree murder in the death of Linda Stevenson, according to a grand jury indictment filed in Delaware.

New Castle County police did not provide details on the death, but an initial release had noted that officers responded to a domestic dispute Dec. 28 at a residence in the Wilmington area.

Linda Stevenson was found unresponsive in the living room and died despite lifesaving measures by officers at the scene. The press release at the time said that her body was turned over to the Delaware Division of Forensic Science for an autopsy.

In Linda Stevenson’s obituary, the 64-year old was described by loved ones as “deeply family-oriented,” and a big Philadelphia Eagles fan. It also said she founded a small bookkeeping business in the final years of her life.

A cause of death was not included in the statement on William Stevenson’s arrest. The grand jury’s indictment Monday was the result of an “extensive weekslong investigation” into the death, police said.

Delaware Political Weekly: Week Ending January 29, 2026

“We are kings of our bikes. So, we are again really lucky to live in Rehoboth, when we park a car, we have to get back into the car. We can hop on our bikes and our ritual is that we are always biking from our home to L(ewe)s. We do a little bit of walking around, a little bit of margarita, a little bit of good food – there’s amazing food then bike right back. So the ritual, on our bikes, every chance we can, any place we can go, and eliminate the cars.”–Dan Cruce. 

I’m pretty sure that the weather slowed down activity this week.  But we have a couple of noteworthy items to address.

1.  It’s onGriffith vs. Bahnsen in RD 12.  (Psychiatric) Doctor Rob Bahnsen vs. (Richards, Layton & Finger’s favorite) Lawyer Krista Griffith.  Needless to say, money will be no object.  RD 12 includes westernmost Brandywine Hundred, a significant portion of Chateau Country, and even dips into some of Wilmington’s tonier neighborhoods, thanks to the most recent redistricting.  This race is a Democratic primary, with the winner the heavy favorite going into the fall.  I make Bahnsen the favorite until/unless I see a strong grassroots effort from Griffith’s team.  Still, the Delaware Way members of the House D caucus will certainly be supporting Griffith.  Both candidates have now qualified for the primary ballot.

2.  R Files For Rae Moore’s Seat.  One Gary Taylor.  based on my hasty search of the intertubes, I think that he’s a Veteran and may, or may not, be a mortgage broker.  Breaking News: I’m WRONG.  He’s an ex-cop who looks to be making a quick jump to the General Assembly.  He touts ‘30-plus years in law enforcement’. Guess that everything old is new again.  Moore has made some enemies in the Caucus, but they’re righteous enemies–The Speaker Of The House and Kim Williams.  She won reelection against R Chris Beronio in 2024, 58-42.  In 2022, she defeated R David Thomas by a similar margin.  Unless the Mean Girls try to gin up a D primary, I look for a similar result this year.

That’s all I’ve got.  What’d I miss, and whaddayathink?

General Assembly Post-Game Wrap-Up/Pre-Game Show: Thursday, January 29, 2026

Credit where credit’s due:  In a building where anybody with access to knowledge is a prospective leaker, the stealth veto overrides by the Senate was a masterstroke.  The bleatings of Eric Buckson tell us that the Senate Rethugs weren’t clued in, not that it mattered.  I suspect, though, that the secrecy was aimed more at keeping the Governor’s people out of the loop.  Regardless of the merits of the bills that were overridden, I’m really impressed with the skill with which this operation was carried out.  From the linked Spotlight Delaware article:

The State Senate voted to override Gov. Matt Meyer’s two vetoes issued on bills last year – one that would close what advocates call a wage theft loophole, and another that would limit where marijuana shops can be located. The House later sealed the override on the labor bill, but has not yet voted on the marijuana override.

Senate Republicans lambasted their Democratic colleagues before each override vote, particularly for introducing the measures without giving the minority party advance notice. According to the Senate rules, giving advance notice across party lines – or even putting veto override votes on the Senate’s publicly accessible agenda – is not required.

“I’m amazed – dumbfounded – at the fact that we’re even here right now.” State Sen Eric Buckson (R-Dover) said. “This was thrown at me at this time. At this particular minute. And this, to me, is not process. A simple heads up would have been more than fair.”

But Democrats pushed back against Republican objections, saying they were simply following the chamber’s rules, and that last week’s winter storm had caused delays and miscommunications between the leadership of each party.  (Translation:  No, Rethug senators can’t have their manhood back.)

Besides, not providing a heads-up was an essential part of the plan.  When I worked in the Senate, it was well-known within the caucus that there would be at least two D senators racing up to the Governor’s office to tell them something that had been discussed in caucus in strict confidence.  While I won’t share their names, one of them is still skulking around the Controller General’s office. Had either of those two senators been in the current caucus, the secret would not have been kept.

On the marijuana bill, I had anticipated that the override attempt would take place.  Why?  Allow me to quote from Sen. Paradee following the unexpected veto:

“If you give someone your word and you later back out or do not deliver as you promised, you will irreparably tarnish your name and reputation,” he said at the time. “Once that happens, no one will trust you or want to work with you again.”

Meyer did give his word on that bill, and he went back on it.  He created the atmosphere for yesterday’s action.  It’s on him.

Here is yesterday’s Session Activity Report.

Oh, before I get any further, I just can’t resist this.  HB 251 (Morrison), which enables New Castle County Council to elect their own Council President, easily made it out of committee.  One, and only one, person spoke in opposition.   Monique Johns (-Williams?).  Her argument, and this was her argument, being that if this was taken away from voters, no person of color would ever be able to hold the position.  I ,um, suspect the argument carried little weight in a political body where both the Speaker and Majority Leader are Black (granted, the wrong Black leaders, which, come to think of it, describes Monique).

But, I digress.

Today’s Senate Agenda mirrors yesterday’s Senate Agenda, since they didn’t get to the planned Agenda due to the overrides.  Does anybody know the answer to this question I raised–is the final provision in the Mini Bond Bill a shot at the Governor?  This, to be precise:

…amend Delaware Code to require the Diamond State Port Corporation Executive Director to be selected by majority vote of the Board.

At least one inquiring mind want to know.

The bills on today’s House Agenda reflect those priorities that legislators established, and which have already passed the Senate.

I’m disappointed that the General Assembly didn’t take up changes to the Special Elections process (because you never know when a special election will pop up) and that the Senate punted on legislation that would have challenged the ability of Delaware River & Bay to give out contracts to ICE co-conspirators.  Were I a cynic, I’d think that the prime sponsor(s) just wanted brochure material without actually giving two shits about the issue.

Following today’s session, the General Assembly is scheduled to be off for six weeks for Joint Finance Committee hearings.  In the past, that meant that the Governor would submit his proposed budget for JFC consideration by today.  I see no mention of the imminent budget introduction on the Governor’s official homepage.  Anybody have more info?

Over and out until mid-March.