Tag Archives: Delaware

Filing Deadline Passes – State of the Races

First some news about the U.S. House race courtesy of TNJ’s Dialogue Delaware:

Scott Spencer has dropped his bid for the Democratic nomination and has endorsed John Carney. He raised only $8000 so I guess he didn’t have enough for the filing fee.

In other ballot news, Democrat Scott Spencer of Wilmington said he has ended his campaign for the office, endorsing former Lt. Gov. John C. Carney Jr. Spencer said his “organic” approach to campaign finance was a success. He raised about $8,000, he said, but has not filed a campaign finance report. The deadline for second-quarter reports is Thursday.

As RSmitty noted, Libertarian candidate Brent Wangen has also filed for the Republican primary for U.S. House. So it’s a 4-way race: Michele Rollins, Glen Urquhart, Rose Izzo and Brent Wangen. I’m predicting they’ll finish in this order in the primary as well.

TNJ put together a handy spreadsheet of the races. Among the notable changes is that Hazel Plant has not one but two primary challengers: Stephanie Boulden and Darius Brown. Will Plant’s name recognition carry the day or will she be outworked by the two newcomers?

There are still 12 state reps without challengers in the primary or general, 6 Democrats and 6 Republicans. These state reps are RD1 Dennis P. Williams (D), RD5 Melanie George (D), RD11 Greg Lavelle (R), RD13 John Mitchell (D), RD16 J.J. Johnson (D), RD17 Mike Mulrooney (D), RD19 Bob Gilligan (D), RD21 Mike Ramone (R), RD30 Bobby Outten (R), RD38 Gerald Hocker (R), RD39 Danny Short (R) and RD40 Biff Lee (R).

In the State Senate there are 3 incumbents without challengers, 2 D and 1 R. They are SD1 Harris McDowell (D), SD12 Dori Connor (R) and SD13 David McBride (D). Karen Peterson (SD9) now has a Republican challenger, Robert Johnston.

2 More Days To File – Who’s Unchallenged

There are still 2 more days to file to run for office. Let’s take a look at who is unopposed. Will they get a challenger?

Attorney General – Beau Biden (D – incumbent)

State Senate
State Senate District 1 – Harris McDowell (D – incumbent)
State Senate District 9 – Karen Peterson (D – incumbent)
State Senate District 12 – Dori Connor (R – incumbent)
State Senate District 13 – David McBride (D – incumbent)
State Senate District 15 – Richard R. Lawson (R) [incumbent Nancy Cook (D) has not yet filed]

Of the 11 state senate races, 5 are unopposed.

State House of Representatives
State Representative District 1 – Dennis P. Williams (D – incumbent)
State Representative District 2 – Hazel Plant (D – incumbent)
State Representative District 3 – Helene Keeley (D – incumbent)
State Representative District 5 – Melanie George (D – incumbent)
State Representative District 11 – Greg Lavelle (R – incumbent)
[Deborah Hudson in RD12 has a Libertarian opponent, but no Democratic challenger]
State Representative District 13 – John Mitchell (D – incumbent)
State Representative District 16 – J.J. Johnson (D – incumbent)
State Representative District 17– Michael Mulrooney (D – incumbent)
State Representative District 19 – Bob Gilligan (D – incumbent)
State Representative District 21 – Mike Ramone (R – incumbent)
State Representative District 23 – Terri Schooley (D – incumbent)
State Representative District 26 – John Viola (D – incumbent)
State Representative District 28 – William Carson (D – incumbent)
State Representative District 30 – William R. “Bobby” Outten (R – incumbent)
State Representative District 38 – Gerald Hocker (R – incumbent)
State Representative District 39 – Danny Short (R – incumbent)
State Representative District 40 – Clifford “Biff” Lee (R – incumbent)
State Representative District 41 – Greg Hastings (R) [John Atkins (D – incumbent) has not yet filed]

Of 41 seat, 18 are unopposed (44%). Of the 18 unopposed seats, 11 are Democrats (61%) and 7 are Republicans. To me, it looks like a tough year for Delaware Republicans to take back either the House or Senate.

Who’s Running – One Week To Go!

It’s time to update the Who’s Running list. Last week we saw that some GA seats were going unchallenged and yesterday we got a surprise retirement announcement. Have things changed in the last week?

U.S. Senate
Chris Coons has gained an opponent. It’s Libertarian candidate James Rash. Still no signs of Christine O’Donnell or Mike Castle.

U.S. House
This race has also gained an opponent. Libertarian Brent Wangen has filed and joins John Carney (D), Rose Izzo (R) and Glen Urquhart (R). No filings so far from Scott Spencer (D) and Michele Rollins (R). Yesterday’s News Journal featured an article on some of the first-time candidates in the race, with a large emphasis on Brent Wangen.

Statewide Office
Treasurer – Velda Jones-Potter (Incumbent) vs. Chip Flowers in the Democratic primary. Republican Colin Bonini has not filed yet.
Auditor of Accounts – Richard Korn vs. Ken Matlusky in the Democratic primary. Incumbent Republican Tom Wagner has not filed yet.
Attorney General – Beau Biden (D – incumbent) has no challenger yet.

State Senate – No changes from last week
State Senate District 1 – Harris McDowell is unchallenged
State Senate District 5 – Chris Counihan (D) vs. Cathy Cloutier (R – incumbent)
State Senate District 7 – Patty Blevins (D – incumbent) vs. Fred Cullis (R)
State Senate District 8 – Dave Sokola (D – incumbent) vs. Louis Saindon
State Senate District 9 – Karen Peterson (D – incumbent) is unchallenged
State Senate District 12 – Dori Connor (R – incumbent) is unchallenged
State Senate District 13 – David McBride (D – incumbent) is unchallenged
State Senate District 14 – Bruce Ennis (D – incumbent) vs. John Moritz (R)
State Senate District 15 – David Lawson (R) [Nancy Cook (D) incumbent]
State Senate District 19 – Joe Booth (R – incumbent) vs. Eric Bodenweiser (R) primary [no D challenger yet]
State Senate District 20 – Perry Mitchell (D) [George Bunting (D) incumbent]

State Representatives – Changes featured in bold
State Representative District 1 – Dennis P. Williams (D – incumbent) is unchallenged
State Representative District 2 – Hazel Plant (D – incumbent) is unchallenged

State Representative District 3 – Helene Keeley (D) is unchallenged
State Representative District 4 – Gerald Brady (D – incumbent) vs. Richard Carroll (R)
State Representative District 5 – Melanie George (D – incumbent) is unchallenged
State Representative District 6 – Debra Heffernan (D) vs. Tom Kovach (R – incumbent)

State Representative District 7 – Bryon Short (D – incumbent) vs. Judith Travis (R)
State Representative District 8 – Kathleen Rokosz (R) vs. winner of Quinn Johnson (D – incumbent) – Valeria Jones-Rabb primary
State Representative District 9 – Richard Griffiths (D) [open seat, Dick Cathcart (R – incumbent)]
State Representative District 10 – Robert Rhodunda (R) vs. winner of Dennis E. Williams (D – incumbent) – Kenneth Dargis (D) primary
State Representative District 11 – Greg Lavelle (R) is unchallenged
State Representative District 12 – Deborah Hudson (R) is unchallenged
State Representative District 13 – John Mitchell (D) is unchallenged
State Representative District 14 – Pete Schwartzkopf (D – incumbent) vs. Christopher Weeks (R)
State Representative District 15 – Valerie Longhurst (D – incumbent) vs. James Van Houten (R)
State Representative District 16 – J.J. Johnson (D) is unchallenged
State Representative District 17– Michael Mulrooney (D) is unchallenged
State Representative District 18 – Mike Barbieri (D – incumbent) vs. Terry Spence (R) [REMATCH!!!]
State Representative District 19 – Bob Gilligan (D) is unchallenged
State Representative District 20 – Francis Swift (D) [Manolakos (R) incumbent]
State Representative District 21 – Mike Ramone (R) is unchallenged
State Representative District 22 – Dave Ellis (D) vs. Joseph Miro (R – incumbent)
State Representative District 23 – Terri Schooley (D) is unchallenged
State Representative District 24 – Kay Gallogly (D) vs. Ed Osienski (D) primary [no filed (R) challenger yet]
State Representative District 25 – John Kowalko (D -incumbent) vs. Gordon Winegar (R)
State Representative District 26 – John Viola (D – incumbent) is unchallenged
State Representative District 27 – Jay Galloway (R) vs. winner of Earl Jaques (D -incumbent) – James Maravelias (D) primary
State Representative District 28 – Robert Carson (D) [confused here – incumbent is William J. Carson (D), relative?]
State Representative District 29 – John McCutchan (D) vs. winner of George Phillips (R) – Lincoln Willis (R) primary [open seat Pam Thornburg (R)]
State Representative District 30 – William R. “Bobby” Outten (R) is unchallenged
State Representative District 31 – Ronald Smith (R) [Darryl Scott (D) incumbent]
State Representative District 32 – Brad Bennett (D) vs. Beth Buzzell Miller (R)
State Representative District 33 – Robert Walls (D – incumbent) vs. winner of Harold Peterman (R) – Steven Rust (R) primary
State Representative District 34 – Jill Fuchs (D) vs. Donald Blakey (R – incumbent)
State Representative District 35 – Jim Westhoff (D) vs. David Wilson (R – incumbent)
State Representative District 36 – Russell McCabe (D) vs. Harvey Kenton (R) [open seat George Carey (R)]
State Representative District 37 – Frank Shade (D) vs. Ruth Briggs King (R – incumbent)
Representative District 38 – Gerald Hocker (R) is unchallenged
State Representative District 40 – Clifford “Biff” Lee (R) is unchallenged

Bottom line: not many changes from last week. Almost all the seats have a candidate. Supposed candidates O’Donnell, Spencer, Protack, Castle and Rollins have still not filed. Do any of the races look different this week?

Delaware Is Different

Delaware ended its legislative session on Wednesday. The GA passed a balanced state budget on the deadline. The budget restored last year’s pay cuts and increased funding in various areas. The GA also passed a set of bills addressing the Bradley case in Sussex by a unanimous vote.

The General Assembly concluded business for the year early this morning, leaving citizens unscathed by tax increases and state employees confident of their jobs.

The session ended with the elimination of a yearlong pay cut for state employees and a late boost in state revenue that allowed legislators to avoid painful election-year belt-tightening or tax increases.

Compare and contrast with some of our neighboring states. In New Jersey, Chris Christie relied solely on budget cuts because the millionaires in the state must be protected:

Christopher J. Christie, the first Republican elected governor of New Jersey in 12 years, unveiled a $29.3 billion budget on Tuesday that relies almost exclusively on spending cuts to reverse the sagging fortunes of a state he sees as battered by the recession and choking on its tax burden.

To close a deficit that he asserted was approaching $11 billion, Governor Christie called for the layoffs of 1,300 state workers, closings of state psychiatric institutions, an $820 million cut in aid to public schools, and nearly a half-billion dollars less in aid to towns and cities. He also suspended until May 2011 a popular property-tax rebate program, breaking one of his own campaign promises.

Of course, Republicans adore Christie because the pain of recession must be borne by the poor and middle class instead of the politicians and bankers that caused the problem. However, people in the state weren’t so happy:

A crowd estimated at 30,000 to 35,000 people gathered Saturday [May 22] near New Jersey’s Statehouse to protest Gov. Chris Christie’s proposed budget cuts.

State police, who gave the crowd estimate, said no problems were reported.

The crowd is believed to be one of the largest ever to protest in state history. It was mostly comprised of public employee union members and several community and nonprofit groups that would lose some or all their funding if Christie’s plans are adopted.

Of course these protestors weren’t wearing teabags or carrying misspelled signs comparing Christie to Hitler so the media wasn’t interested.

Other neighboring states aren’t immune. Pennsylvania has its first on-time budget in Rendell’s term, and it calls for layoffs and spending cuts:

The tentative budget, agreed to by negotiators and Rendell on Tuesday, includes no increases in sales or income taxes, and Rendell hailed a boost in spending for public schools. But he acknowledged that this agreement includes painful cuts, and he said there could be as many as 1,000 state employee layoffs.

“There’s no way to do this without inflicting pain,” Rendell said. “There’s no clear way to cut $1 billion from the budget … without pain, but under the circumstances, this is the right thing to do.”

Delaware is just different. Delaware requires supermajorities to pass the budget, like many other states. In other states, like California or New York, this leads to months-long budget crises because a few legislators can hold the whole government hostage. This doesn’t happen in Delaware (so far).

The trends affecting the Republican party just don’t seem to be happening here either, or not nearly as much. In Nevada and Kentucky the GOP establishment candidates were soundly defeated by hard right Tea Party activists. Delaware Republicans have nominated Country Club Republicans like Michele Rollins and Mike Castle instead. Tea Party candidates like Christine O’Donnell and Glen Urquhart haven’t gotten much traction in Delaware. Delaware has a small and vocal Tea Party minority but they could only must a couple dozen protestors in Dover Wednesday.

Delaware seems to be bucking the national trends. Instead of laying off state workers, we’re restoring pay cuts. Instead of losing jobs, we’re announcing new jobs. Instead of purging Republican incumbents, we’re embracing them. What makes Delaware so different?

Who’s Running – County Edition

On Tuesday we took a look at who’s running for statewide office and for the General Assembly. Now let’s take a look at who’s running for countywide offices. You can look at the Delaware Elections page for primaries and general election information.

New Castle County

Sheriff – Mike Walsh (D – incumbent) vs. Trinidad Navarro (D) [primary, no general election opponent yet]
Register of Wills – Ciro Poppiti (D) [open seat – no filed opponent]
Recorder of Deeds – Mike Kozikowski (D – incumbent) [no filed opponent]
County Council District 1 – Joe Reda (D – incumbent) vs. Joseph Suiter (R)
County Council District 2 – Michael Anone (D) vs. Robert Weiner (R – incumbent)
County Council District 3 – Renee Tanscher (D) vs. Janet Kilpatrick (R) [open seat – Bill Tansey is retiring]
County Council District 5 – Lisa Diller (D – incumbent) [no filed opponent]
County Council District 6 – William Powers (D – incumbent) vs. Andrea Daley (R)

I have to say here that the Republicans did a good job getting opponents for these races. All Democratic incumbents except Lisa Diller have opponents right now.

Kent County

Sheriff – James Higdon, Jr. (R – incumbent) [no filed opponent]
Recorder of Deeds – Betty Lou McKenna (D – incumbent) vs. Michael Lindquist (R)
Levy Court District 2 – Bradley Eaby (D – incumbent) [no filed opponent]
Levy Court District 6 – Harold Brode (D – incumbent) vs. Glen Howell (R)
Levy Court At Large – Terry Pepper (D) vs. Wallace Edmanson (R) [Richard Ennis (D) is incumbent]

Sussex County

Sheriff – Eric Swanson (D – incumbent) [no filed opponent]
Register of Wills – Gregory Fuller,Sr. (D – incumbent) vs. Cynthia Green (R)
Recorder of Deeds – Alma Roach (D) [John Brady (D) incumbent]
County Council District 5 – Vance Phillips (R – incumbent) [no filed opponent yet] Hey anyone know, did that bill pass?

Castle Votes YES On Financial Reform

The new Financial Reform legislation just passed the House of Representatives 237-192. Mike Castle voted yes on this bill, despite previously voting no (Two other Republicans voted yes – Ahn Joseph Cao and Walter Jones). I guess Castle is not worried about Christine O’Donnell or the teabaggers. Judging by the turnout at the Tea Party rally at Dover today, Castle is right to ignore them (photo by Mike Matthews).

Wow...teabagger attendance on legislative green is embarrassingly low!!

Two Weeks Out – Who’s Running?

The filing deadline for office in Delaware is July 13 (the last day to withdraw is July 15). Let’s look at the state of the election for federal and state offices. Who’s running? What races are of interest?

Federal Offices

Right now Chris Coons, John Carney and Beau Biden have no primary candidates. So far, Chris Coons is unopposed (go Chris!) Scott Spencer, Michele Rollins, Christine O’Donnell and Mike Castle are not candidates yet, according to the Department of Elections. On the Republican side, Glen Urquhart and Rose Izzo are filed candidate.

Primaries

As of today here are the primaries (filed candidates only):
Democratic
Treasurer – Velda Jones-Potter (I) vs. Chip Flowers
Auditor of Accounts – Richard Korn vs. Ken Matlusky [Wagner (R) incumbent]
State Representative District 8 – S. Quinton Johnson (I) vs. Valerie Jones-Rabb
State Representative District 10 – Dennis E. Williams (I) vs. Kenneth R. Dargis
State Representative District 24 – Kay Wilde Gallogly vs. Ed Osienski [Open Seat – Oberle]
State Representative District 27 – Earl Jaques (I) vs. James Maravelias

Republican
U.S. Representative (DE-AL) – Glen Urquhart vs. Rose Izzo [Open Seat – Castle]
State Senate District 19 – Joe Booth (I) vs. Eric Bodenweiser
State Representative District 29 – George Phillips vs. Lincoln Willis [Open Seat – Thornburg is retiring, right?]
State Representative District 33 – Harold Peterman vs. Steven Rust [Robert Walls (D) incumbent]

General Election

State Senate District 1 – Harris McDowell is unchallenged
State Senate District 5 – Chris Counihan (D) vs. Cathy Cloutier (R – incumbent)
State Senate District 7 – Patty Blevins (D – incumbent) vs. Fred Cullis (R)
State Senate District 8 – Dave Sokola (D – incumbent) vs. Louis Saindon
State Senate District 9 – Karen Peterson (D – incumbent) is unchallenged
State Senate District 12 – Dori Connor (R – incumbent) is unchallenged
State Senate District 13 – David McBride (D – incumbent) is unchallenged
State Senate District 14 – Bruce Ennis (D – incumbent) vs. John Moritz (R)
State Senate District 15 – David Lawson (R) [Nancy Cook (D) incumbent]
State Senate District 20 – Perry Mitchell (D) [George Bunting (D) incumbent]
State Representative District 3 – Helene Keeley (D) is unchallenged
State Representative District 4 – Gerald Brady (D – incumbent) vs. Richard Carroll (R)
State Representative District 6 – Debra Heffernan (D) [Tom Kovach (R) incumbent]
State Representative District 7 – Bryon Short (D – incumbent) vs. Judith Travis (R)
State Representative District 8 – Kathleen Rokosz (R) [faces winner of Johnson (I) – Jones-Rabb primary]
State Representative District 9 – Richard Griffiths (D) [Richard Cathcart (R) incumbent]
State Representative District 10 – Robert Rhodunda (R) [faces winner of Williams (I) – Dargis primary]
State Representative District 11 – Greg Lavelle (R) is unchallenged
State Representative District 12 – Deborah Hudson (R) is unchallenged
State Representative District 13 – John Mitchell (D) is unchallenged
State Representative District 14 – Christopher Weeks (R) [Schwartzkopf (D) incumbent]
State Representative District 15 – Valerie Longhurst (D – incumbent) vs. James Van Houten (R)
State Representative District 16 – James Johnson (D) is unchallenged
State Representative District 17 – Michael Mulrooney (D) is unchallenged
State Representative District 18 – Mike Barbieri (D – incumbent) vs. Terry Spence (R) [REMATCH!!!]
State Representative District 19 – Bob Gilligan (D) is unchallenged
State Representative District 20 – Francis Swift (D) [Manolakos (R) incumbent]
State Representative District 21 – Mike Ramone (R) is unchallenged
State Representative District 22 – Dave Ellis (D) vs. Joseph Miro (R – incumbent)
State Representative District 23 – Terri Schooley (D) is unchallenged
State Representative District 25 – John Kowalko (D -incumbent) vs. Gordon Winegar (R)
State Representative District 27 – Jay Galloway (R) [faces winner of Jaques (I) – Maravelias primary]
State Representative District 28 – Robert Carson (D) [confused here – incumbent is William J. Carson (D), relative?]
State Representative District 29 – John McCutchan (D) [faces winner of Phillips – Willis primary]
State Representative District 30 – William R. “Bobby” Outten (R) is unchallenged
State Representative District 31 – Ronald Smith (R) [Darryl Scott (D) incumbent]
State Representative District 32 – Brad Bennett (D) vs. Beth Buzzell Miller (R)
State Representative District 33 – Robert Walls (D – incumbent) [faces winner of Peterman – Rust primary]
State Representative District 34 – Jill Fuchs (D) vs. Donald Blakey (R – incumbent)
State Representative District 35 – Jim Westhoff (D) vs. David Wilson (R – incumbent)
State Representative District 36 – Russell McCabe (D) vs. Harvey Kenton (R) [George Carey (R) incumbent – anyone know about this race?]
State Representative District 37 – Frank Shade (D) vs. Ruth Briggs King (R – incumbent)
State Representative District 38 – Gerald Hocker (R) is unchallenged
State Representative District 40 – Clifford “Biff” Lee (R) is unchallenged

We’ll talk about the county offices tomorrow. Which races are of interest to you? I think the open seat races will be interesting (RD-24 and RD-29) are going to be interesting. The primary challenge of Eric Bodenweiser to Joe Booth in SD-19 is also of interest. In the general election race the rematch of Mike Barbieri and Terry Spence in RD-18 should be one to watch. Progressive favorite John Kowalko has a general election challenger in RD-25 with Gordon Winegar. The race in RD-35 of Jim Westhoff (a real progressive) with David Wilson in the heart of lower slower could be exciting.

Have you noticed how many officeholders are unchallenged still? Although there are some incumbents facing primary challenges: Booth in SD-19, Johnson in RD-8, Dennis E. Williams in RD-10 and Jaques in RD-27.

C’Mon Delaware (the podcast) Episode 7

Click Here to listen.
This is the “walking the dog, talking about things we like in Delaware broadcast”

Includes:

The moon

The Blue Rocks

The Riverfront (the apartment buildings however,…not good)

Northern Delaware (where everything good about Delaware is located (except the beaches))

Being called gay

Indians

Palin’s Breasts

Ryan Cormier’s blog

USA Soccer

The Warwick Inn

Muscrat (sp?)

Starbucks Gift Card (still unclaimed)

Miss Delaware & Cussing

Pandora (the blogger)

Going Immobile

I don’t know what website the young lady is viewing on her phone, but it is certainly not the new Delaware.gov website. Yesterday, Delaware unveiled its new website, it has lots of bells and whistles, but the biggest drawback is that is not mobile friendly. In this day and age when so many of us are on the go accessing the internet from our phones, a newly designed government website should be needs to be mobile friendly. And, yes, I know DelawareLiberal is not mobile friendly, though that’s liberalgeek’s fault ;-). Here is a good comparison between Delaware’s site and New Jersey’s mobile site just so you can see the simplicity of a mobile site.

Then, Delaware’s insistence to heavily use Flash on the frontpage, when well over 50% of the mobile web traffic is coming from iPhones, just ranks of short-sightedness. Adding insult to injury, one receives the  following error message when accessing the site. Um, the inability to use flash is not “a known iPad bug”. Nice try.

Let’s Discuss Ruth Ann Minner

I have to admit that I don’t know much about Ruth Ann Minner or her administration. I moved to Delaware in 2007 and Minner was already on her way out. I know she is not beloved but not hated either. Yesterday, the News Journal published a second article on what seems to be a very cosy relationship between Ruth Ann Minner and Christopher Tigani of N.K.S. Distributors.

Former Gov. Ruth Ann Minner’s administration helped push through what commercial agents say is a “sweet deal” for a lease on land owned by the state. The deal was done for one of Minner’s friends in the state’s powerful liquor industry.

Christopher Tigani, who ran N.K.S. Distributors Inc., signed a 66-year lease on 10.3 acres of land on the east side of Milford for $1,500 a month in 2006, just two months after a state appraiser set the rent at $84,125 a month, public records show.

Although the land needed to be rezoned from residential to commercial when Tigani signed the lease, his company made only one payment until the property was annexed by Milford as commercial two years later. So far, N.K.S. has paid $79,200 in rent — $3.96 million less than it would have paid at the rate the state land appraiser originally proposed

The earlier NJ article detailed a trip to a conference in Quebec by Minner that was paid for by Tigani but was not reported to the state.

So reading this article as an outsider it certainly looks bad for Minner. I wonder if further digging will find other deals for her cronies or if this is the only one. However, I don’t think there will be much fallout for Minner. She’s no longer an elected official and I really think most people are looking forward and aren’t that interested in rehashing the previous administration but I could be wrong about that. What do you think? Is this going to lead to something more or will everyone just shrug their shoulders and move on?

ed. note: I changed the post to correct my misspelling of Mr. Tigani’s name.

Beau Biden Released From Hospital

Beau Biden was released from the hospital today, according to press reports. The Delaware Department of Justice released this statement:

Attorney General Beau Biden returned home this afternoon from Jefferson Hospital for Neuroscience, Department of Justice spokesman Jason Miller said.

Biden’s doctor, Dr. Robert Rosenwasser of Jefferson Hospital for Neuroscience, made the following statement upon the Attorney General’s discharge:

“On the morning of Tuesday May 11, Attorney General Beau Biden suffered a minor stroke. Due to rapid triage, diagnosis, and institution of appropriate medical therapy, he is leaving Jefferson Hospital for Neuroscience of Thomas Jefferson University neurologically normal.”

“I am pleased to report that the results of his final discharge general and neurological exam find his neurological status perfect in all arenas including motor skills, language function, and cognitive assessment. I am extremely pleased about his status as of discharge and have released him to assume full responsibilities as Attorney General after a brief period of rest at home.”

We wish him well in his recovery. Biden was hospitalized on Tuesday, May 11, so he’s spent 6 days in the hospital. Hopefully we’ll learn more now that Biden is out of the hospital.

[7th Update]: BEAU BIDEN HOSPITALIZED; MILD STROKE

Just breaking:

Vice President Joe Biden’s office released this statement:

“Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden is at Christiana Medical Center undergoing treatment at present. He is alert and awake, and communicating with his parents and his wife, who are with him. We will provide more details as they become available.”

Let us hope this is not serious. Best wishes to the Biden family.

UPDATE: The third hand rumor from the hospital is that Beau Biden suffered a stroke. It must be stressed that it is an unconfirmed third hand rumor at this point.

2ND UPDATE: NBC News is confirming the problem is “neurological.” That means it could be a stroke or aneurysm.

3RD UPDATE NBC is now hedging and says the problem “could be neurological.”

4TH UPDATE (from DD): I am not a fan of going 2 hours now without any news. To me, that is an ominous sign. It could mean that Beau is in surgery or undergoing tests, and thus the doctors and/or the AG’s office or the Vice President’s office do not have anything new to say. Or it could mean something else.

The News Journal, in our waiting, as added this bit of color:

There are a number of government SUVs at the maternity wing entrance to the hospital and a state police car at the main entrance. Secret Service officers are at the entrance to the emergency room. There is only one helicopter on the hospital’s landing pad, and it belongs to the hospital. [..]

Beau’s father underwent two surgeries to correct near-fatal brain aneurysms in 1988.

“It goes to the whole thing about the grace of God and the good will of neighbors when your time is your time,” Biden said during a campaign stop in 2008. “When mine burst, fortunately, as described to me by the neurosurgeons, it ricocheted off my skull instead of into my brain. …

“It just makes you think about … every single day, you don’t know. You’d better take advantage of the day,” he said.

Asked at the time how he felt, Biden responded, “Oh, I’m fine. As a neurosurgeon will tell you, they either fix it or they don’t. And when they fix it, it’s fixed. If they don’t, they don’t and there’s not much in between.”

One in 15 Americans develops a brain aneurysm, a weakening of the walls of an artery or vessel. When the artery ruptures, it causes bleeding into the brain, causing a hemorrhage, which can lead to stroke, brain damage and death.

They don’t confirm that Beau has a brain aneuryism, but they begin talking about Joe Biden’s 1988 brain aneuryism. That is a big clue that the News Journal knows something and everyone is sitting on the story, perhaps for a news conference, or for others to be informed. And that again is not a good sign.

5th UPDATE: WPVI in Philadelphia is reporting that Biden presented with signs of a stroke:

Beau Biden was showing signs of a possible stroke and was then rushed to the hospital from his home. A source close to the family tells ABC News that Beau had some discomfort and a headache.

6th UPDATE: CBS3 in Philadelphia calls it an “apparent stroke.”

7th Update:

From a statement:

Here’s the explanation:

“Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden was admitted this morning to Christiana Hospital in Newark, Delaware after having what we believe to be a mild stroke,” Dr. Timothy Gardner, Medical Director of the Center for Heart and Vascular Surgery at Christiana Care Health System, said in a just-released statement.