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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Corporations, partnerships, trusts, limited liability companies, and other "artificial entities" have the right to vote in Delaware elections under some circumstances, a judge said in a novel ruling Tuesday.

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Corporations, partnerships, trusts, limited liability companies, and other "artificial entities" have the right to vote in Delaware elections under some circumstances, a judge said in a novel ruling Tuesday.

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-- Bloomberg Law (@bloomberglaw.com) 6:01 PM · May 26, 2026

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More: Judge Craig A. Karsnitz rejected an ACLU challenge to a charter permitting voting in local elections by the entities that own most of the property in the Town of Fenwick Island, one of several municipalities in the state with similar provisions. Karsnitz dismissed the lawsuit from Delaware's Superior Court, citing "the principle of one person/entity/one vote."

"Visions of faceless large corporations or even HAL controlling a small town are frightening and the stuff of science fiction," but "trusts, partnerships, limited liability companies, and corporations are expressly recognized as persons' in the Delaware Code," the judge said.

Karsnitz, writing in a 19-page opinion Tuesday, rejected an array of constitutional arguments advanced by the ACLU, including the claim that entity voting dilutes the political power of living people.

The lawsuit "does not allege discrimination based on race or political partisanship," show "that entity property owners vote sufficiently as a bloc to usually defeat the preferred candidates of natural persons," or assert "that Fenwick's charter distinguishes between natural persons and entity property owners with the discriminatory intent to fence out natural persons," the judge said.

#1 | Posted by qcp at 2026-05-27 11:17 AM | Reply

Here is "Mr Henry F. Potter":

#2 | Posted by C0RI0LANUS at 2026-05-27 11:28 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

F'n Unbelievable!!

Isn't it enough that Corporations are already Super Citizens that buy politicians and elections and laws to benefit themselves?

#3 | Posted by Corky at 2026-05-27 12:46 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

This is not going to end well.

#4 | Posted by fresno500 at 2026-05-27 06:41 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 2

Delaware has been protecting shady corporations for many years now - it's nothing new. Does it surprise you that it's a democrat stronghold? And what's that senator's name who served there since the 1970's? I forget his name, but he eventually got a big promotion beginning around 2007....

#5 | Posted by lfthndthrds at 2026-05-27 09:07 PM | Reply

Do they have to be 18 years old?
Will they need picture ID?
What is their sex?
Do they have to register with selective service and report if drafted.
Will they submit the same tax forms and pay the same rate as a biological human?
If they commit a crime could they do jail time?
..

#6 | Posted by TenMile at 2026-05-27 09:45 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 3

Fcnking stupid country

#7 | Posted by hamburglar at 2026-05-28 01:35 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

Slowly, this civilization of ours is transitioning to a hybrid, part one person one vote democracy, and one dollar, one vote oligarchy.
Bring back the draft, and not let anyone vote until they have served for the mandated time either in a civilian capacity or in the military. And no corporations get fitted for uniforms...

#8 | Posted by Hughmass at 2026-05-28 07:51 AM | Reply | Funny: 1

For all of you who laughed, it appears that Mitt Romney was right when he declared corporations to be people, my friend...

#9 | Posted by catdog at 2026-05-28 08:31 AM | Reply

#8

That has to be the stupidest take on this.

NO SLAVERY. The draft is SLAVERY. How hard is it to understand SLAVERY IS BAD? STOP ASKING FOR SLAVERY.

The vote should be limited to humans, any human subject to the law should have a vote. Political contributions should be limited to humans. There's absolutely no reason humans should have to suffer through slavery to get the vote.

#10 | Posted by DarkVader at 2026-05-28 12:29 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 2

Judge: Corporations Can Vote in Some Delaware Elections


Even if they are woman or black owned?

That Yankee judge be crazy!

#11 | Posted by donnerboy at 2026-05-28 01:56 PM | Reply | Funny: 1

I am not a fan of corporations having political power or a political voice, but the people of Delaware can run their state as they wish. As long as this is limited to local elections it is none of my business.

I think it is a terrible idea and I would not want to live in Delaware, but with a population of a little over a million, it seems most people share that sentiment.

#12 | Posted by gtbritishskull at 2026-05-28 02:56 PM | Reply

So a person with a business gets two votes?

#13 | Posted by fresno500 at 2026-05-28 04:13 PM | Reply

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