Delaware
Supreme Court won’t review Delaware gun control laws, but legal battles continue
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When Delaware lawmakers banned the sale of assault-style weapons and limited gun magazine sizes to 17 rounds in 2022, firearms rights advocates insisted the new laws were unconstitutional and would not withstand legal challenges.
Sure enough, they promptly sued in U.S. District Court in Wilmington. While the case began winding through the system, they attempted to get a preliminary injunction to prevent the laws from taking effect. But a federal judge rejected that bid, and so did the 3rd U.S. Circuit of Appeals.
Undeterred, a group of gun owners and Second Amendment advocates, including the Firearms Policy Coalition, petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the lower court decisions.
But this week, the nation’s highest court declined.
The justices also declined to review federal court decisions upholding Maryland’s handgun licensing requirements, which were a model for Delaware’s permit-to-purchase law that passed last year. The Delaware law is also facing a lawsuit by gun advocacy groups, including the Delaware State Sportsmen’s Association.
So with all three Delaware laws still intact — even though the lawsuits remain active — the state’s gun control advocates are ecstatic.
“We’re doing great work in this movement, and the Supreme Court is saying, ‘yeah, you’re doing great work, and it’s constitutional,’’’ said Traci Murphy, director of the Delaware Coalition Against Gun Violence.
Attorney General Kathy Jennings seconded that notion.
“The gun safety laws that have been passed have been overwhelmingly popular in our state,’’ Jennings told WHYY News. “And so this is yet another failure by the gun lobby to take away those safety measures.”
The Supreme Court petition regarding the two Delaware laws asked the justices to consider “whether the infringement of Second Amendment rights constitutes per se irreparable injury.”
Murphy said the only harm is to those who want to sell the expensive assault-style weapons.
“The only reason people are advocating for access to assault weapons is to line the pockets of the gun industry,’’ Murphy said. “They make more money when they sell bigger weapons. The only irreparable harm that’s happening, if you even consider it to be irreparable, is to people who are losing out on the money they would have made by selling weapons that are designed to kill people.”
Though the high court declined to weigh in, David Thompson, the lead attorney for the firearms rights advocates, told WHYY News that the fight on that principle isn’t over.
“We continue to believe that a deprivation of rights secured by the United States Constitution constitutes irreparable injury, and we look forward to vindicating that principle in future litigation,’’ Thompson said.
Delaware
Talk & Film Bring Delaware’s Revolutionary Story to Life at Archives’ First Saturday Program – State of Delaware News
On Saturday, July 11, 2026, at 10:30 a.m., the Delaware Public Archives will host a special First Saturday Program featuring a presentation and a screening of a new documentary exploring Delaware’s pivotal role in America’s founding.
The event will begin with a shortened presentation of Independence or the Bayonet, examining the critical days leading up to July 1776 through the perspectives of Caesar Rodney, George Read, and Thomas McKean.
Following the presentation, attendees will watch Caesar Rodney’s Ride: The Story of Delawareans and the Declaration of Independence, a new one-hour documentary presented by the Delaware Heritage Commission. The film explores Caesar Rodney’s legendary overnight ride to Philadelphia and the important role Delawareans played in the fight for American independence.
This special program is part of the Delaware Public Archives’ ongoing Delaware 250 educational programming commemorating the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence and highlighting Delaware’s unique contributions to the nation’s founding.
The program is free and open to the public.
For more information about the Delaware Public Archives or to learn more about upcoming events and programs, visit archives.delaware.gov.
Delaware
Coastal Delaware Restaurant Week raises funds for local first responders – Milford LIVE! – Local Delaware News, Kent and Sussex Counties
Dewey Beach Police Department: Kayla Burkentine, Kate Van Vorst, Caitlin Chaney, RBDBCC, Dewey Beach Police Chief Constance Speake, Meghan Hyett, Jeana Paratore, RBDBCC
Coastal Delaware Restaurant Week concluded its annual event by providing financial support to several local first responder organizations serving the Delaware beaches.
Organized by the Rehoboth-Dewey Chamber of Commerce in partnership with the Cape Gazette, the weeklong event was held June 7-12 and featured participating restaurants throughout the coastal region. As part of the initiative, participating restaurants helped generate donations that allowed organizers to present $1,500 each to Home of the Brave, the Rehoboth Beach Police Department, the Rehoboth Beach Volunteer Fire Company, the Dewey Beach Police Department and Tunnels to Towers Delmarva.
The annual event encourages residents and visitors to dine at participating restaurants while supporting local first responders.
Restaurants participating in this year’s Coastal Delaware Restaurant Week included Blue Moon, Bluecoast Rehoboth, Cafe Azafran, Cultured Pearl, Dewey Beer Company, DiFebo’s Rehoboth, Dogfish Head Brewings & Eats, Dogfish Head Chesapeake & Maine, Downtown Bethany Blues, Kiwis Kove, Lefty’s Alley & Eats, Lighthouse Dewey Beach, Lupo Italian Kitchen, Mason’s Famous Lobster Rolls, Outback Steakhouse, Shorebreak, Sirocco Food & Drink, Starboard Claw, The Blue Hen, The Federal, Theo’s Steaks Sides & Spirits, Thompson Island and Victoria’s.
Sara Uzer is a journalist from Sussex County with more than 15 years of experience as a writer, editor, and community advocate. She started her career in Washington, DC and has lived in Sussex County for the past five years.
Delaware
Delaware lawmakers pass same-sex marriage bill after initial failure in the House
Amendment passes after first vote fails
The legislation needed 28 of the 41 House members to vote yes, including one Republican. However, only 24 members voted in favor of the bill in the first House vote last month, with one Democrat voting no and one not voting. Most House Republicans did not vote. Bill sponsor state Rep. Claire Snyder-Hall, D-Rehoboth Beach, initially voted yes and then changed her vote to ‘no’ so it could be reconsidered.
When the bill was brought up again on June 30, 28 state representatives voted yes and 12 voted no.
State Rep. Madinah Wilson-Anton, D-Newark, said she did not vote the first time the bill was considered in the House because of concerns that not everyone’s marriages are recognized in Delaware. The lawmaker unsuccessfully pushed legislation last year aimed at recognizing first-cousin marriages on behalf of a constituent.
Wilson-Anton publicly apologized to people she said had reached out to her with hurt feelings over not voting and pledged to vote yes if it was brought up again. However, she has also called out the “racist and Islamophobic hate” directed toward her by people online.
“It’s been stormy, it’s been lonely and it’s been difficult, and I do it anyway, because it’s the right thing to do,” she said. “I think we really need to do a lot of self-reflection over this break before we come back next year and have honest discussions about how productive it is to snipe at each other over social media instead of taking issues directly to each other and our constituents in a more productive way.”
State Rep. Josué Ortega, D-West Wilmington, changed his vote from no to yes, saying that while his Catholic faith will always guide him, he needed to represent the wants of his constituents.
Most Republicans voted no, noting that gay marriage is already legal in Delaware. But Snyder-Hall said those protections can be removed with a simple majority vote in a way that adding it into the state’s constitution cannot.
“There’s a movement going to try to claw back protections that have been established in law for the LGBTQ+ community, and also racial equality,” she said. “Our constitution reflects our values and in Delaware we want to make sure that everybody knows that.”
Hockessin state Rep. Mike Smith was the lone Republican who voted to approve the measure. He said many of his constituents were on both sides of the issue.
“I did hear from a lot of members of my district [that] life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness directly affects them in this issue,” he said. “So you’ll be getting my support today.”
Constitutional amendments require a two-thirds vote in each chamber in consecutive legislative sessions. The legislation just completed its first leg. The second leg would have to be approved by the end of June 2028.
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