My first question is"
- Can a company get jury duty?
- Can it get a passport?
- Can they be jailed?
- Then how can they vote? How can they show citizenship.
- If a company is in multiple countries can they vote in each country?
- Who votes for the company? Do they need a vote from the Board, or does just the ED vote?
- What about is they have faculties in serval towns, do they get to vote in each town?
ReutersBy Tom HalsMay 26, 2026
- Summary
- Judge rules Fenwick Island's corporate voting does not dilute human votes
- ACLU of Delaware argued corporate voting violates state constitution, sought to block practice
- Judge found no evidence of discrimination or violation of 'free and equal' elections
A judge in Delaware, where many big U.S. companies are incorporated, ruled on Tuesday that a small town that allows corporations to vote in municipal elections was not violating the state's constitution.Delaware Superior Court Judge Craig Karsnitz said the beach town of Fenwick Island was not diluting human votes by allowing companies and other legal entities that own property to cast votes in municipal elections.The American Civil Liberties Union of Delaware sued the town, arguing it violated the elections clause of the state constitution. The group sought a court order blocking Fenwick Island from counting votes by "non-human artificial entities" in future elections.The group said entities make up about 12% of registered voters in the town.A lawyer for the organization did not immediately respond to a request for comment.The town's mayor, Natalie Magdeburger, did not immediately respond to a request for comment but told Reuters in March that the city believes "a property owner who pays taxes and is subject to our ordinances should have a say in who represents them on our Town Council."
Just another power grab by the billionaires!
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