143rd Delaware General Assembly

The 143rd Delaware General Assembly was a meeting of the legislative branch of the state government, consisting of the Delaware Senate and the Delaware House of Representatives. Elections were held the first Tuesday after November 1st and terms began in Dover on the first Tuesday in January. This date was January 4, 2005, which was two weeks before the beginning of the fifth administrative year of Democratic Governor Ruth Ann Minner from Kent County and Democratic Lieutenant Governor John Carney from New Castle County.

Governor
Ruth Ann Minner
143rd General Assembly
In office
January 4, 2005  January 9, 2007
Preceded by142nd Assembly
Succeeded by144th Assembly

Currently the distribution of seats for both houses was based on the interpretation of the federal 2000 census. It resulted from a large number of memberships in the New Castle County area and ruling that the election districts would abandon county lines for their boundaries, but would design whatever district boundaries that would accomplish such population equals.

In the 143rd Delaware General Assembly session the Senate had a Democratic majority and the House had a Republican majority.


Party summary

Senate

TOTAL members: 21

House of Representatives

TOTAL members: 41

Leadership

Senate
House of Representatives

Members

Senate

About half the State Senators were elected every two years for a four-year term, except the decade district redesign year, when all served two years. They were designed for equal populations from all districts and its accomplishment occasionally included some territory from two counties.

New Castle County
  • 1. Harris B. McDowell, III (D)
  • 2. Margaret R. Henry (D)
  • 3. Robert I. Marshall (D)
  • 4. Charles L. Copeland (R)
  • 5: Catherine L. Cloutier (R)
  • 6. Liane M. Sorenson (R)
  • 7: Patricia M. Blevins (D)
New Castle County
  • 8: David P. Sokola (D)
  • 9: Karen E. Peterson (D)
  • 10. Steven H. Amick (R)
  • 11. Anthony J. DeLuca (D)
  • 12: Dorinda A. Connor (R)
  • 13: David B. McBride (D)
  • 14: James T. Vaughn (D)
Kent County
  • 15. Nancy W. Cook (D)
  • 16. Colin R.J. Bonini (R)
  • 17. John C. Still, III (R)
  • 18. F. Gary Simpson (R)
Sussex County
  • 19. Thurman G. Adams, Jr. (D)
  • 20. George H. Bunting, Jr. (D)
  • 21. Robert L. Venables, Sr. (D)

House of Representative

All the State Representatives were elected every two years for a two-year term. They were designed for equal populations from all districts and its accomplishment occasionally included some territory from two counties.

New Castle County
  • 1. Dennis P. Williams (D)
  • 2. Margaret Rose Henry (D)
  • 3. Helene M. Keeley (D)
  • 4. Joseph G. DiPinto (R)
  • 5. Melanie L. George (D)
  • 6: Diana M. McWilliams (D)
  • 7. Wayne A. Smith (R)
  • 8. Bethany A. Hall-Long (D)
  • 9. Richard C. Cathcart (R)
  • 10. Robert J. Valihura, Jr. (R)
  • 11. Gregory F. Lavelle (R)
  • 12: Deborah D. Hudson (R)
  • 13. John F. Van Sant, III (D)
  • 14: Peter C. Schwartzkopf (D)
New Castle County
  • 15: Valerie J. Longhurst (D)
  • 16: James Johnson (D)
  • 17: Michael P. Mulrooney (D)
  • 18: Terry R. Spence (R)
  • 19: Robert F. Gilligan (D)
  • 20: Roger P. Roy (R)
  • 21. Pamela S. Maier (R)
  • 22: Joseph E. Miro (R)
  • 23: Teresa L. Schooley (D)
  • 24: William A. Oberle, Jr. (R)
  • 25. Stephanie A. Ulbrich (R)
  • 26: John J. Viola (D)
  • 27. Vincent A. Lofink (R)
Kent County
  • 28: Bruce C. Ennis (D)
  • 29: Pamela J. Thornburg (R)
  • 30. William R. Outten (R)
  • 31. Nancy H. Wagner (R)
  • 32. Donna D. Stone (R)
  • 33. G. Wallace Caulk, Jr. (R)
  • 34. Gerald A. Buckworth (R)
Sussex County
  • 35. J. Benjamin Ewing (R)
  • 36. V. George Carey (R)
  • 37. Joseph W. Booth (R)
  • 38. Gerald W. Hocker (R)
  • 39. Evelyn K. Fallon (R)
  • 40. Clifford G. Lee (R)
  • 41. John C. Atkins (R)
gollark: It would be neat if they were cryptographically signed too, but it turns out I have no idea what actual algorithm the potatOS ECC library is implementing, oops.
gollark: So, progress on the potatoupdates™ system, I now have a script generating manifest files which are deterministically generated from the exact contents of a PotatOS version™.
gollark: > multiprocessing.pool objects have internal resources that need to be properly managed (like any other resource) by using the pool as a context manager or by calling close() and terminate() manually. Failure to do this can lead to the process hanging on finalization.> Note that is not correct to rely on the garbage colletor to destroy the pool as CPython does not assure that the finalizer of the pool will be called (see object.__del__() for more information).Great abstraction there, Python. Really great.
gollark: No, I mean I was reading from underneath the line it highlighted, which was the POST documentation.
gollark: Oh, never mind, the link was just being confusing.

References

  • The 2005-2006 Legislative Roster, Delaware State Chamber of Commerce, 2005

Places with more information


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