Delaware has a Democratic Trifecta Plus with Supermajority and a Democratic Triplex. Meaning, the Democratic Party controls the offices of Governor, Secretary of State, Attorney General, and both Chambers of the State Legislature, and a majority on the Delaware Supreme Court.  Delaware Democrats have a Supermajority in both the State Senate and the House of Representatives* - in the Senate, they hold 15 seats out of 21, while in the House, they have 26 out of 41 seats. This means they can pass legislation without any support from the minority party. Our state government has been a fully unified Democrat Party controlled government since 2009. 1992 was last Republican governor, and 2008 last Republican majority in Senate.  The most left-leaning Democrats in the Delaware General Assembly are those who have been endorsed by the Delaware Working Families Party, such as Representatives Madinah Wilson-Anton and Eric Morrison, as well as Senators Sarah McBride and Kyle Gay-Evans. These lawmakers have been vocal advocates for progressive policies, including economic justice, equitable education, and trans rights. They have also been endorsed by the Delaware Democratic Socialists of America. 1) Who does our Democrat-controlled legislature send as delegates to a Convention for proposing Amendments in this scenario? Conservative Constitutionalists as we desire, or Democrat Left-leaning progressive activists? 2) Ratification is the safety should Proposed Amendments be objectionable; amendments are ratified by either State Legislatures, or by State Conventions, whichever mode Congress proposes - which way would our Democrat-controlled progressive legislature, or a state convention convened by them, lean?  Of course we are not the only state in this position. And in states that have better Republican balance, many are saturated with weak Republicans and much worse, Establishment RINO’s. [https://ballotpedia.org/Party_control_of_Delaware_state_government](https://ballotpedia.org/Party_control_of_Delaware_state_government) [https://ballotpedia.org/State_government_trifectas](https://ballotpedia.org/State_government_trifectas) [https://ballotpedia.org/State_government_triplexes](https://ballotpedia.org/State_government_triplexes) [https://ballotpedia.org/Delaware_General_Assembly](https://ballotpedia.org/Delaware_General_Assembly) [https://ballotpedia.org/State_supreme_court_elections,_2023](https://ballotpedia.org/State_supreme_court_elections,_2023) > [!* Note] > Correct on all counts, except for one. There is a SuperMajority in the Senate ONLY. The Delaware Democrats are only 2 Seats short of having a "Supermajority" in the House. What would the Democrats gaining a SuperMajority in the House mean?  > > It would mean that the Democrats could alter or even abolish the Delaware Constitution without requiring any Republican vote. Right now they can pass most any laws without Republican votes, but they cannot amend the Constitution without it. > > \- Chris R. Delaware is a Democrat super-majority in Senate, 2 seats shy in House. If Democrats are on board with what is characterized as a conservative movement, and the only way a resolution for application to U.S. Congress for a convention for proposing Amendments to the U.S. Constitution gets passed is with Democrat support - folks should be asking themselves why, how do Democrats benefit? And the reason is they have their own agenda of course.