Your story and the stories of our fellow Delawareans must be heard in 2010. Congress has voted on important measures, including financial regulation, economic stimulus and health care. These votes have affected you and me, our families, friends and co-workers.
Please help highlight the impact these votes have had and will have on our lives — Tell us your story.
- Have you been impacted by the financial and economic crisis of the past 2 years?
- Have you experienced a foreclosure on a home or seen savings & investments evaporate?
- Have you been employed on a project funded by stimulus funds?
- Are you frustrated with the GOP’s “Say-No” attitude that is preventing your recovery from the current crisis?
If you answered, “yes” to any of these questions, please click here and describe your situation.
Your story is important to us because the future of Delaware will be affected by outcome of the election in November. We can continue making progress on the issues that are critical to the future of Delaware or we can sit back and watch as Republicans vote against our state’s interests.
All across our state, lives have been or will be affected by decisions made in Washington. If you know someone who may have a story about these effects, please ask them to share their story with us by clicking below:
Thank you for taking the time to help ensure our representatives will vote for us, the citizens of Delaware.
Sincerely,
Rebecca Young
P.S.: Click here to see where our leaders stand on the most important issues in Delaware




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John Brady filed for bankruptcy. He forgot to make sure his campaign was incorporated. He didn’t pay his campaign bills and his health problems kept him from working. Maybe this is a story for the DEM’s HCR impact playbook.
It’s on DE Grapevine.
Weren’t you on his insurance commissioner campaign, RWL dear?
I can’t wait to hear all the excuses you and Cassandra will make on his behalf. The same arguments you could have made on KWS’s behalf. KARMA.
Nancy, you’re not fit to tie Suzanne’s shoes. No one is interested in the trash that comes out of your mouth every time you open it, so just shut up.
Other then your dearly beloved KWS – he even stood up and said that at a meeting last week – he admitted to having filed for bancruptcy and didn’t make excuses – BIG difference.
Go have another drink Nancy and comment on blogs where people care what you have to say — which is just about NOWHERE
Oh…and Nancy, you ain’t seen KARMA until it comes around for brainless shiftless classless pretentious KWS. It’ll be spectacular and it’ll hit you too. I can’t wait.
And while we’re at it, John Brady’s integrity doesn’t need to be defended. It speaks for itself.
From what I read on Grapevine, Brady filed for bankruptcy because of a personal shitstorm hitting at exactly the worst possible time. Unable to work b/c he was in the hospital – medical bills – law partnership dissolving – setting up solo practice. The bill from Rogers seems like it was the final straw.
The difference, Nancy, is that Brady was forthright about all this. KWS tried to obfuscate and hide her difficulties, keeping them out of public view. We still don’t even know what her medical problems were.
In retrospect, I’m wondering if maybe the loss was ultimately a good thing for John – not professionally, but personally. Imagine if his medical problems had flared up while he was starting to run the IC office. The stress would have been a knockout blow.
I’ll vote for John Brady for anything he chooses to run for – from dogcatcher to president. He’s got a good future ahead of him, and he’s an honest man – something we desperately need.
Anon, KWS had no medical problems. They were one of her lies to explain away the default judgments against her. As you might remember, she ran up her credit cards and didn’t pay them because she had no job for years and her supposed business didn’t exist. Yes, we do need an honest person in the IC’s office and Brady would be it. KWS sure isn’t.
Hey anon and Meghan – I don’t take anything serious that Nancy writes anyway – she’s a total dingbat. Having been there and seen how hard it was to raise campaign funds, I am not surprised that John had to take this serious and difficult step. However, he isn’t covering it up or tellign lies about it. How many politicians do you know that would come out and say that they had to file for bancruptcy? Not many, that’s for sure.
I wish John good health and the best of luck in his re-election campaign – his opponent has so far failed to impress me.