Delaware Government: What It Is and Why It Matters

Delaware's state government is a constitutionally structured, three-branch system that exercises authority over approximately 1 million residents across 3 counties, administering everything from corporate law to public education to criminal justice. This page covers the structural composition of that system, the operational scope of its authority, and the distinct functions performed by its major components. Detailed reference material across more than 60 topic areas — from budget mechanics and judicial jurisdiction to individual agency functions — is available throughout this site.

Scope and definition

Delaware state government operates under a framework established by the Delaware Constitution, which distributes sovereign authority across three co-equal branches: executive, legislative, and judicial. The state's constitutional architecture traces to 1897, the year Delaware's current constitution was ratified — its fourth, following prior versions from 1776, 1792, and 1831 (Delaware Constitution, Article I, Delaware Code).

The state governs a geographic area of approximately 2,489 square miles, making it the second-smallest state by land area in the United States (U.S. Census Bureau). Despite that compact footprint, the legal and administrative reach of Delaware's government extends far beyond its borders — particularly through the Delaware General Corporation Law, Title 8 of the Delaware Code, which governs more than 60% of Fortune 500 companies incorporated in the state (Delaware Division of Corporations).

Scope coverage: This site addresses Delaware state-level government — its branches, agencies, constitutional provisions, fiscal structures, and regulatory systems. It does not address federal government operations within Delaware, private-sector entities, or the internal governance of Delaware's 3 counties and 57 municipalities except where those units interface directly with state authority. Federal statutes, U.S. constitutional provisions, and interstate compacts fall outside this site's primary coverage, though their intersection with Delaware law is noted where operationally relevant.

For broader national context, unitedstatesauthority.com serves as the parent authority network within which this state-level reference operates.

Why this matters operationally

Delaware's government functions as both a typical mid-Atlantic state administration and an atypical global corporate jurisdiction simultaneously. The state's Court of Chancery — a court with no jury, staffed by specialized judges called Vice Chancellors — adjudicates the majority of major U.S. corporate disputes. Decisions from that court shape corporate governance standards applied nationally.

The Delaware state budget reflects this duality. Corporate franchise taxes and fees generated over $1.3 billion in fiscal year 2022, constituting roughly 25% of total general fund revenues (Delaware Office of Management and Budget). That revenue stream allows Delaware to fund public services — including K-12 education, Medicaid administration, and transportation infrastructure — at levels that would be unsustainable given its small population base alone.

The Office of the Governor holds consolidated executive authority, with appointment power over cabinet secretaries, veto authority over legislation, and emergency powers codified under Title 20 of the Delaware Code. Understanding how those powers are exercised — and constrained — is essential for any entity doing business with or regulated by Delaware agencies. Common decision points include procurement processes, regulatory enforcement timelines, and administrative appeals through the court system.

Frequent questions about how specific processes work are addressed at Delaware Government: Frequently Asked Questions.

What the system includes

Delaware state government comprises three constitutional branches, 14 principal departments within the executive branch, a bicameral legislature, and a unified court system with 5 distinct court levels. The following breakdown maps the primary institutional components:

  1. Executive Branch — The Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, State Treasurer, Insurance Commissioner, and Auditor of Accounts are the 6 statewide elected executive officers. The Delaware Executive Branch also includes 14 cabinet-level departments ranging from the Department of Health and Social Services to the Department of Transportation (DelDOT).

  2. Legislative Branch — The General Assembly consists of a 41-member House of Representatives and a 21-member Senate. House members serve 2-year terms; senators serve 4-year terms. The Delaware Legislative Branch originates all appropriations and enacts the statutory code.

  3. Judicial Branch — The Delaware Judicial Branch operates 5 courts: the Supreme Court, Superior Court, Court of Chancery, Family Court, and Justice of the Peace Courts. The Supreme Court has 5 justices and serves as the court of last resort.

  4. Constitutional and fiscal frameworks — The Delaware Constitution and the state's fiscal statutes define the boundaries within which all branches operate. Constitutional amendments require a two-thirds vote in both chambers across two successive General Assemblies — no public referendum is required, an unusual feature among U.S. states.

Core moving parts

The operational engine of Delaware government runs on five interlocking mechanisms:

Appropriations and budget authority. All state spending originates in the General Assembly's Joint Finance Committee. The Governor submits an annual budget proposal; the legislature modifies and enacts it. The Delaware state budget and finance system governs how approximately $5.3 billion in annual general fund expenditures is allocated across agencies.

Executive rulemaking. State agencies promulgate regulations through the Delaware Administrative Procedures Act, codified in Title 29 of the Delaware Code. Proposed regulations are published in the Delaware Register of Regulations before taking effect — giving affected parties a defined public comment window.

Judicial review. The courts, particularly the Court of Chancery and Superior Court, review agency actions and legislative enactments for constitutional compliance. The Delaware Judicial Branch provides the mechanism through which disputes between the state and regulated parties are resolved.

Election and accountability cycles. Statewide officers face elections on 4-year cycles aligned to presidential election years. The General Assembly operates on rolling 2-year sessions. These cycles determine when policy priorities shift and when regulatory agendas are reset.

Intergovernmental relations. Delaware participates in 3-state regional compacts and coordinates with federal agencies on programs including Medicaid, transportation funding, and environmental regulation. The state's 3 counties — New Castle, Kent, and Sussex — exercise limited home rule authority, with significant administrative functions remaining at the state level rather than the county level, a structural feature that distinguishes Delaware from larger, more decentralized states.