Finally, Citizens United comes to its logical conclusion.

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.

https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/delaware-court-upholds-voting-by-companies-small-towns-election-2026-05-26/

#uspol

@FritzAdalis how exactly does this work? Is it one corpo, one vote? If so, can I just go on a LLC creation spree, all incorporated in a specific location, with a collective of individuals and start trading money back and forth (works to keep hyperscalers, chip producers, etc afloat) and flood the zone somewhere to promote some agenda?
@BurritoSommelier
I think it's corps that own property. So you buy a bunch of property and spin up an llc for each one.

@FritzAdalis @BurritoSommelier

but like, how many corps can we have per property
because surely it isn't one vote per lot

@ProcessParsnip @FritzAdalis @BurritoSommelier is it not? i thought it was -- one vote per corporation owning at least one lot (and thus one vote per lot, if each one is given to a new corporation). i wouldn't underestimate how silly this whole thing is.
@pinecone460 @ProcessParsnip @FritzAdalis @BurritoSommelier Tons of corporations incorporated in Delaware don’t actually own property, they lease a mailbox. It’s common for hundreds to share the same street address. This particular decision might apply only to corporations which actually own land, though.