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The Secretary of State of Delaware is the head of the Department of State of the U.S. state of Delaware. The Department is in charge of a wide variety of public and governmental services, and is divided into the following divisions:
Jeffrey W. Bullock is the Secretary of State of Delaware, and Delaware's 80th Secretary of State.As Secretary of State, Bullock oversees over twenty different agencies, including the Division of Corporations, the Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs, the Division of the Arts, and the Division of Professional Regulation.
This category contains a listing of all subcategories and articles relating to the persons who were state secretaries of state of Delaware. At the present time this is only a partial list as there are many persons who have served as state secretaries of state who do not have a corresponding article. For a description of the office itself:
Harriet N. Smith Windsor was the Delaware Secretary of State from 2001 through 2009. Windsor is a Democrat and currently services as the Vice Chair of the Delaware Democratic Party . In 2008 Windsor was an elector for Barack Obama .
Hughes served as the Delaware Secretary of State from 1897 until 1901. He ran for governor of Delaware in 1916 but was defeated by Republican John G. Townsend Jr., a businessman from Selbyville, Delaware. Twenty years later, in 1936, he was elected to the U.S. Senate, defeating incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Daniel O. Hastings. During this ...
This category contains a listing of all subcategories and articles relating to the persons who were members of the Delaware governor's cabinet. For a description of the offices themselves: See also: Government of Delaware
In Delaware, the secretary of state oversees the Delaware Office of Veterans Services. [17] In Illinois, the secretary of state is ex officio Clerk of the Court of Claims. [18] In addition, the secretary of state is responsible for the enforcement of state motor vehicle theft statutes and the regulation of the automotive industry. [19]
In 1936, he was appointed Delaware Secretary of State. He then served as associate justice of the Delaware Superior Court from December 7, 1938, until April 29, 1957, and, as President Judge from that date, until July 23, 1962.