
‘If there's fascism we need to call it out': Delaware governor on post-Biden world
Now 82, Biden has retired to Delaware after leaving the political stage. At 53, Meyer is among a new generation of Democrats trying to navigate a post-Biden world in which Donald Trump is eviscerating the federal government, stress-testing the rule of law and prosecuting a global trade war.
As governor of America's second smallest state, Meyer finds himself playing Whac-A-Mole as he deals with the consequences of Trump's capricious actions while pursuing an ambitious agenda of his own. The keen cyclist is also trying to maintain a balance between defending progressive values and finding pragmatic ways to work with Washington.
'If there is fascism we need to call it out,' he says during a Zoom interview from Wilmington. 'We shouldn't be shy about it. At the same time I'm working hard with my head down, understanding that my job, at its root, is delivering for Delawareans and doing that however I can.'
Born in Michigan, Meyer moved to Delaware as a child and knew Biden's sons Beau and Hunter. He attended the Wilmington Friends school and went on to study computer science and political science at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. Then came Africa.
He recalls: 'In middle school social studies, my teacher talked about Kilimanjaro, this amazing snow-capped mountain on the equator in Kenya, and so I always wanted to go to Kenya. In my junior year in college, I was flying into Kenya to study abroad there and a Tanzanian guy sitting next to me said, 'You're going to the wrong country: Kilimanjaro's in Tanzania, not in Kenya.' But I was stuck.'
Meyer loved his time in Kenya and became fluent in Swahili. One day he bought a pair of sandals made from used tyres that were sold on the side of the road in Nairobi and discovered they were a hit with US students. He founded Ecosandals, a recycled footwear company selling to customers in 17 countries on five continents. It was the first e-commerce company in Kenya and grew to 30 staff.
Meyer went on to spend a year in Mosul, Iraq, as a diplomat embedded with the US army. He then returned to the US and worked at one of the lowest-income middle schools in Delaware, where he felt 'pissed off' as he witnessed communities facing problems including unstable housing and gun violence.
'It's disheartening when you spend time in places like Kenya and Iraq and then you come back home, teach in a school that's a couple miles from where I grew up, and the education kids were getting, the safety of their neighbourhoods, in many ways was worse than neighbourhoods and schools I saw in places like Iraq and Kenya,' he said. 'I felt that's not what America should be in 2016.'
Meyer – who is married to an emergency room doctor, Lauren Meyer – ran for elected office, winning a New Castle county executive position in 2016 by defeating a three-term incumbent through grassroots campaigning. His subsequent run for governor was an example to Democrats of the need to engage with tangible issues such as failing schools and unaffordable housing.
But what Meyer could not know was that he would also be confronting the return of Trump – emboldened, unfettered and hellbent on maximum disruption. He reflects: 'We put together what may be the most extensive set of policies of what we were going to do that anyone running for governor has ever put together in Delaware history. Then we came into office and found ourselves trying to play Whac-A-Mole, trying to stop holes in the pipes.'
Trump's cuts to the federal government meant 62 state public health employees, funded through a CDC grant, were in jeopardy. Market-shattering tariffs could also upend the Meyer agenda, especially if the country enters a recession. 'Whatever was in those policy papers we've got to put lower in the pile and we've got to figure out how we wade through what's looking like is going to be a challenging time for Delaware and for America.'
Trump's first term was notable for the resistance of blue states such as California and New York. California's governor, Gavin Newsom, and then attorney general, Xavier Becerra, filed more than a hundred lawsuits against the Trump administration over gun control, immigration and other issues. Should we expect a repeat this time?
Meyer replies: 'Look, I'm naive, I'm an outsider, I'm not a partisan. I'm not a fan of very much of what Donald Trump says but if there's any way possible for us to work with the Trump administration to move Delaware forward, to protect those in vulnerable communities, and to make sure our economy is growing and expanding – my preference is more prescribed programmes but if he wants to do it through block grants, I'm game.
'But we're not seeing that. We're not seeing resources. Pretty much everything any governor is seeing right now is cuts – sometimes dramatic cuts to services, cuts to the federal workforce that have an impact.'
Trump has spent his first two and a half months in office demonising immigrants and transgender people. Yet some business and university leaders have capitulated to his administration.
Meyer does not intend to. He insists: 'We need to hold strong when the president or any elected official, anyone in a position of leadership, are vilifying people from certain communities. I don't begrudge any of my Democratic colleagues or colleagues of any party that are standing up and calling it out in the harshest language.'
Locked out of power, the Democratic party has been soul searching and struggling to find an inspiring and unifying narrative. Meyer believes that it should include delivering for working people, protecting the most vulnerable, allowing people to celebrate their sexuality and gender identity and helping legal immigrants to pursue the American dream while treating undocumented immigrants without cruelty or hatred.
He says: 'The more we can deliver on these things and show people that even in this crazy Trump time, look at the benefits to our schoolchildren and in our hospitals and healthcare systems, look at the availability of affordable housing, that's going to be good for the Democratic party and it's going to be good for the country.'
Delaware, long dominated by credit card companies and the chemical giant DuPont, remains Biden country. Rail travellers between New York and Washington pass through the Joseph R Biden Jr Railroad station in Wilmington, where he launched his first campaign for president in June 1987.
Yet Biden left office in January with a 36% approval rating and recriminations from fellow Democrats for not dropping out of the presidential race sooner. Meyer, who as a schoolboy volunteered for his first campaign in 1988, swerves past the question of Biden's mental acuity and whether White House officials engaged in a cover-up.
But he says: 'You can agree or disagree with his policies and his politics. This is a man who cares deeply for our country and has personally sacrificed so much for our country.
'He was widely seen in Delaware as a bipartisan guy who could get support across the aisle and was fighting for America first. I see it not as a sad statement of the Bidens or Joe Biden or his presidency but a sad statement of America and the state of our political spaces now that someone like that seems to be vilified by a sizable percentage of America.'
Despite this, and all the other turmoil in Trump 2.0, Meyer remains optimistic about the future. Last weekend the former teacher joined other Democrats and union members to protest against potential cuts to the Department of Education. 'It's hard to get teachers out early on a Saturday morning but I was with hundreds of teachers. People are galvanised. People have a lot of enthusiasm about getting back to the values of what makes this America.'
Thousands of people were also taking to the streets for 'Hands Off' demonstrations across Delaware. From abortion to Doge, from immigration to Medicare, from Gaza to Ukraine, the protesters had myriad causes.
Meyer adds: 'My guess is there was a lot of disagreement among the protests about what America should be. But there is broad agreement that it is not this, that we need a government that's working for the American worker, not working to get crazy headlines or not pursuing a Project 2025 agenda to give benefit to the few over the majority of us.
'We need smart people coming around the table and saying, come on, America, we can do better than this and there are Democrats and Republicans who are coming to that realisation.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
25 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Texas Democrats tear ‘permission slips' imposed by Republican house speaker
Texas Democrats are tearing up 'permission slips' they signed in order to leave the chamber, joining state representative Nicole Collier ahead of Wednesday's vote on the controversial Texas congressional redistricting maps. The slips are part of new surveillance protocols set by Texas Republicans in the house chamber, stating that Democrats would 'be granted written permission to leave only after agreeing to be released into the custody of a designated [Texas department of public safety] officer' who would ensure their return to the chamber. The move follows a two-week quorum break that had delayed Republicans' effort to redraw the state's congressional districts to align with Donald Trump's push to reshape the US House map in his favor before the 2026 midterm elections. On Tuesday, Collier chose to remain confined inside the Texas house chamber until lawmakers reconvene on Wednesday, refusing to comply with what she condemned as a 'demeaning' protocol. Collier was among dozens of Democrats who left the state for the Democratic havens of California, Illinois, Massachusetts and New York to delay the Republican-controlled legislature's approval of redrawn congressional districts sought by Trump. When they returned Monday, Republicans insisted that Democrats have around-the-clock police escorts to ensure they wouldn't leave again and scuttle Wednesday's planned House vote on a new political map. But Collier wouldn't sign what Democrats called the 'permission slip' needed to leave the house chamber, a half-page form allowing Department of Public Safety troopers to follow them. She spent Monday night and Tuesday on the house floor, where she set up a livestream while her Democratic colleagues outside had plainclothes officers following them to their offices and homes. Linda Garcia, a Dallas-area representative, said she drove three hours home from Austin with an officer following her. When she went grocery shopping, he went down every aisle with her, pretending to shop, she said. As she spoke to the Associated Press by phone, two unmarked cars with officers inside were parked outside her home. 'It's a weird feeling,' she said. 'The only way to explain the entire process is: it's like I'm in a movie.' The trooper assignments, ordered by Dustin Burrows, the Republican house speaker, was another escalation of a redistricting battle that has widened across the country. Trump is pushing GOP state officials to tilt the map for the 2026 midterms more in his favor to preserve the GOP's slim house majority, and Democrats nationally have rallied around efforts to retaliate. Gene Wu, the house minority leader from Houston, and Vincel Perez, a state representative of El Paso, stayed overnight with Collier, who represents a minority-majority district in Fort Worth. On Tuesday, more Democrats returned to the Capitol to tear up the slips they had signed and stay on the house floor, which has a lounge and restrooms for members. Cassandra Garcia Hernandez, a Dallas-area representative, called their protest a 'slumber party for democracy' and said Democrats were holding strategy sessions on the floor. 'We are not criminals,' Penny Morales Shaw, a Houston representative, said. Collier said having officers shadow her was an attack on her dignity and an attempt to control her movements. Burrows brushed off Collier's protest, saying he was focused on important issues, such as providing property tax relief and responding to last month's deadly floods. His statement Tuesday morning did not mention redistricting and his office did not immediately respond to other Democrats joining Collier. 'Rep Collier's choice to stay and not sign the permission slip is well within her rights under the house rules,' Burrows said. Under those rules, until Wednesday's scheduled vote, the chamber's doors are locked, and no member can leave 'without the written permission of the speaker'. To do business Wednesday, 100 of 150 House members must be present. The GOP plan is designed to send five additional Republicans from Texas to the US House. Texas Democrats returned to Austin after Democrats in California launched an effort to redraw their state's districts to take five seats from Republicans. Democrats also said they were returning because they expect to challenge the new maps in court. Republicans issued civil arrest warrants to bring the Democrats back after they left the state 3 August, and Greg Abbott, the Republican governor, asked the state supreme court to oust Wu and several other Democrats from office. The lawmakers also face a fine of $500 for every day they were absent. Democrats reported different levels of monitoring. Armando Walle, a Houston representative, said he wasn't sure where his police escort was, but there was still a heightened police presence in the Capitol, so he felt he was being monitored closely. Some Democrats said the officers watching them were friendly. But Sheryl Cole, an Austin representative, said in a social media post that when she went on her morning walk Tuesday, the officer following her lost her on the trail, got angry and threatened to arrest her. Garcia said her nine-year-old son was with her as she drove home and each time she looked in the rearview mirror, she could see the officer close behind. He came inside a grocery store where she was shopping with her son. 'I would imagine that this is the way it feels when you're potentially shoplifting and someone is assessing whether you're going to steal,' she said. Associated Press contributed to this report


Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Trump official 'ordered New Jersey mayor's arrest' at immigration centre in new footage
The federal officer who arrested New Jersey mayor Ras Baraka and Rep. LaMonica McIver suggested he may have been ordered to do so by a Justice Department official In recent months, police officers and immigration enforcers have flooded into major US cities and made sweeping arrests of people they suspect of being undocumented migrants, often disregarding the legal process to do so. This shocking authoritarianism has also seen multiple elected officials detained, with at least one appearing to have been put behind bars after a major appointee of President Trump gave the order. Freshly released body cam footage has shown that the federal officer who detained New Jersey mayor Ras Baraka implied he might have been acting under instructions from the deputy attorney general. This comes as Donald Trump attempts to force a head-to-head meeting between Putin and Ukraine's President Zelensky. The footage emerged as part of a legal submission by Rep. LaMonica McIver, who was also taken into custody alongside Baraka during an oversight visit at an immigration centre, where they had a run-in with immigration officers. While Baraka faced trespassing charges that were later dropped, McIver was accused of assaulting federal agents. It appears she is pushing for the dismissal of her charges. Her legal team alleges that a Department of Homeland Security special agent, after concluding a phone call, informed fellow agents, "We are arresting the mayor right now, per the deputy attorney general of the United States. "Anyone that gets in our way, I need you guys to give me a perimeter so I can cuff him," the agent further instructed. The Mirror U.S. has not yet formally reviewed the footage. Although it has been submitted as evidence, the video has not been made available to the general public. Todd Blanche currently holds the position of deputy attorney general. Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told the Mirror: "The American people can see with their own eyes a sitting member of Congress assaulting law enforcement," and she referenced a video of the altercation that DHS uploaded on X back in May. The apparent suggestion of Blanche's involvement is the latest in a series of moves where Justice Department officials have seemingly wielded their power to target Democrats and adversaries of President Trump. Since Trump resumed office, his DOJ has initiated multiple investigations into figures who oppose him, including Jack Smith, James Comey, and others. Moreover, it has been reported that federal law enforcement officers have apprehended New York City Comptroller Brad Lander and even placed California Sen. Alex Padilla in handcuffs. Suspicions are escalating as Politico disclosed that several Democrats are pondering whether agents at the Newark facility were directed to arrest Baraka. Witness statements and additional video evidence from the day depict the mayor standing calmly behind a fence with a guard for a significant period. Rep. Rob Menendez, also a Democrat, informed Politico that he saw an agent within the enclosed area on the phone receiving instructions to detain Baraka, who was outside the enclosure when the call occurred. Last week, McIver's lawyers submitted a description of the bodycam footage to the court, reinforcing this narrative. "Even though he stepped out, I am going to put him in cuffs," the special agent is purported to have declared. Following this, the agent mentioned arresting the mayor "per the deputy attorney general." Moments later, the mayor found himself in handcuffs, sparking off a brawl. Magistrate Judge André M. Espinosa described it as an "embarrassing retraction" that "suggests a failure to adequately investigate, to carefully gather facts and to thoughtfully consider the implications of your actions before wielding your immense power."


BBC News
5 hours ago
- BBC News
Can Trump really ban mail-in voting?
President Donald Trump plans to use his office to try to get rid of mail-in ballots ahead of the 2026 elections for the House of Representatives and Senate."An executive order is being written right now by the best lawyers in the country to end mail-in ballots because they're corrupt," he said in a social media post this a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the White House on Monday, Trump also showed a political motivation, saying that mail-in voting is "the only way" Democrats "can get elected". "Mail-in ballots, in part, helped Trump secure his 2024 victory over Democrat Kamala Harris. But he has long claimed, without proof, that he lost the 2020 election due to voter fraud perpetrated through mail-in ballots and voting machines. What is mail-in voting and how is it used? Mail-in voting allows voters to cast their ballots at home and then send them in to be counted, instead of going in person to cast a ballot at a polling place. Eight states and Washington, DC, allow all elections to be conducted entirely by mail: California, Colorado, Hawaii, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Vermont and Washington those, only two - Nevada and Utah - went to Trump in most other states, voters can request at-home ballots and then cast their "absentee votes" either through the post or special ballots became more popular during the 2020 election when many voters were homebound because of the 43% of votes cast in that election were on mailed ballots, compared to 30% in 2024, election data phrase "voting machines" usually refers to devices that directly record a vote at the polling place. Typically a voter will make their choices on a touchscreen, and their votes will then be stored on a computer and also recorded in a paper trail in case of a recount or audit. These machines are used in 10 states alongside other methods. Why is Trump unhappy with it? Trump has said that "mail-in ballots are corrupt" and long suggested the method is susceptible to voter fraud. He also has said that it favours 2020, Democratic voters have been much more likely to use mail-in ballots, compared to Republicans, but research so far has not shown it gives the party's candidates any the 2024 election, Trump seemed more relaxed about mail-in voting, encouraging supporters to "vote any way possible", and the Republican party promoted least three states that Trump won in 2024 - North Carolina, Arizona and Pennsylvania - saw Republicans embrace mail-in ballots, sometimes outpacing Democrats, according to Politico. Does the president have power to change voting laws? In short, no. The US Constitution says "times, places and manner of holding elections ... shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof". It says Congress has a role to "make or alter such regulations", but it does not specify a role for the Congress can change the way states run presidential and congressional elections, it cannot change how a state runs its own elections, for roles such as governor. Most experts say this all means that Trump cannot tell states how to carry out 2026 though, posted on social media that under the law the states "are merely an 'agent' for the Federal Government in counting and tabulating the votes". "They must do what the Federal Government, as represented by the President of the United States, tells them, FOR THE GOOD OF OUR COUNTRY, to do," he wrote on his Truth Social platform. UCLA election law professor Rick Hasen wrote on his blog that Trump's statement was "wrong and dangerous.""The Constitution does not give the President any control over federal elections," Hasen wrote. Is the US the only country with mail-in voting? The US has had some form of mail-in voting since the 19th century, though it has evolved and changed with time. In announcing his upcoming executive order, Trump said that the US is the only country in the world that has mail-in voting. Moments later, he walked back those remarks, saying that he "may be wrong".Some 34 countries, allow some kind of mail-in voting, according to the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (International IDEA).Of those, 12 countries, including Canada, Germany and South Korea, allow all voters to vote by mail in their elections.