Updated 3:05聽p.m.,聽5/5/2015

Hawaii state Senate factions have聽realigned to make Ron Kouchi the chamber’s new chief, replacing Senate President Donna Mercado Kim.

The Senate voted 19-6 on a resolution Tuesday that made Kouchi president. Sens. Les Ihara, Gil Riviere, Russell Ruderman, Sam Slom, Laura Thielen and Kim voted no.

“I don鈥檛 believe there鈥檚 any one issue they can point to other than me trying to do the job, being consistent, being inclusive,” Kim told Civil Beat. “That’s how it goes. You’ve got 13, you can be king. It’s not the end of the world for me.”

Senate President Donna Mercado Kim at the Capitol. 14 april 2015.  photograph by Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Senate President Donna Mercado Kim leads a floor session April 14.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat


Kim, who is not aligned with any faction, has聽been president聽since the 2013 session thanks to support from the Chess Club and Tokuda factions of the Senate.

The Chess Club is an old and evolving faction that until this year had then-Sen. David Ige as a longtime member. It also聽included Sens. Roz Baker, Suzanne Chun Oakland, Will Espero, Josh Green, Ihara, Ruderman and Thielen. The top three running the group are Ihara, Baker and Chun Oakland.

Two freshmen senators, Riviere and Breene Harimoto, seem aligned with this group at times but some view聽them as independent.聽Sen. Brian Taniguchi, who chaired the Ways and Means Committee before Ige, is also considered independent.

Sen. Jill Tokuda, who chairs the powerful Ways and Means Committee, leads what’s effectively a swing faction of four. The other members are Sen. Gil Keith-Agaran, who heads Judiciary and Labor, arguably the second-most influential committee; Sen. Kalani English, the majority leader; and Sen. Mike Gabbard, who聽chairs the Energy and Environment Committee.

Sen. Ronald Kouchi during marijuana hearing. 27 april 2015. photograph Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Sen. Ron Kouchi during a committee meeting on marijuana legislation last week.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

The nine-member Opihi faction, led by Sen. Michelle Kidani, managed to聽lure away Tokuda’s faction聽to reorganize.

The group also includes Sens. Donovan Dela Cruz, Brickwood Galuteria, Lorraine Inouye, Gil Kahele, Clarence Nishihara, Maile Shimabukuro, Glenn Wakai and Kouchi.

Aside from the Opihi and Tokuda factions, Espero, Baker and Taniguchi also signed on to support Kouchi as president.

Espero declined to comment on why he is supporting Kouchi.

“I hadn鈥檛 expected this situation to occur at this time in our legislative session,” Espero said Monday night. “I聽don鈥檛 remember the last time we organized during the mid-term. However, anything is possible in the Capitol in this building. I聽look forward to working with the new leadership.”

Espero will keep his job as vice president of the Senate under the new reorganization.

The Opihi faction gets its name from the notion of sticking together, much like the limpet that clings to rocks in rough surf.

Members of the Chess Club, by contrast, are more policy driven and freer to vote their conscience. Although that doesn’t mean they can’t be overruled, as happened Friday night, the deadline for conference committees to approve聽bills for聽the full House and Senate to vote on this week.

Green refused to compromise with the House on a final bone of contention in a bill聽to establish medical marijuana dispensaries, derailing it until Senate leadership got involved. Exceptions were made to the rules, Espero was made chair of the conference committee instead of Green, and the bill was approved聽Monday.

In the background was a petition circulated by Dela Cruz that got 16 signatures from senators who wanted the bill to pass, even if it meant accepting the House version.聽However,聽the聽dustup over the聽medi-pot bill isn’t seen as the聽impetus to change leadership.

Outgoing Senate President Mercado Kim walks away after giving the gavel to new Senate President Donald Kouchi. 5 may 2015. photograph Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Outgoing Senate President Donna Mercado Kim walks away after giving the gavel to new Senate President Ron Kouchi, Tuesday.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Kim said on Monday she called Kouchi, who she’s worked with for the past 30 years, to ask about the move to reorganize that she was hearing about.

She said Kouchi told her he wasn’t leading the charge but that it was expected to happen during Thursday’s floor session.

Kim said she asked Kouchi for a reason but he told her she’d have to ask the Tokuda faction.

Kouchi and Tokuda did not return messages left Monday.

“I don’t know if聽people want the power or didn鈥檛 appreciate me asking questions,” Kim said.

Kim said she feels a lot was聽accomplished this session, including bills related to聽medical marijuana dispensaries聽and聽protecting conservation land at Turtle Bay.

“We’ve accomplished quite a bit in a very civil, very respectful manner,” she said.

Kouchi, who served 22 years on the Kauai County Council before being appointed聽to聽the Senate by then-Gov. Linda Lingle in 2010,聽was the chamber’s聽vice president last year and聽shepherded聽the overall state capital improvement projects budget this session.

Talk of reorganizing is common near the end of a session but a change in Senate leadership聽actually happening during a session is rare. Usually those decisions are made just before a session begins in January.

James Aki was the last Senate president to be ousted, back in 1994. Ethics questions over his ties to a developer were at the root of it. He later got in trouble for .

Kim took the reins from Shan Tsutsui, who stepped down after being appointed lieutenant governor in December 2012. Prior to Tsutsui’s two-year stint as president, Colleen Hanabusa held the job聽from late 2006聽until she was elected to the U.S. Congress in 2010.

The reorganization is also expected to shake聽up several committees while keeping聽Tokuda聽as chair of Ways and Means and Keith-Agaran as head of Judiciary and Labor.

Among the biggest changes would be聽removing聽Green as chair of the Health Committee, replacing him with聽Chun Oakland, and聽making Nishihara chair of Agriculture, replacing Ruderman.

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