Who to believe: Harry Kim or Colleen Hanabusa鈥檚 mom?

Voters don鈥檛 actually have to make that choice. But supporters of Gov. David Ige and his opponent in the Democratic primary will find two television campaign commercials featuring the Hawaii Island mayor and the mother of the U.S. representative appealing.

The 30-second Ige spot titled 鈥淜im鈥 features the revered mayor praising the governor for his response to the volcano crisis that began in May.

鈥淕ov. Ige responded without any hesitation,鈥 says Kim, as Ige is shown聽stern-faced, hands on hips, wearing blue jeans and just yards away from a fiery lava stream swallowing a road.

Watch the ad:

It is not stated, but Ige鈥檚 response to Kilauea is the opposite of his response to the false missile alert. To have a figure of Kim鈥檚 significance 鈥 there is no leader in the state more associated with volcanoes and civil defense than Harry Kim 鈥 is a tremendous endorsement of the governor.

鈥淗e came through,鈥 says Kim of Ige’s leadership.

Given that the lava still flows, and that Hawaii County is home to 200,000 people, 鈥淜im鈥 will help Ige.

For her part, Hanabusa will be helped by her 34-second spot, 鈥淪ushi.鈥 It stars the candidate鈥檚 mom, June Hanabusa.

鈥淢y mother has passed on to me more than our family recipes,鈥 says Hanabusa, seen in the kitchen with her mom.

Watch the ad:

The clip is actually from Hanabusa鈥檚 campaign for Congress in 2010, and Hanabusa smiles and tells the camera that people still ask about her mom, who is alive and well. Mother and daughter are shown cooking.

Hanabusa then says she is reminded how much 鈥渢hings have changed in just eight years. So many problems have gotten worse, and I worry about losing the Hawaii we love.鈥

That鈥檚 why Hanabusa chose to leave Congress, she explains, to come home to take on the challenges that she implies Ige and former Gov. Neil Abercrombie were not able to take on since 2010, when Hanabusa was first elected to Congress.

Hanabusa actually first ran for Congress in 2003, in a winner-take-all special election to fill the two-year term of the late Patsy Mink. She lost.

But most voters won鈥檛 remember that. 鈥漇ushi鈥 shows the warm personal side of Hanabusa and it’s an ad that many voters can relate to.

Josh Green, a candidate for lieutenant governor, is a state senator from the west side of Hawaii island, but many people also know that he is a medical doctor. If they don鈥檛, that knowledge will be inescapable after viewing his 30-second commercial, 鈥淗ealthcare Is A Right.鈥

鈥淎s lieutenant governor, Josh will strongly protect Medicare and Social Security for our kupuna.鈥

Watch the ad:

It鈥檚 not clear how a statutorily weak Hawaii LG would be able to influence national discussion on federal entitlement programs. But it doesn鈥檛 matter. Most people who watch this TV ad will come away thinking one thing: Josh Green is a doctor.

Green himself is shown no less than eight times either in his blue scrubs or his white coat. The part where Green applies his stethoscope to a keiki clad only in diapers in what appears to be a homeless camp is one of the most indelible images of the 2018 local campaign season.

A second Democrat in the LG field, Jill Tokuda, stresses family in a 31-second ad called 鈥淩esponsible.鈥 The ad makes a tie between family responsibilities and the responsibilities involved in managing state government.

Tokuda speaks in the spot about shepherding the state鈥檚 $14 billion budget while she was chairwoman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee.

Watch the ad:

Some voters may recall that Tokuda was removed from that job in May 2017 鈥斅爄n her view, because, as she put it at the time, 鈥淚 took a really hardline stance in terms of not wanting聽to extend the general excise tax for any long period of time.鈥

Some critics said there was growing dissatisfaction with Tokuda鈥檚 lack of collaboration with her colleagues.

One other thing: Look again at 鈥淩esponsible鈥 to see if you missed the bamboo imagery. The plant grows fast, has versatile uses and is unbending.

鈥淲hy I’m Voting Carvalho 鈥 Paula Morikami鈥 is one of a number of short video endorsements of Kauai Mayor Bernard Carvalho Jr., a third candidate in the Democratic LG field. Morikami works for the Kauai County government.

鈥淚鈥檝e worked for him for seven and a half years, and he totally amazes me how he is able to bring people together with totally different viewpoints,鈥 she says.

Images accompanying Morikami鈥檚 voiceover show Carvalho meeting with all sorts of folks. It underscores one of the mayor鈥檚 biggest talking points in his campaign for LG.

Watch the ad:

Like other Carvalho clips, this 36-second YouTube spot features the #thinkBig hashtag. The mayor is a former NFL player and arguably the largest person running for any statewide office this year.

It also includes an excerpt from a jingle that includes the lyric, 鈥淰ote Carvalho for lieutenant governor.鈥 Some like the jingle, a reworking of a popular Hawaiian song. Others question whether jingles are really the way to go anymore, as there really hasn’t been a good one since Lei Ahu Isa ran one years ago to the tune of 鈥淕uantanamera.鈥

A fourth Democratic LG candidate, Will Espero, offers this 30-second clip titled, simply, 鈥淰ote Will Espero.鈥 It packs a lot in, with the narration from the candidate himself wearing a familiar fedora and with Diamond Head as backdrop.

Espero speaks of his record of getting legislation passed to address homelessness, public safety, the environment and other issues.

Watch the ad:

Espero鈥檚 clip concludes with contact information and an illustration of a pair of his familiar eyeglasses beneath his fedora. The longtime state senator, who resigned his seat this summer as required by law, is a long shot for LG. But as far as I know, he is the only statewide candidate who wears a hat. Branding!

Finally, the fifth Dem in the LG hunt has just released a 30-second ad called 鈥淪how the Super PACs your Vote is NOT for Sale!鈥

Watch the ad:

Kim Coco Iwamoto is asking voters to reject efforts by corporate-funded super PACs to buy this election. Without mentioning it, the ad is clearly referring to the local super PAC called Be Change Now, which is spending over $1 million to make Josh Green the next lieutenant governor. The money comes from a well-heeled construction union.

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