State Sen. Josh Green held on to a modest lead to win the Democratic primary for lieutenant governor, fending off four strong challengers.
State Sen. Jill Tokuda conceded late Saturday.
In final results, Green, a Hawaii Island doctor, had 30.2 percent of the vote compared to Tokuda’s 27.5 percent, according to the .
“It is surreal,” Green said after winning. “I can’t imagine any better job.”
Green said he would be moving to Oahu full time if he and Gov. David Ige prevail in the Nov. 6 general election.
“I won’t be living out of a suitcase like I have the last 14 years,” he said.
With a few dozen die-hard supporters looking on, and her husband and children by her side, Tokuda gave an upbeat concession speech that focused on the achievement of landing more than 55,000 votes.
Tokuda had campaigned on the theme of being a champion for working families, and she reprised that theme in her speech as she urged her supporters to keep fighting.
鈥淲e have to keep standing, and we have to keep being that champion,鈥 she said.
She also touched on the accomplishment of mounting a strong showing despite Green鈥檚 massive support from Be Change Now. The campaign, she said, was a lesson in perseverance.
鈥淓ven if life does throw you a million-dollar plus challenge,鈥 she said, 鈥測ou just keep going.鈥
Tokuda was aided by the University of Hawaii Professional Assembly, which spent heavily on her behalf.
Among other Democratic candidates, after the fourth round of results were released, Kauai Mayor Bernard Carvalho had 18.5 percent of the vote, former Board of Education member Kim Coco Iwamoto had 13.8 percent, and longtime legislator Will Espero, who left his state Senate seat earlier this year to run for lieutenant governor, had 6.2 percent.
In the Republican primary, Marissa Kerns narrowly won the nomination, getting 29.9 percent. Steve Lipscomb听had 29.3 percent and Jeremy Low had 25.2 percent.
But most of the outsized spending in this year鈥檚 lieutenant governor race 鈥 all to fill a seat vacated earlier this year by the previous person elected to that office 鈥 gravitated toward Green and Tokuda.
During a televised debate in July, all five Democratic candidates expressed an interest in taking the lieutenant governor鈥檚 post 鈥 an office with little power in state government 鈥 and revamping it to their interests and strengths.
Tokuda, for example, proposed making the lieutenant governor the chair of the state鈥檚 Board of Education, while Green proposed using the office to focus on the state鈥檚 homeless crisis and opioid-addiction problems.
All five Democratic candidates said they could serve with either David Ige or Colleen Hanabusa as governor. 听The last person elected lieutenant governor, Shan Tsutsui, left office earlier to work for a private consulting firm. The former state Senate president from Maui later endorsed Hanabusa.
As a state senator, Green had already spent the past few election cycles amassing a hefty campaign war chest. By the end of 2014, for example, he reported $500,000 on hand, state reports fueling speculation that he was preparing run for higher office. Green’s campaign reported raising more than $1 million this election cycle.
Meanwhile, Tokuda reported raising more than 听for her lieutenant governor bid. The former chairwoman of the Senate鈥檚 powerful Ways and Means Committee also benefited from more than $264,000 in outside support from the University of Hawaii Professional Assembly PAC, records show.
Nonetheless, Green鈥檚 financial support from outside groups dwarfed Tokuda鈥檚. Be Change Now, the Hawaii Regional Council of Carpenters鈥 influential super PAC, spent a stunning听 – – to support Green鈥檚 bid.
The outside spending seen this year is a remarkable reversal from the 2014 election, when super PACs didn鈥檛 invest any cash at all in the lieutenant governor race, Campaign Spending Commission show.
(That was the first year super PACs could play a role in Hawaii lieutenant governor鈥檚 race, following the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 pivotal Citizens United decision in 2010.)
Insiders say the massive support for Green was largely payback against Tokuda for the tough stance she took as Ways and Means chair against extending Honolulu鈥檚 rail tax.
Her decision had already cost her the Senate Ways and Means chairmanship.
鈥淚 am really excited about the opportunities on my horizon, and where my sun will rise next,鈥 she her Senate colleagues during a tearful May 2017 address shortly after she was ousted from the chair by her peers at the end of the Legislative session.
鈥淭his isn鈥檛 the end. It鈥檚 clearly just the beginning,鈥 she added. Three months later, Tokuda announced she would run for lieutenant governor.
Kim Coco Iwamoto, meanwhile, proposed using the LG office as a 鈥減eople鈥檚 office鈥 and she vocally rejected support from outside groups such as super PACs. Instead, Iwamoto, an heiress to the family business – – relied heavily on loans to her own campaign, totaling some .
Neither Iwamoto nor Carvalho nor Espero benefitted from any outside money in the race, according to Campaign Spending Commission figures.
None of the Republican candidates received super PAC spending either during the primary.
Civil Beat reporter Stewart Yerton contributed to this report.
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About the Author
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Marcel Honor茅 is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can email him at mhonore@civilbeat.org