Editor’s Note: This is the second in a series of profiles of the leading Honolulu mayoral candidates.听

If voters want a Honolulu government that is run like a business, Rick Blangiardi says he is the candidate for them.听

The former television executive and first-time candidate says he can fix what he calls a 鈥渓eadership crisis鈥 at city hall. While his more seasoned political opponents have argued they don鈥檛 need 鈥渢raining wheels鈥 for the job, Blangiardi says government experience is unnecessary.听

鈥淟ook, the mayor is the CEO of the city,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t is about managing 鈥 managing people, decision-making.鈥澛

A critic of Mayor Kirk Caldwell and Gov. David Ige, Blangiardi has positioned himself as a pragmatic outsider who is “not building a political career.鈥

Honolulu Mayoral Candidate Rick Blangiardi.
Rick Blangiardi retired from a lucrative gig as Hawaii News Now’s general manager to run for mayor. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2020

In the nonpartisan race, Blangiardi is one of the more conservative contenders and is backed by former Republican Gov. Linda Lingle. A self-identified independent, he says he represents a mix of compassion on social issues with fiscal conservatism. His campaign said he is not a supporter of President Donald Trump.听

A novice candidate during a tough year for campaigning, Blangiardi has benefitted from name recognition earned through his TV career. A Civil Beat/Hawaii News Now poll in May showed Blangiardi at the top of a crowded field of candidates, followed by former Congresswoman Colleen Hanabusa. The biggest group of respondents, however, was undecided.听

In such unprecedented times, Blangiardi is arguing that a politician is no better equipped than he is.听

鈥淭his is a rebuild which will be slow and painful,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here is no playbook for that.鈥澛

Blangiardi is in the sweet spot of being able to project experience without having the baggage of a public record in politics, said Colin Moore, director of the University of Hawaii鈥檚 Public Policy Center.听聽

鈥淭hat鈥檚 really advantageous in this election,鈥 he said.听

Primary election ballots are scheduled to be delivered to mailboxes by July 21, and must be mailed back or dropped off by primary day, Aug. 8. If no one garners over half the vote 鈥 which is unlikely in a field of 15 candidates 鈥 the top two candidates will face off in November.听

Blangiardi’s political leanings could be an asset going into the primary but may become a challenge if he gets to the general, Moore said.听

鈥淕oing into the primary, I think he鈥檒l get most of the people who lean conservative, a lot of people in the business community,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f he makes it to the next round, that鈥檚 where it鈥檚 going to become a problem for him. The mainstream Democratic vote, the union vote, might not feel comfortable with him.鈥

Humble Beginnings

Blangiardi, 73, is the only top-tier candidate from the mainland. He said he grew up in an immigrant family that spoke both Italian and English in a tenement in Cambridge, Massachusetts.听

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 even have a bathroom in my house at the age of 12,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hose are my roots.鈥

Blangiardi said he was the first in his family to graduate from college. His professional bio says he obtained his bachelor鈥檚 degree from Springfield College in Massachusetts in 1969 and then got his master鈥檚 in education in 1973 at the University of Hawaii where he played football.

While at UH, he became a football coach, a role he held until 1977 when he left to start a career in broadcasting at KGMB. His wife was expecting their first child at the time, and money was tight. He was only making about $15,000 a year, he said.听

“I changed my life鈥檚 direction, and that wasn鈥檛 easy,” he said. “It was a major turning point. Since then, there have been ups and downs in my life.”

Rick Blangiardi announces his run for Mayor of Honolulu at Old Stadium Park.
Rick Blangiardi says he’s the decisive leader Honolulu needs. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2020

In the early ’80s, Blangiardi got embroiled in a bank fraud scheme in which he acted as a 鈥渟traw man鈥 to obtain a mortgage for a shady real estate broker. In exchange, he received $1,500, he . The broker also promised him increased KGMB ad buys and a cut in a future real estate deal, Blangiardi鈥檚 .听

Blangiardi was sued by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. for his role in a related deal involving a Kansas financial institution. He maintains he was an unwitting victim of a scam. In the end, Blangiardi said he testified against the main perpetrators and helped put them behind bars. As for Blangiardi, he filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy and left Hawaii in 1989.听

Throughout the 1990s, Blangiardi held leadership positions at television stations throughout the mainland with stints in Seattle, New York, San Francisco, St. Louis and Los Angeles. At the end of the decade, he was president of Telemundo Group, the Spanish language television network. In that role, he said he led the 2001 sale of Telemundo to NBC, 鈥渢he largest acquisition of a foreign-language broadcaster in the United States by one of the major television networks,鈥 according to The .听

In 2002, he was hired to head both KHON and KGMB. After the 2008 financial crash, Blangiardi led the consolidation of two stations, KGMB and KHNL, into Hawaii News Now, which is Civil Beat鈥檚 broadcast news partner.听

鈥淚鈥檓 very proud of what we built,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat was born out of a lot of tough decisions.鈥澛

Under Blangiardi鈥檚 leadership, HNN produced and . As a boss, for his high standards and his coach-like leadership style.

Blangiardi, a father of three adult children, has served on the boards of the YMCA, Central Pacific Bank, the Aloha Council Boy Scouts of America and the Chamber of Commerce of Hawaii, among other organizations.

Despite his humble roots and the financial hit he took in his 30s, Blangiardi is the wealthiest candidate in the mayor’s race, according to . He made more than $1 million managing Hawaii News Now in 2019 and owns a $2 million penthouse in the Admiral Thomas condominium near Thomas Square with his wife, Karen Chang.听

Chang has done well for herself, too. and American Express, she sold her oceanfront mansion in East Honolulu for $19.8 million in 2015, according to . She owns a separate $1 million unit in the Admiral Thomas condo, property records show.听聽

Chang was a member of the Honolulu Police Commission until she resigned ahead of Blangiardi鈥檚 run for office.听

On The Issues

At HNN, Blangiardi became a familiar face to viewers with “Local Connection,” an editorial segment in which Blangiardi spoke about the news of the day. The pieces give a glimpse into his thinking on public policy issues.听

In a 2019 segment, he defended advocates of the Thirty Meter Telescope and criticized protesters who say the “modern stargazers are desecrators.”

鈥淭his slur unfairly focuses anger on innocent and well-intentioned people,鈥 he said.听鈥淭urning away the TMT may make a few people feel good for the moment while damaging Hawaii鈥檚 reputation and economy for years to come, and doing literally nothing to address the legitimate grievances of the Hawaiian people.鈥澛

Blangiardi also that got the OK from the government but faced citizen opposition, including the Waimanalo sports complex and the Kahuku wind farm.

Rick Blangiardi annouced his run for Mayor of Honolulu . Governor Linda Lingle was in attendance for her support for Blangiardi.
Former Gov. Linda Lingle was in attendance when Blangiardi announced he was running for mayor. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2020

鈥淭hat level of distrust in government is widely shared, and in a lot of ways, it’s justified,鈥 he said. 鈥淎lthough lawlessness is not.鈥

On the issue of the Waimanalo development though, Blangiardi said he sided with protesters.

“I think it鈥檚 really about whether you ‘listen to hear’ or whether you ‘listen to speak,'” he said in a recent interview. “I鈥檝e learned to ‘listen to hear’ and do what鈥檚 practical.”

On homelessness, Blangiardi about what he considered to be the government鈥檚 unwillingness to take on the 鈥渃riminally homeless.鈥 He suggested that homeless people who sleep outdoors should be arrested.听

鈥淛udges have the power to push defendants into drug or mental health care, and even into housing,鈥 he said in the editorial. 鈥淭hose who still refuse can enjoy a roof over their heads in jail.鈥

Blangiardi still touts a 鈥渢ough love鈥 approach to homelessness but said he would work collaboratively with the state and private sector to provide more mental health and addiction services. He said sit-lie enforcement can be a 鈥渃atalyst鈥 to get people who can鈥檛 help themselves into treatment, but in the absence of a place to put people, it鈥檚 ineffective.听

Blangiardi has for his efforts on homelessness and said Gov. David Ige could learn a thing or two from Green. Blangiardi has also criticized Ige more broadly, calling his first three years in office 鈥.鈥

, Blangiardi said he supports raising the minimum wage to $15 or even $17 an hour. In the current climate though, Blangiardi said that鈥檚 too much to ask of small businesses.听

To increase city revenue, Blangiardi said he would look at raising property taxes on hotels 鈥 a move he argued for before the COVID-19 pandemic. It’s something .听

鈥淭hey鈥檙e really working in an extractive business and have been for a long time,鈥 Blangiardi said, adding that he wouldn鈥檛 raise taxes on residents.听

When it comes to police, Blangiardi has taken . In an HNN editorial last year about a 鈥recent spike in law enforcement shootings,鈥 Blangiardi said the problem is people 鈥渓iving criminal lifestyles,鈥 not the officers who shoot them.听

鈥淟et’s not be so quick to blame law enforcement in general for these unfortunate cases,鈥 he said. 鈥淟et鈥檚 thank the people who protect us for their service. Of course investigate when things go wrong, but also appreciate the larger picture of why they end up in the terrible position of having to make that fatal decision in the first place.鈥澛

In a recent interview, Blangiardi said he wrote that at the time to be 鈥渟ensitive in the moment to police being fired upon.鈥澛

SHOPO President Malcolm Lutu said the union chose to endorse Blangiardi because he will “put public safety first.” Chad Blair/Civil Beat/2020

The State of Hawaii Organization of Police Officers endorsed Blangiardi in May.听聽

It鈥檚 a stamp of approval that could be a liability at a time when protesters in Hawaii and nationwide are demanding more accountability and transparency from the police.

But Blangiardi said he will not take orders from SHOPO. He said he supports increased transparency at HPD, including the passage of House Bill 285, which makes police misconduct records more widely available to the public. SHOPO opposed the measure.听

鈥淲e need to be as open with the public as we possibly can, to build trust,鈥 he said.听

If faced with budget cuts, Blangiardi indicated that police officers would be protected to the extent possible. Public safety is essential, he said, and the department already has a hard enough time recruiting to fill vacancies.

鈥淚’m all for accountability and transparency, but I am absolutely opposed to defunding the police,鈥 he said, referring to the calls from activists. 鈥淥ur police department here right now can use the resources we can dedicate to it.鈥

Regarding other demands from the Black Lives Matter movement, Blangiardi said he trusts HPD Chief Susan Ballard is listening and will follow best practices.听

A Leader Without A Plan

Blangiardi says he can lead the city out of its current crisis, but he鈥檚 light on the details.听

鈥淗e鈥檚 been pretty unwilling to commit to specific policy positions,鈥 Moore said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 usually, ‘Well, when I鈥檓 mayor, we鈥檒l study this, we鈥檒l figure it out.’鈥澛

With the city facing potential budget shortfalls because of the pandemic, where would Mayor Blangiardi cut costs? He doesn鈥檛 know.听

鈥淚 haven鈥檛 looked at that budget yet, to be honest with you,鈥 he said in a joint Civil Beat/Hawaii News Now interview, adding that he鈥檚 waiting until he wins the primary.

Blangiardi said he would know what to do because he鈥檚 worked in environments where 鈥$50 million was a rounding error.鈥澛

鈥淏udgets are just a matter of zeros,鈥 he said.

Blangiardi’s campaign website doesn’t mention many specific plans. Screenshot/2020

While Blangiardi lamented 鈥渨aste鈥 in city spending, he was unable to point to a single example.听

Before the pandemic, Blangiardi said he believed the rail project needed to be completed.听Now with the financial crisis and the public-private partnership bids still unknown, Blangiardi said it鈥檚 a question mark. The project may need to be paused, he said.听

“If you can鈥檛 pay for something, you can鈥檛 pay for it,” he said.听

He faulted the current administration for not doing enough on homelessness and said the issue is one of the major areas he would focus on if elected.

鈥淐ompassionate disruption doesn鈥檛 work,鈥 he said.

However, Blangiardi acknowledged he has no specific plan to address either existing homelessness or the wave of housing instability brought on by the pandemic that experts are predicting.听聽

鈥淚鈥檓 really worried about the amount of homeless people we may see on a going forward basis, and for that, I don鈥檛 have an answer right now,鈥 he said in the joint Civil Beat/Hawaii News Now interview. 鈥淎nd that is something that, look, we鈥檙e six months out from getting into the office. There鈥檚 so much that can happen.鈥

He said the city needs to help develop affordable rental units, but offered few details on how to make that happen. He said he would like to explore the development of city land, retrofitting existing structures for housing and tax incentives for the building industry.听

鈥淭here are some really brilliant people in this town who care. It’s not all about greed and making money,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o I want to do that. I want to be a facilitator for that kind of change.鈥澛

Following a city audit on the problems at the Department of Planning and Permitting, Blangiardi said he鈥檇 like to improve operations to boost affordable housing construction but didn鈥檛 say how.听

鈥淚鈥檇 want to evaluate that first,鈥 he said.听

If elected, Blangiardi said he would surround himself with the 鈥渟martest thinkers and the smartest doers.鈥

“I don鈥檛 have a plan for everything right now, but we will, but I know how to put plans together and how to execute,” he said. “I鈥檓 a leader. I鈥檓 decisive. I probably lead as much with my heart as with my brain. And I love Hawaii.鈥澛

Read other profiles in this series:

Mufi Hannemann: He Was Mayor Once Before. Will That Help Or Hurt With Voters?

 

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