Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .
The governor, a Democrat, was not particularly popular in his own party. He often clashed over policy and legislation with his fellow Democrats who controlled the Hawaii Legislature.
The testy relationship came to a head when lawmakers mustered the votes to override a vetoed bill 鈥 a direct and successful challenge to the governor’s leadership.
The year was 2001 and the governor was Ben Cayetano. It was the first time in state history that a Democratic governor had been overridden by Democratic legislators. (More on that later.)
On Tuesday, Gov. David Ige, a Democrat, was overridden by Democratic legislators, too, but it was not the first time for him. That came in 2016.
Still, Ige鈥檚 veto overrides now total six 鈥 the most of any Democratic governor 鈥 and he鈥檚 still got one more legislative session before his term ends in early December 2022. Lawmakers might also override a seventh vetoed bill this Thursday when they plan to vote on three other vetoed bills that were amended Tuesday to meet Ige’s objections.
Let鈥檚 keep things in perspective. Ige issued more than 50 vetoes in his six years in office that were not overturned, giving him a decent batting average. But his predecessor and fellow Democrat Neil Abercrombie vetoed 43 bills in four years and none were overturned.
Ige also explained in a press conference Tuesday that he included more bills than usual on his veto intent list this year 鈥 28, ultimately pared back to 26 but also including a line-item veto of 鈥 because of the pandemic鈥檚 lessening impact to state coffers and the issuing of U.S. Treasury guidelines on how to spend federal COVID-19 relief funds. Both developments came after the 2021 legislative session ended April 29.
That said, Ige was rebuffed by the House and Senate this week, which overrode a total of five bills on Tuesday and possibly one more on Thursday. The House actually overrode an additional three vetoed bills that the Senate decided not to take up.
Ige’s No Lingle
But Ige will likely never experience the disdain heaped on former Republican Gov. Linda Lingle (2002-2010) by majority Democrats.
Lingle, only the second GOP governor in state history, issued 347 vetoes during her eight years in office and suffered overrides in all but one session. Her track record included a record 38 overrides in 2009 when she vetoed 55 bills.
Among the Lingle vetoes that were overridden were bills increasing , authorizing and requiring recipients of state funding for sexual health education programs to provide comprehensive, medically accurate .
But Democrats could not kill many other Lingle vetoes, including of 2010. A lot of Democrats were just as uncomfortable about the then controversial bill as was the Republican head of state.
Let鈥檚 go back to Cayetano. The legislation he vetoed in 2001 was called the Age of Consent bill and was intended to protect minors from having consensual sex by raising the permissible age from 14 to 16.
In his 2009 memoir, 鈥淏en,鈥 the former governor said he had no objection with raising the age. What bothered him was language in the bill that allowed for a sliding scale.
鈥淔or example, under the sliding scale, if a 19-year-old had consensual sex with his 14-year-old girlfriend he would face a 20-year prison sentence,鈥 Cayetano recalled. But if his girlfriend was 15 at the time, it would not be a crime.
The sliding scale 鈥渄efied reality and common sense,鈥 he wrote, and a 20-year felony prison sentence was way too harsh. Cayetano noted that Honolulu prosecutor Peter Carlisle also opposed the bill as did the Commission on the Status of Women. And yet, only one Democrat, state Sen. Les Ihara, voted against it.
The reason for the veto override, Cayetano learned from some Democrats, was because they did not want to appear soft on crime come election time.
This is not to equate the events in the 2021 Legislature with those of the 2001 session. But bills do have consequences, ones often not foreseen at the time they are approved or rejected.
Cayetano wrote that five years after the Age of Consent bill became law, 24-year-old John Etrata and 15-year-old Ariel Aki killed themselves on Lanai. They had been lovers and lived together for three months at the time. Etrata was arrested for sexual assault of a minor.
鈥淣o one knows for sure why they killed themselves,鈥 Cayetano explained. 鈥淏ut I wondered how shocked Etrata must have been when he found out 鈥 as he must have 鈥 that he faced a 20-year prison term for being intimate with Aki. Ironically, had Aki been a year older, they 鈥 with her parents鈥 consent 鈥 could have been married.鈥
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The fact that the Hawaii Democratic legislature today has no problem overriding veto's from a Democratic Governor is yet another telltale sign of the change in Hawaii's 21st century political culture. If one was around long enough to know, when the Cayetano veto override happened, it was a big deal in this town because it had never been done before. This of course opened the floodgates for the legislature to have at it with Lingle's veto's and, up to today, Governor Ige's. One can say that this is also another sign of Hawaii politics post-Inouye, in which Uncle made sure that everyone walked lock step on decisions and didn't rock the boat - playing for time to the next session where the issues could be hashed out there.聽
Kana_Hawaii·
3 years ago
we elect all these people to office. we chose them as the best in their field of candidates. so to have disagreements among the select few on a few of the laws passed is good. the governor is term limited the others are not, so it is safer to be on the good side of the power blocks if you want to be in office in the future.聽
dork·
3 years ago
"Still, Ige芒聙聶s veto overrides now total six 芒聙聰 the worst of any Democratic governor." Maybe not "worst". Suggest "most" is better. Some things need
overriding. The veto of HB862 was one of them. In part:"HB862: Abolishes the
office of aerospace development, aerospace advisory committee, and Hawaii
unmanned aerial systems test site advisory board."It's about time Hawaii
came to its senses. Nobody is or will be creating a spaceport in Hawaii. The license alone is $500,000.聽 Stuff is being launched into space from several locations, none of them Hawaii.
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