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Flickr/Michelle Kidani/2012

About the Author

Chad Blair

Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on X at .

When Danny Kaleikini died last week at the age of 85 as one of Hawaii鈥檚 best-loved entertainers. What was overlooked in most of the news reports on the death of the Ambassador of Aloha was that Kaleikini once ran for lieutenant governor of Hawaii.

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He was Frank Fasi鈥檚 running mate in 1994 for the short-lived Best Party. The ticket managed with 30% of the vote, not far behind the winners 鈥 Democrats Ben Cayetano and Mazie Hirono 鈥 and just ahead of the third-place Republican ticket of Pat Saiki and Fred Hemmings.

鈥淜aleikini shared his concerns as a Native Hawaiian businessman,鈥 the Honolulu Star-Advertiser . 鈥淭he unsuccessful campaign was his only foray into the political arena.鈥

Kaleikini鈥檚 run for office was well ahead of the recent spate of local celebrities throwing their proverbial hat in the ring. The trend suggests there will be more to come.

As Denby Fawcett wrote last year, contenders in the 2022 primary included 鈥渢wo former beauty queens, a former television news anchorman, a Hoku award-winning singer, a world champion big wave surfer and a retired mixed martial arts fighter.鈥

Several of those candidates are now elected officials.

State Sen. Slom with Danny Kaleikini on opening day of the Hawaii Legislature, Jan. 21, 2015.
State Sen. Slom with Danny Kaleikini on opening day of the Hawaii Legislature, Jan. 21, 2015. The photo at top right, from state Sen. Michelle Kidani via Flickr, shows聽Kaleikini giving the invocation at the opening of the 2012 legislative session. Flickr/Hawaii Senate Minority/2015

Danny Kaleikini鈥檚 bid was also fairly novel nationally at the time. Ronald Reagan was the rare celebrity to have succeeded so spectacularly in politics, and his career from union official to making speeches on the GOP rubber chicken circuit, to being governor and then president paved the way for many others.

What followed were the political careers of Sonny Bono (formerly with Cher), Arnold Schwarzenegger (the “Terminator”), Jesse Ventura (the 鈥淏ody鈥), Steve Largent (from the NFL), Bill Bradley and Kevin Johnson (from the NBA), Fred Thompson (鈥淟aw & Order鈥), Fred Grandy (鈥淭he Love Boat鈥), Al Franken (鈥淪aturday Night Live鈥), Cynthia Nixon (鈥淪ex and the City鈥), Clay Aiken (鈥淎merican Idol鈥) and Caitlyn Jenner (“Keeping Up With the Kardashians鈥), among others.

Some were serious candidates, some were elected, some were not. Stars like Clint Eastwood are still active in film and many may not recall his stint as mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, back in the 1980s.

Here at home, Honolulu City Councilman Augie Tulba first made it big locally as a comedian and media personality. And Brickwood Galuteria, a former radio host, musician and actor, served in the state Senate and is today a trustee for the Office of Hawaiian Affairs.

But Danny Kaleikini was practically present at the beginning of the current trend, building on a line of other celebrity-politicians that dates back many decades.

鈥極ne Smart Hawaiian鈥

The Best Party was the creation of Fasi, the longtime Honolulu mayor who ran several times unsuccessfully for governor and identified variously over the years as a Democrat, a Republican and an independent.

Kaleikini had no political experience, Honolulu Advertiser entertainment columnist Wayne Harada , describing him then as a 鈥渟traight-shooting figure in the entertainment world鈥 who was also 鈥渃lose to the town鈥檚 politicos.”

He was also the wealthiest of the top six candidates running for gov and LG in 1994, according . His holdings included more than $3 million in real estate.

鈥淩epeated efforts to contact Kaleikini for comment were unsuccessful,鈥 Dooley wrote in his Sept. 29 news story.

Kaleikini easily defeated a primary opponent and campaigned with Fasi, who together promised to 鈥済ive government back to the people鈥 and cut income taxes, according to on Kaleikini. (The footnote credits the )

As part of my graduate studies at UH Manoa I volunteered for Saiki鈥檚 campaign to get a front-row seat of the action.

Danny Kaleikini, who died Jan. 6, is remembered for his entertainment career. But he also had a brief career in politics.
Kaleikini, who died Jan. 6, is remembered for his entertainment career. But he also had a brief career in politics. Screenshot/2023

My research, which drew heavily from the Advertiser and the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, concluded that Fasi was flagrantly trying to win votes from Native Hawaiians. Fasi, who hand-picked Kaleikini, also cited the examples or Reagan, Bono and Eastwood as precedents.

Newspaper ads for Kaleikini described him as relating 鈥渢o all people 鈥 bridging the gap between nationalities and cultures.鈥 Fasi himself said, 鈥淗ey, let me tell you, he鈥檚 one smart Hawaiian.鈥

As for Kaleikini, who had been involved with Democratic campaigns from Jack Burns to John Waihee, he said at the time, 鈥淧eople are angry at the conditions in Hawaii, and anyone who thinks they can put sovereignty on the back burner has another guess coming because it鈥檚 for real. We must bring aloha back to government, we must bring aloha back to Hawaii.鈥

The final results of the 1994 Hawaii governor's race.
The final results of the 1994 Hawaii governor’s race, from the State Office of Elections. 

Kaleikini did not support secession of Hawaii from America, however, and said that he wanted to remain 鈥渁n American of Hawaiian ancestry.鈥

But he did suggest he would push for 鈥渢he return of all crown lands that were deeded over to the United States government by the illegally constituted Republic of Hawaii.鈥 And he said he intended to 鈥渕ake homestead lots and home sites available to Hawaiians.鈥

I also learned that Kaleikini apparently joked that his own mother did not want him to run for office, telling him, 鈥淚f anything goes wrong, everybody鈥檚 going to blame you because you鈥檙e Hawaiian.鈥

Name recognition, resources, charisma and entertainment chops were not enough to put Danny Kaleikini into high office. But it鈥檚 still a winning formula, from Donald Trump in America to Volodymyr聽Zelensky in Ukraine.


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About the Author

Chad Blair

Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on X at .


Latest Comments (0)

Precedents not precedence is the correct word to describe candidates that preceded Kaneala Danny Kalekini. Fasi was trying to win Hawaiian votes, and he already had the Samoan vote. They all voted Fasi Fomaya.

palakakanaka · 2 years ago

Boy! Fasi, Kaleikini would have been a winner!

Richard · 2 years ago

Color me old. I remember that 1994 election. I voted against the Fasi/Kaleikini ticket because Frank Fasi was pro rail and that was defeated by a close city council vote of 5 to 4 in 1992. That was to raise the GE tax to fund the Fasi train. He was mayor in 1992.Nothing against Kaleikini. He will forever be remembered as the Ambassador of Aloha and will be missed. R.I.P.

macprohawaii · 2 years ago

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