The Democratic Party Platform Calls For Serious Government Reform. So Why Are Democrats Reluctant To Do It?
What does it mean to be a Democratic legislator in Hawaii? We are about to find out.
By The Sunshine Editorial Board
February 5, 2023 · 6 min read
About the Author
The members of Civil Beat’s editorial board focused on ‘Let The Sunshine In’ are Patti Epler, Chad Blair and Richard Wiens.
What does it mean to be a Democratic legislator in Hawaii? We are about to find out.
If any of the 68 Democrats in the Hawaii Legislature aren鈥檛 focused this session on efforts to improve government transparency and accountability, they simply aren鈥檛 paying attention to what鈥檚 going on.
They鈥檇 be ignoring the fact that after a series of recent government scandals, including the bribery convictions of two of their former colleagues, the speaker of the House convened a special commission that recommended legislators make dozens of changes to clean up their act.
And the fact that Hawaii鈥檚 newly elected Democratic governor announced he is inclined to sign reform bills 鈥 if only the Legislature will pass them.
And they鈥檇 be ceding the moral high ground to House Republicans, who united to announce their support for the recommendations.
Equally important, Democratic legislators who don鈥檛 push for reform this session would be thwarting their own and resolutions adopted last year.
At that point they might justifiably be called Democrats in Name Only.
State party officials have long pondered an irony that springs from their success: Democrats so thoroughly dominate Hawaii politics that even politicians who don鈥檛 share the party鈥檚 progressive positions want to join the club. In fact, there has been a historic trend of local Republicans switching parties in order to stay relevant.
Newly elected Rep. Natalia Hussey-Burdick put it this way in her candidate Q&A last year: 鈥淭his practice undermines our party values, and leaves the true Democrats wondering how to hold our legislators accountable when they act in direct opposition to our party platform.鈥
Those values are stated clearly and strenuously . The party’s platform, adopted last May at the state convention, says that 鈥済overnment officials should be held to the highest ethical standards鈥 and calls for 鈥渇ull transparency in all government functions.鈥
It goes on: 鈥淲e support government reforms that limit the influence of money on the creation or execution of policy. We support campaign finance reform that limits the amount of money organizations, corporations or individuals can donate to political campaigns. We support full public-financing of elections.鈥
Delegates to the Democratic state convention also that in some cases go further than the appointed by House Speaker Scott Saiki.
For instance, the Legislature currently exempts itself from the open meeting requirements of the Sunshine Law. While the Standards Commission urged lawmakers to adopt 鈥渁s much of the sentiment contained in the Sunshine Law as is possible,鈥 Democratic convention delegates called for the Legislature to 鈥渃omply with all State Sunshine and Ethics laws.鈥
That would mean, among other things, not talking about the public鈥檚 business in private 鈥 something state legislators currently can do even though county council members cannot.
The same Democratic Party resolution targets the current power of committee chairs to single-handedly kill a bill without an explanation, calling for rule changes that would:
- Grant any bill sponsored by a majority of the members in the originating chamber at least one committee hearing.
- Prevent a bill from being deferred indefinitely without a recorded vote by committee members.
The resolution even pushes for more transparency among legislators who are also lawyers, noting, 鈥淟obbyists are required to disclose who is paying them to lobby, but lawmakers who are hired as private practice attorneys are bound by law to keep their attorney-client relationships confidential.鈥
It calls for new House and Senate rules to restrict legislators from holding leadership positions if, within the preceding six months, they were hired as private-practice attorneys or were profit-sharing partners in firms barred from disclosing clients’ names or businesses.
In a separate resolution, the Democratic Party seeks 鈥渁 fully publicly funded campaign program,鈥 reasoning that 鈥渁 healthy democracy requires a sufficient choice of candidates to be functional.鈥
We couldn鈥檛 have said it better ourselves.
With all this evidence of the need for reform, and the willingness of so many people to support reform, one might assume that good-government measures are destined to break through this year at the Legislature. But the session is short, and neither the House nor the Senate leadership has identified reform as one of its top priorities.
Reform proposals are not limited to the 31 measures from the Standards Commission. More than 150 other measures aimed at transparency and accountability have also been introduced this session from individual lawmakers, government agencies such as the , the , the and at the request of others.
Civil Beat has published and will continuously update a reform measure tracker including bill numbers and companion measures, titles and descriptions, the latest status of the bills and the primary committee chair referrals and contacts.
At least in the case of the recommendations of the standards commission, Saiki has promised that “the public will have an opportunity to comment on them.鈥
This 鈥渙pportunity鈥 for citizens to say where they stand should be an obligation for those 68 Democratic legislators. If they choose to reject the recommendations of the standards commission and their own party platform, they need to at least explain themselves.
They can’t legitimately claim to be ignorant of that platform, because according to every Democratic candidate is provided with a copy of it within seven days of the campaign filing deadline. Those same bylaws list “violation” of the platform as possible justification for expulsion, suspension or reprimand, although in practice nobody seems to get in that kind of trouble for not adhering to the party platform.
Reducing the influence of money in politics. Strengthening investigations and prosecutions of fraud. Applying at least part of the Sunshine Law to the Legislature. Fuller and more timely campaign spending reports. Reining in the dictatorial powers of legislative committee chairs.
For now, the chairs are still weaponized with the singular ability to sweep away all these reform proposals without explanation, allowing their colleagues to dodge the issues altogether.
And that is one reason why they are so urgently needed.
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Read this next:
Rep. Natalia Hussey-Burdick: How To Reform Government Without Even Passing New Laws
By Richard Wiens · February 6, 2023 · 9 min read
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The members of Civil Beat’s editorial board focused on ‘Let The Sunshine In’ are Patti Epler, Chad Blair and Richard Wiens.
Latest Comments (0)
My personal experience with the State Legislature this year, after submitting numerous measures on behalf of our kupuna and all condominium owners throughout Hawaii, is that the process needs to be dramatically improved. Besides the process being rushed, with no possibility of ever allowing Legislators or the public sufficient time to review all or most of the Bills (to see which ones have merit to move forward to hearings), the decision to move a Bill forward is left in the hands of one person, the Chair of the first Committee the Bill is referred to. This sole Representative or Senator has "all of the power" to decide which Bills they will allow to move forward to hearings, and which ones they will allow to die. What needs to be highlighted is that they represent only one district, in addition to only representing one political party. Even our U.S. Supreme Court has a fair process where four of the nine Justices must agree to hear cases submitted for review. Where is the Democracy in "one person" deciding, and for something so important to residents throughout Hawaii?
Greg · 1 year ago
The "chairs" need to be de-weaponized of their personal powers and greed. It's a "kakou" thing.
kealoha1938 · 1 year ago
More than passing interest in the Democratic Party of Hawaii calling for sunshine at the Lege, anti corruption measures, getting rid of poisonous dark money, stopping secretive workings, term limits. and so on. So if the Legislature fails to act - again芒聙聰 would the Democratic Party kick the leading rascals out of the party? That would be a desirable next step.
George3 · 1 year ago
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