天美视频

Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024

About the Author

Danny de Gracia

Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister. Opinions are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat’s views. You can reach him by email at dgracia@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .


Find a way to bring back Senate Bill 2381 and let鈥檚 have the campaign equalizer we all need.

What is needed is a demonstration of courage and initiative, not fear and love for the status quo.

鈥淭here鈥檚 an old saying that victory has a hundred fathers, and defeat is an orphan,鈥澛, just after his disastrous Bay of Pigs incident.

Said another way, in politics, everyone wants to take credit for things that are successful, and no one wants anything to do with failure.

JFK鈥檚 insightful proverb also points to a problem with the way America changes laws and policies: Anything worth changing must have the support of a majority, but things that need to be changed usually don鈥檛 ever change because too many people benefit from the status quo staying the same. 

There are some who are disappointed that聽,聽has stalled at the Legislature. The bill would have authorized, starting in the 2028 general election year, 鈥渃andidates to compete without relying on money from special interests鈥 and allowed 鈥渆lected officials to make decisions free from the influence of, or the appearance that they have been influenced by, donations from special interests.鈥

It’s a great idea that in theory should attract widespread support, but instead is extremely controversial because it threatens the status quo that so many people have come to depend and rely on. 

鈥淓lected officials free from the influence of, or the appearance that they鈥檝e been influenced by special interests?鈥 So basically a government of the people, and not mega corporations, ravenous political action committees, and partisan movements that depend on political capture to rig the rules against other people for their unique profit? Who wants that in Hawaii?

Yes, your homeroom teacher in middle school who put a banner above the class chalkboard that read, 鈥淲hat is popular is not always right; what is right is not always popular,鈥 would probably be very disappointed with some of you right now, because in this case, reform requires doing the scary, unpopular, hard thing that few people understand and that most people resist. Fear is popular and fear is why most of you vote against things that would actually help you (but more on this later).

On one end of the spectrum, people are terrified about public financing of candidates because they don鈥檛 want public money going to people they don鈥檛 agree with. 鈥淲hat happens if the person who qualifies for public financing is a Democrat?鈥 worries every Republican. 鈥淲hat happens if the candidate taking public money for their campaign doesn鈥檛 believe in climate change?鈥 worries every progressive. 

Campaign 2022 signs along Moanalua Road near the intersection of Hoomalu Street in Pearl City.
Those who hold political incumbency or political power聽don鈥檛 like the idea of upstarts getting public funding for their campaigns. (Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2022)

In reality, the actual purpose of public financing 鈥 at least in theory 鈥 would be precisely to amplify the voices of people the public rarely hears from because the establishment or media suppresses them or points the bone at them in a way that the public shuns them.

You need public financing of campaigns in a democracy such as we have for the same reason you need the First Amendment 鈥斅, but to protect speech and expression that is considered unpopular and controversial, because that is the most likely to be silenced by structural violence and peer pressure.

That鈥檚 why on the opposite end of the spectrum, those who hold political incumbency or political power don鈥檛 like the idea of upstarts getting public funding for their campaigns. The late Italian prime minister Giulio Andreotti famously said, 鈥淧ower wears out those who don鈥檛 have it!鈥 and the unspoken point of incumbency is to wear out one鈥檚 opponents until they give up on delusions of ever holding power themselves.

What do you think we are doing every time a member of Congress sends out 鈥渃onstituent updates鈥 in the mail boasting about all the things they did and all the pictures they took with various community gatekeepers? That鈥檚 not a constituent update, that鈥檚 a political mailer in disguise paid for by taxpayers. 

What do you think we are doing every time the governor or mayor in the middle of an election year announces a new initiative with a mother-of-all-press-conferences-style unveil?

That鈥檚 not a public information event, that鈥檚 a campaign rally disguised as official executive duties. It sucks all the media air out of the room, and forces everyone 鈥 especially one鈥檚 opponents 鈥 to talk about the official narrative rather than the issues one would want to talk about.

For the incumbent, they all fully believe in public-funded campaigning 鈥 so long as they alone are the benefactor of public funds.

Public funding is an equalizer that allows potentially unpopular people who may have important issues or worthy ideas that need to be heard on the ballot. I say 鈥渦npopular鈥 because you automatically assume and have been trained to think that 鈥減opular鈥 means 鈥済ood鈥 and 鈥渦npopular鈥 means 鈥渂ad for you鈥 but in our upside-down political system, you have all been trained to like things that are bad for you and resist things that would help you. 

How do I know this?听When was the last time you voted to make housing more affordable?听

So this ultimately comes down to the question of legitimacy. If we believe that the purpose of our elected officials is to 鈥渄o the right thing鈥 and by that we mean聽, to establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, and promote the general welfare, then someone needs to do the unpopular but very necessary thing and force a change for good by supporting publicly financed campaigns.聽

Supposedly, we all elected leaders to office 鈥 people to do the right thing when it is hard 鈥 and this is the time to lead by pushing through publicly financed campaigns as a much-needed reform.

We know that money is a corrupting and controlling influence, and those who have money buy the favors and attention of those who don鈥檛 have money. In this regard, there is an iron triangle between political interests, political candidates, and the for-profit media that is difficult to break and impossible to reform using the same system that promotes and encourages the status quo.

We need an equalizer, something that forces a change, and that requires courageous legislators who are more worried about what history books will say about them than the momentary rewards of having a title of 鈥渃ommittee chair.鈥

As I have said before, nothing is 鈥渄ead鈥 at the Legislature until the Legislature adjourns. Find a way to bring back SB 2381 and let鈥檚 have publicly funded campaigns. It won鈥檛 be perfect, but it will be a start, and besides, when was the last time the Legislature required perfection as a prerequisite for policy?


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About the Author

Danny de Gracia

Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister. Opinions are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat’s views. You can reach him by email at dgracia@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .


Latest Comments (0)

There芒聙聶s still time to get this legislation passed if they really want to make this happen. Please reach out today, asap, and prior to Wednesday March 20th 芒聙聯 make the calls, send the emails, share this message with your friends and networks.David Tarnas (Chair) 808-586-8510 reptarnas@capitol.hawaii.govGregg Takayama (VC) 808-586-6340 reptakayama@capitol.hawaii.govLuke Evslin 808-586-6270 repevslin@capitol.hawaii.govSonny Ganaden 808-586-6010 repganaden@capitol.hawaii.govDaniel Holt 808-586-6180 repholt@capitol.hawaii.govLinda Ichidama 808-586-6220 repichiyama@capitol.hawaii.govGreggor Ilagan 808-586-6530 repilagan@capitol.hawaii.govSam Satoru Kong 808-586-8455 repkong@capitol.hawaii.govTyson Miyake 808-586-9444 repmiyake@capitol.hawaii.govKanani Souza 808-586-8465 repsouza@capitol.hawaii.govSpeaker of the House Representative Scott Saiki (not on the Committee but eventually controls its outcome) 808-586-6100 repsaiki@capitol.hawaii.govPlease, call or email the above listed Representatives ASAP, ask them to reconsider their opposition to this hugely important election-reform measure. Put SB2381 back on the agenda and pass it! Please 芒聙聯 make calls and send emails.

Naleilehua · 10 months ago

Either we have a truly representative democracy --or we don't. The action of the Judiciary and Hawaiian Affairs Committee in trotting out one fake argument after another for why the Clean Elections bill SB2381 should not move forward suggests we need the bill more than ever. Public financing will allow real grassroots leaders--the people who have been working quietly and out of the limelight to improve life for their communities and for all of Hawaii--to offer themselves for public office without the specter of Big Money. Passing the Clean Elections bill is one way to fight against the damage caused by Citizens United. Clearly this group of elected officials have no interest in that. Anyone really committed to serving the public good would not resist public financing. Other places --in Hawaii and on the continent--have introduced it and seen it work. Why are some elected officials so afraid of trying it? Because it will address the rot? Because it will usher in new truly representative leaders?

DawnMW · 10 months ago

How about just limiting the time for campaigning advertising to 30 days before the election? No signs, no digital media, no TV commercials until 30 days before the election. This would eliminate a ton of spending and allow candidates with fewer $$ to participate and get their message out equally to the candidates with big dollar supporters

irloyal · 10 months ago

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