Danny De Gracia: Hawaii Voters Deserve Better Candidates. Getting Them Will Be Hard
Hawaii’s political system is broken. It’s up to us to fix it by being more discerning voters and active citizens.
April 22, 2024 · 7 min read
About the Author
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 .
Hawaii’s political system is broken. It’s up to us to fix it by being more discerning voters and active citizens.
If you visit the Hawaii State Office of Elections website,聽聽which explains that locals still have until June 4 to submit paperwork if they wish to run for office this year.聽
There鈥檚 also a regularly updated 鈥淐andidate Report鈥 , that allows interested citizens (and hypervigilant incumbents) to check on the daily who is entertaining the possibility of running for office by 鈥減ulling papers鈥 鈥 鈥 or who has actually filed papers to be on the ballot.
People often gripe that they don’t have good choices on the ballot, so they have to pick the lesser of two evils. Like all popular or common sayings, there鈥檚 usually a kernel of truth to it, but if you鈥檙e reading this article, you鈥檙e probably wondering what the bigger problem is 鈥 and what we can do about it.
As I see it, there are several problems we need to come to grips with as a community, and if you want better choices in 2024, the time to start is now.
Partisan Primaries In Hawaii Are Awful
The real election in Hawaii is the primary election. That鈥檚 because local Democrat and Republican leaders know that districting has made most seats predictably blue or red, and if you win the primary of the reigning party, in most cases you鈥檒l cruise to victory in the general. This is nothing new. But the problem is because Hawaii is such a small state, the two major parties tend to recruit and reward individuals who are either ideological special interest-pleasing piranhas or establishment baby sharks dropped into a political fishbowl filled with weaker, middle-of-the-road goldfish opponents.
Between 2007 and 2014 the Pew Research Center conducted a national study of political and religious preferences and found that 48% of Hawaii adults identified as moderates, while only 18% identified as conservative and 33% saw themselves as liberal. Of those moderates, 18% said at the time they had no political preference, while 58% said they leaned Democrat and 24% leaned Republican.
This is likely why many of the 鈥渇irebrands鈥 we have in local offices can be so extreme at times 鈥 they must go far left or far right to emerge victorious. Even if we switched to a nonpartisan primary, which some have suggested Hawaii do, the people who will emerge from the nonpartisan jungle will still be partisan beasts.
may not necessarily be the kind of person given to careful deliberation, moderation or even collaboration when it comes to being in office. This tends to deter a lot of highly qualified individuals from running for office, because they may not want to take sides in a culture war they have no opinion about, or they may support a mixed bag of policies on opposing partisan sides that make them unpalatable. It also eliminates these same types of people in a primary, assuming they do run.
If 鈥渘ormies鈥 want to get more balanced candidates, they鈥檙e going to have to either find a way to persuade their neighbors to stop voting so partisan or they鈥檒l have to mobilize in a way that ensures the mildest Democrat or tamest Republican wins in their primary. And believe me, that is a heavy lift.
Why We Back Incumbents
I鈥檝e mentioned previously on the topic of publicly funded campaigns that President John F. Kennedy once said that victory has a hundred fathers, but failure is an orphan. WalletHub released a report that said Honolulu has the worst inflation in the nation. When it comes to gathering support for nascent political campaigns, our cost of living makes people highly selective in who they support.
鈥淗ighly selective鈥 is a polite way of saying people can鈥檛 afford food, housing, bills and political donations at the same time, so they鈥檒l either not help or 鈥 if they do help 鈥 they鈥檒l fund known political personalities rather than startup candidates.
There鈥檚 also a cloud of fear that hangs over Honolulu in which people don鈥檛 want to donate or be seen as openly supporting someone, lest they get recriminated against for backing a losing candidate.
The same goes for tapping into the help of Hawaii鈥檚 consultant class, which consists of a small pool of politically agnostic experts who are behind the victories of candidates on both sides of the aisle. That is the nature of a palace economy 鈥 it exists because the palace is never challenged because the palace always pays out.
Rather than backing someone who could win, people want to back someone who has already won. That means we back establishment incumbents and hyperpartisan primary winners.
鈥淚 really like your ideas,鈥 we like to say here. 鈥淜eep it up! I鈥檒l support you once you win your primary!鈥 It reminds me of how the late President George H.W. Bush while in office by telling them to rise up first and promising America would follow. Of course, America did not follow, and the Kurds were butchered by Iraq鈥檚 dictator at the time.
The idea that a 鈥済ood candidate鈥 will be able to go around to win looks great on paper but in reality, it isn鈥檛 practical to do. That鈥檚 why successful candidates will 鈥済o to the dark side鈥 and chase large donors first, because they need the immediate infusion of early support to then flex the 鈥渂e like Mike鈥 conformity effect on the little people to back them.
Media Coverage Doesn’t Help
I hate to say it, but local for-profit news reporting on campaigns and politics is awful. Not only is for-profit campaign reporting here shallow, superficial and clearly biased, but it also tends to flood the public with bad stuff that drowns out important topics and worthy candidates. I say 鈥渂ad stuff鈥 because I can鈥檛 use another term with the acronym 鈥渂.s.鈥 but you get the idea.
The majority of press conferences that get reported are ones for established candidates seeking higher office, not startup challengers with great ideas but little exposure. Softball questions are usually asked by the media, with minimal assertive follow-ups or demands for explanation.
The end result? Vanity candidates who are well-funded or well-known usually win at the expense of policy expertise or moderation in worldview.
The majority of the people whom Hawaii would classify as a good choice on the ballot will likely never file for office or run because they are aware of all these things. Someone who is eminently qualified will often find themselves asking, 鈥淲hy would I want to subject myself to all this when I can just stay in the private sector, make money and mind my own business?鈥
So where does that leave us, the people and the voters? Well, if you want better candidates, you鈥檝e got to be better voters. Stop ignoring good opportunities and stop supporting bad candidates. The late President Kennedy famously said during his inaugural address, 鈥淭hose who foolishly sought power by riding the back of the tiger ended up inside.鈥
How many times are we going to let ourselves be eaten by political tigers, and when will we start recruiting, supporting and electing better people? The system is broken. We broke it and we keep it broken. But we need to make the choice to do something different this year.
Want better candidates on the November ballot? Be better voters from now to the primary.
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ContributeAbout the Author
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)
The Legislature would operate more effectively if 76 adult residents were selected at random.
sleepingdog · 8 months ago
Ah, the sweet, time-honored tradition of Hawaiian elections, where the real sport is watching moderates get sidelined in a primary frenzy that rivals a Black Friday sale. And oh, the article's quaint omission of the all-too-familiar racial undercurrents in local voting habits? Classic! Yes, we're all used to candidates pandering to their party's extremes, but let's not forget the true Hawaiian way: voting based on race often trumps any party loyalty or ideological alignment. Tradition is tradition, after all!
HauulaHaole · 8 months ago
Term limits are not going to fix these problems. Replacing a democrat with another is not going to do anything. Where do you think the next new democratic candidate comes from? And where do you think the democrat that gets replaced goes? Id guess Mufi still has enormous political power and he芒聙聶s long been out of office.
Kilika · 8 months ago
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