While the District 39 contest went to an automatic recount, two other tight races did not thanks to an election law change.

Republican state Rep. Elijah Pierick’s reelection victory in House District 39 was powered by in-person voters, an automatic recount shows.

Pierick won by 20 votes over Democratic challenger Corey Rosenlee after an election night count of mail ballots had given Rosenlee a 331-vote lead.

Pierick received 4,706 votes to 4,686 for Rosenlee in the district that includes Royal Kunia, Village Park, Honouliuli, Hoopili and a portion of Waipahu.

The recount, which did not change any vote totals, showed that Pierick dominated in-person balloting by a 351-vote margin, 559 to 208.

Republican state Rep. Elijah Pierick, right, defeated Democratic challenger Corey Rosenlee, center, an automatic recount showed. (Civil Beat/2024)

The vast majority of voters in the district used mail ballots, and Rosenlee won those by a 51.9% to 48% margin. But that was overcome by Pierick鈥檚 72.8% to 27.12% margin among in-person voters.

Pierick鈥檚 victory brings the number of GOP-controlled seats in the 51-member House to nine. That鈥檚 the most Republican House seats in at least a decade.

State law was to decrease the number of automatic recounts, and as a result at least two tight general election contests that would have previously qualified for recounts did not.

The law now requires them in races where the difference between votes is 鈥渆qual to or less than one hundred votes or one-quarter of one percent of the total number of votes cast for the contest, whichever is lesser.鈥

Previously, the last part of that section was: 鈥渨hichever is greater.鈥 That had sometimes resulted in automatic recounts in low-turnout primaries that were not all that close even though there was less than a 100-vote difference.

The final turn before getting into he hallway leading to the voting machines at Kapolei Hale is deceptively shorter than the line which wraps around the building and then snakes around itself Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024, in Kapolei. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)
In-person voters turned out in bigger than expected numbers on election night, leading to long lines at the only two voting centers that were open on Oahu, including this one at Kapolei Hale. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)

State Elections Chief Scott Nago in support of the law change in which he noted that an automatic recount had been required in a 2020 primary even though the winner got 53.3% of the vote to 46.7% for the loser.

The change was also supported by the League of Women Voters of Hawaii, which testified, 鈥渢he recount threshold should be strict so that it correctly identifies races that are genuinely close.鈥

At least two races on Hawaii鈥檚 Nov. 5 ballot were close enough that they would have qualified for automatic recounts before the law change.

In the South Maui County Council race, Tom Cook defeated Kelly King by just 117 votes, 41.6% to 41.4%.

And in the House District 32 race, Republican challenger Garner Shimizu defeated Democratic incumbent Micah Aiu by 76 votes, but the law鈥檚 鈥渙ne quarter of one percent鈥 of all ballots cast in the race came out to 24 votes — meaning the difference between the two needed to be less than that.

District 32 includes Fort Shafter, Moanalua, Aliamanu, Foster Village and portions of Aiea and Halawa.

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