Posted on 07/30/2018 1:03:12 AM PDT by lowbuck
One-party rule has wreaked havoc in the state, and voters might turn to a new crop of Republicans. A visit to the semiannual meetings of the national committees of the two major parties makes you realize that even in the polarizing Age of Trump, a midterm election isnt one national election but 50 state ones. At last months Republican National Committee meeting in Austin, Texas, the mood ranged from optimistic to ready to ready for a funeral
On the one hand there was Maryland, where despite the fact that Donald Trump won only 34 percent in 2016, GOP governor Larry Hogan has a 68 percent approval rating. But in neighboring Pennsylvania, which Trump won against all expectations, Democratic governor Tom Wolf is favored for reelection, and a court-ordered redistricting map puts up to five GOP House seats at risk.
Then there is Hawaii. Local Republicans think theyve hit rock bottom and begun to recover.
When Hawaii became a state in 1959 along with Alaska, it was the more Republican of the two. But gradually their positions reversed. As late as 1976, Hawaii still had a Republican U.S. senator, and Jimmy Carter won the state that year with only 50.59 percent of the vote.
But the growing power of public-employee labor unions and the failure of Republicans to appeal to the 70 percent of the states population that is nonwhite gradually made Hawaii into a one-party state. There was a brief interval, from 2002 to 2010, when the state elected Linda Lingle, the first GOP governor since the early 1960s. But she failed to enact meaningful reforms and neglected to build the party. The slide accelerated with the arrival of Hawaii-born Barack Obama on the national stage. It continued to the point where last year the Los Angeles Times declared that Republicans were almost extinct in Hawaii.
Today, the party has no members at all in the 25-seat state senate and only five members in the 51-seat state house.
Hillary Clinton may have won Hawaii with 62 percent of the vote, but Donald Trumps national victory emboldened GOP activists there to declare that their partys slide had to end. The aging and feckless party leadership was swept aside in favor of new faces.
Hawaii voters are getting restless. The state suffers from sky-high taxes, crushing public-employee pension debt, the largest per capita homeless population in the country, and an incompetent bureaucracy.
The new party chair is a young Filipina American named Shirlene DelaCruz Santiago Ostrov. Its new finance chairman is Mark Blackburn, a businessman who has quickly succeeded in paying off the partys debt. Blackburn is also raising money to win state legislative seats that the party either used to hold or that are now held by Democrats who dont fit their district.
There are signs that Hawaii voters are getting restless. The state suffers from sky-high taxes, crushing public-employee pension debt, the largest per capita homeless population in the country, and an incompetent bureaucracy.
That latter problem became a national story in January. Democratic governor David Iges popularity plummeted after a state worker triggered a ballistic-missile alert by twice pushing the wrong button during a drill. The alert led to 38 minutes of panic in part because no one could find the password for Governor Iges Twitter account. Today, Ige is on track to become the second governor in a row to lose his job in a Democratic primary.
Ostrov, the new GOP party chair, is focusing on rebuilding the party from the ground up. She plans to issue, after the August 11 primary, a Contract with Hawaii, modeled after Newt Gingrichs 1994 Contract with America, to spell out just how Republicans would change things. Armed with advance copies of that contract, she has recruited candidates in winnable districts. All are running in open seats, have the benefit of not facing a primary opponent, and have gone through a vigorous training program designed by Gene Ward, the minority floor leader in the state house.
Among the candidates that Ward has helped train is Val Okimoto, a former special-education teacher who is of Japanese and Filipina ancestry. Another is Sai Timoteo, who is active in Native Hawaiian issues in her lower-income district and has worked as an executive in the hotel industry.
Ostrov acknowledges that Hawaii is currently a one-party state, but she sees genuine opportunity for Republicans if they run candidates who reflect the states diverse population and the unifying principles of its ethnic groups. The cultures in Hawaii all share a belief in family, a work ethic, opportunity, and law enforcement, she told me. The more that its obvious that one-party rule is undermining those values, the more I believe were going to make gains both this year and in the future.
As Tip O'Neil said "All politics is local". Let's see what develops in the Aloha State.
If you can make it past this sentence:
“The slide accelerated with the arrival of Hawaii-born Barack Obama on the national stage.”
You win a cookie.
Thanks for posting the truth. I am not sure who would believe such an article in the first place.
I hope they’re real Republicans and not RINOs.
I hope they’re real Republicans and not RINOs.
The truth will out in November. However, this state GOP is literally at rock bottom and has nowhere to go but up. A one-party state Senate is an anathema to representative governance.
Politics is dynamic, not static. Socialism is failing Hawaii, and like all populations under Socialist regimes the public gradually begins to get fed up. It will happen in Hawaii eventually. The question is, has that turn already occurred, or is it still in the future?
Weak state political parties have a practical reason to blossom anew when they have a President in power: the lure of federal patronage.
As they continue to fall further into the Socialist utopia type government of California, many people will stop visiting because of the onerous rules and regulations...when that happens, you will see a change in the Hawaiian mentality!
Because that whole state survives on tourist trade dollars - PERIOD!
Michael Barone is a pretty good writer who leans right and shows class. Gotta disagree on this one. Wishful thinking.
About the only Republican of sorts that HI had for any length of tme was the late Senator Hiram Fong.
I believe the GOP is going to surprise some ‘media professionals’ in blue states. I’d love to see Hawaii be a competitive state...and Connecticut might have some wins...
Let Hawaiians suffer under oppressive taxes they voted for.
Double down on oppression.
Suffer Hawaii suffer, so that our states can look at your failure and avoid that.
Hawaii suffers so that we can live better.
Hawaii Republicans will succeed or fail based on one thing.
They will succeed if they embrace conservatism and run on it.
They will fail if they just give lip service to conservatism, yet try to run as “centrists” or “moderates”, “liberalism lite.”
This failure was pretty obvious in California, when the Republicans there decided to be liberals, not conservatives. And embracing liberalism, they are close to being extinct.
Watch Oregon
I’m not buying it.
Once a place goes Socialist there is no turning back.
The political dynamic becomes a series of debates between the Left and the Far Left. Going back to common sense is a non-starter because nobody wants to part with their goodies.
Any Republican who can actually get elected here will be so Liberal as to be useless to the rest of us.
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