Saturday, 9 August 2014

Hawaii Dems face tough battles for gov, Senate


HONOLULU (AP) — As the final days of campaigning drew to a close in Hawaii's dramatic primary races, a pair of hurricanes thrashed toward the islands.
The storms posed considerable risk, but for Gov. Neil Abercrombie, they also represented an opportunity to cast himself as a steady leader with a strong emotional connection to people in the state.
He hugged military response personnel, emphasized his national network of contacts and, even as forecasters predicted the storms would weaken and veer away, Abercrombie reminded everyone to remain vigilant. "The full brunt of the storm is still to come," he said Friday morning.

Whether this final image will be decisive for voters casting ballots Saturday remains to be seen. The incumbent governor faces a surprisingly strong challenge from a fellow Democrat and early voting was heavily encouraged.
It's not the only race splitting the Democratic Party establishment. Rep. Colleen Hanabusa is challenging U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz to determine who will fill the shoes of the beloved Sen. Daniel Inouye.
The winners of each race will face Republicans and independent candidates in the November general election, but such campaigns are longshots in heavily Democratic Hawaii.
Schatz has outspent Hanabusa by more than $1 million, and his ads dominated the airwaves. But Hanabusa has attracted many of Inouye's supporters, who felt it was disrespectful for Abercrombie to disregard the political icon's dying wish. Before his death, Inouye told Abercrombie to appoint Hanabusa as his successor. Abercrombie, however, chose Schatz, his lieutenant governor.

Hanabusa evoked Inouye's name throughout the campaign, aligning herself with the traditional Hawaii political establishment, while Schatz touted his endorsement from President Barack Obama.
"I feel as though both candidates are equally qualified," said voter Paul Pollock, 60, who works in the maritime industry and voted for Schatz. "But I'd like to shed the old guard, as it were, and give someone who wasn't an Inouye designate a chance."
As the storm winds died down Friday, election officials assessed the impact and decided to press on with Saturday's scheduled primary.
Abercrombie's calm demeanor as Hurricane Iselle thrust through the islands was a contrast to just days earlier, when at a campaign rally he defended his record— fists raised — after a poll was released that showed him trailing his opponent, state Sen. David Ige, by 18 points.
"Somebody said to me today, 'What do you think about the fact that some people are upset with you because of the decisions that you made?'" Abercrombie said to the crowd, practically shouting. "Every decision I made was on behalf of Hawaii, and every decision I made I said at the time, 'Let's see what the results are of facing the tough choices and making the tough decisions.' And the results are in, and the results are that Hawaii is in a better position today than it has ever been."
Ige has mounted his challenge despite being outspent by about 10 to 1. While Abercrombie tore through $4.9 million through July 25, Ige spent just $447,000, according to Hawaii's Campaign Spending Commission.
Challenging the incumbent Democrat may have hurt Ige's ability to fundraise. But Ige, a respected state senator who served in the Legislature for 28 years, felt Hawaii was headed in the wrong direction, and that too many of the governor's decisions were dividing communities, he said.
"There were many in the party that did not want me to run," Ige said in a recent interview. "They felt like the incumbent should be supported."
Many Ige voters said they weren't necessarily taken in by Ige; they just didn't like Abercrombie.
"Hawaii is such a small place that you have to be really careful about what bridges you burn," said voter Carrie Shoda-Sutherland, 39, a Honolulu education researcher who voted for Ige. "I think there's an overall sense that he's not as relationship-based as you have to be in Hawaii."
Voters who cast their ballots for Ige ahead of the Aug. 9 primary cited disappointment with the way Abercrombie handled contract negotiations with teachers and his past support for a plan to tax pensions.
Others credited Abercrombie for making tough choices to get the state out of a recession.
"I think it's sad that his reputation is being tarnished by a group that thinks he short-shrifted them," said Allen Hoe, 67, a lawyer who voted for Abercrombie.
Former Gov. John Waihee, another Abercrombie supporter, questioned the accuracy of the recent poll, and said that just before he was elected, a poll was released saying he trailed his opponent by 18 points.
"We don't need to win by 25 points, by 10 points," Waihee said at Abercrombie's rally. "We need to win by one vote."

 

California governor reverses parole for Charles Manson associate Bruce Davis

This image is the most recent photo of infamous inmate Charles Manson, taken in 2011.


 
California Gov. Jerry Brown has reversed a parole board decision and denied the release of Bruce Davis -- a former associate of Charles Manson and a convicted murderer himself.
"I find the evidence shows that he currently poses an unreasonable danger to society if released from prison," Brown said in his decision released Friday night. "Therefore, I reverse the decision to parole Davis."
Davis was sent to state prison for life on April 21, 1972, for the first-degree murders of musician Gary Hinman and stuntman Donald "Shorty" Shea in 1969.
 
In March, the state Board of Parole Hearings granted parole for the 71-year-old Davis following his 28th parole suitability hearing.
 
Brown had up to 150 days to nullify or modify the decision.
 
In reversing the board, Brown cited the viciousness of the killing.
"The exceptional brutality of these crimes and the terror the Manson Family inflicted on the Los Angeles community 45 years ago still resonate," he said.
It is the third time a California governor has refused to release Davis.
In January 2010 and October 2012, the parole board granted him parole. In the second case, the board explained it made such a recommendation because of Davis' "positive adjustment, record of no recent disciplinary problems, and for successfully completing academic and vocational education and self-help programs."
Both times, the sitting governors -- first Arnold Schwarzenegger and later Brown -- reversed that decision.
"When considered as a whole, I find the evidence ... shows why he currently poses a danger to society if released from prison," Brown wrote in 2013 to explain his reversal.
No Manson "family" member has been freed solely for good behavior.
The group's gruesome killings inspired the best-selling book "Helter Skelter" and made their undisputed ringleader Manson a cult figure.
The 1969 spree ensnared several victims, including 8-months-pregnant actress Sharon Tate.
Manson is serving a life sentence for his role in nine murders. He was denied parole for the 12th time in 2012; his next such hearing is set for 2027, at which time he'd be age 92.