A political junkie friend of mine said Colleen Hanabusa should spend the next two years shaking hands across the state and telling them this number: 1,769.
That’s to remind voters of just how close her race was with Brian Schatz, and the seat is up again in 2016.
It turns on that the U.S. representative lost to the U.S. senator by 1,782 votes in a race that saw nearly 230,000 votes total cast for the two candidates.
The earlier figure of 1,769 was the margin of victory after the Aug. 15 make-up primary in Puna, but the total was not certified.
Now it’s a done deal and will stand, since electoral challenges have been rejected.
Brian Evans, the other Democrat in the primary, picked up a total of 4,842 votes.
Wonder if things would have been different had the Las Vegas crooner with a Keaau address had not been in the mix.
Also of note: 3,842 ballots were left blank.
Comparing the counties, Schatz edged Hanabusa on the Big Island and received 2,139 more nods on heavily populated Oahu.
But Hanabusa narrowly defeated Schatz on Maui and beat him by 635 votes on Kauai.
GET IN-DEPTH
REPORTING ON HAWAII’S BIGGEST ISSUES
What it means to support Civil Beat.
Supporting Civil Beat means you’re investing in a newsroom that can devote months to investigate corruption. It means we can cover vulnerable, overlooked communities because those stories matter. And, it means we serve you. And only you.
Donate today and help sustain the kind of journalism Hawaiʻi cannot afford to lose.
About the Author
-
Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on X at @chadblairCB.
