
Contentious is a word that I would use to describe most of the business sessions of the GOP Hawaii Convention sessions held on Saturday May 17. Members were divided among those wanting to return the party to a traditional and conservative base while others want to continue with the moderate and "Democrat light" ideology pursued by the Lingle administration and her many supporters. A division among supporters for Senator John McCain and Congressman Ron Paul for President of the United States was also apparent, but not a concern to me.

The Platform remains a major issue for many in the party. Not only did the party end all discussion and
proposals for the platform in April, they did the same thing at the full session of the convention. Members were forced to approve the 2006 platform as the 2008 platform through a series of motions that cut off all possibility to amend or even discuss the document. Clearly supporters of this action outnumbered the many who wanted to open the process to discussion at least. No way. The vote was taken and the 2006 platform ended up being rubber stamped into place as the official one for 2008.
As mentioned in this blog and elsewhere, the point of contention against adopting a new, conservative platform is the Akaka Bill. The Democrat crafted bill is designed to allow Hawaiians to be recognized by the federal government as a tribe and allow them to create their own government within the framework of the one we have now. The Hawaiian plank of the proposed platform would have not allowed for the support of the Akaka Bill and instead would grant Hawaiians and everyone else the opportunity to take charge of their own lives without relying on government handouts and more programs.
In the end, pro-Akaka Bill advocates such as Attorney
Bruss Keppler (shown below, left) got their way in squashing a better platform. Mr. Keppler was seated in the delegate area while continuing to support Democrats through financial contributions in the thousands of dollars.

The air of contention also hung over the selection of delegates to the National Convention in Minnesota. The process of conducting the vote was flawed. Blank write-in ballots were issued by the party for members to write-in the names of those people running for delegate and alternates. The problem? The list of names that were handed out on paper to delegates was incomplete. A new list of both delegates and alternates were to be posted on the giant TV screen. Nearly a half hour of the meeting was wasted on getting the names.
To make matters worst, it was ruled that anyone could submit any type of ballot on paper to the counters, as long as they did not surpass the 3 congressional district and 11 at large district vote count for both delegates and alternates. The McCain campaign distributed a printed ballot with their delegate list on it for submission.
After the votes were counted, it was indicated that 60% of the delegates had turned in the handwritten ballot and not the pre-printed McCain ones. Delegates from the Ron Paul campaign later protested the validity of the McCain printed ballots, to no avail.
A clear slate of McCain pledged delegates and alternates were elected.

Anything bright happened at the convention? Certainly. Lt. Governor
James "Duke" Aiona made his 2010 campaign speech for the State's top seat. He spoke about lower taxes, better education, getting tough on crime and support for the Constitutional Convention. Governor
Linda Lingle praised her Lt. Governor, her cabinet staff and neighbor island liaisons. Candidates running for office were able to introduce themselves and meet people. Lunches and dinners were served to those who sprung extra money to attend them. The "Obsession" movie on radical Islam was shown. A good time was had by some.
Perhaps by a slim chance, what was done at the convention this weekend will turn into election gold in November. Don't hold your breath.
Photo captions:- The face of anger from conservative delegate on the shutdown of platform discussion.
- GOP leaders confer before platform meeting of convention. They wanted to shut down platform discussion very quickly and did through a series of staged motions.
- Bruss Keppler, GOP delegate who has given thousands of dollars to Democrats.
- Stop Rail Now people were there to get more signatures for ballot amendment.
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