The 2002 Hawaii gubernatorial election was held on November 5, 2002, to select the
Governor of Hawaii. Incumbent
DemocraticGovernor of HawaiiBen Cayetano was term-limited and therefore could not run for re-election. Former
Maui MayorLinda Lingle, who had narrowly lost the
1998 election, was nominated once again by the
Republicans while
Lieutenant GovernorMazie Hirono earned the
Democratic nomination in a tight race. Lingle and Hirono duked it out in a hard-fought campaign, with Hirono's campaign crippled by allegations of corruption within the
Hawaii Democratic Party and many voters desiring a change.[1] Ultimately Lingle defeated Hirono in a close election, making her the first
Republican Governor of Hawaii elected since
1959 and the state's first-ever female governor. She was the first white person to be elected governor of the state since 1970. Lingle and Hirono faced off again in Hawaii’s
2012 U.S. Senate election; Hirono won that race and thus became the first female U.S. Senator in Hawaii history.
Lingle was critical of the way that Hirono had handled education and economic issues as lieutenant governor; in a TV spot premiered by the Lingle campaign in September, the Republican noted that "Reading scores are now among the worst in the nation. We rank last in jobs creation and first in poverty increase" and argued that Hirono bore part of the blame.[3] Hirono responded that low reading scores could be attributed to the fact that many Hawaiian students — such as Hirono, herself an immigrant from Japan — were learning English as a second language. She also pointed to legislation which she had supported to "improve teacher quality" and boost test scores, and commented that "I'd like to know what Linda has done" to further the cause.[3]
The 2002 Hawaii gubernatorial election was held on November 5, 2002, to select the
Governor of Hawaii. Incumbent
DemocraticGovernor of HawaiiBen Cayetano was term-limited and therefore could not run for re-election. Former
Maui MayorLinda Lingle, who had narrowly lost the
1998 election, was nominated once again by the
Republicans while
Lieutenant GovernorMazie Hirono earned the
Democratic nomination in a tight race. Lingle and Hirono duked it out in a hard-fought campaign, with Hirono's campaign crippled by allegations of corruption within the
Hawaii Democratic Party and many voters desiring a change.[1] Ultimately Lingle defeated Hirono in a close election, making her the first
Republican Governor of Hawaii elected since
1959 and the state's first-ever female governor. She was the first white person to be elected governor of the state since 1970. Lingle and Hirono faced off again in Hawaii’s
2012 U.S. Senate election; Hirono won that race and thus became the first female U.S. Senator in Hawaii history.
Lingle was critical of the way that Hirono had handled education and economic issues as lieutenant governor; in a TV spot premiered by the Lingle campaign in September, the Republican noted that "Reading scores are now among the worst in the nation. We rank last in jobs creation and first in poverty increase" and argued that Hirono bore part of the blame.[3] Hirono responded that low reading scores could be attributed to the fact that many Hawaiian students — such as Hirono, herself an immigrant from Japan — were learning English as a second language. She also pointed to legislation which she had supported to "improve teacher quality" and boost test scores, and commented that "I'd like to know what Linda has done" to further the cause.[3]