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About the Authors

Tam Hunt

Tam Hunt is a green-energy lawyer, writer and political activist. He is a member of the Green Party of Hawaiʻi working to build a viable third-party alternative in the islands and beyond.

Susan Roberts-Emery

Susan Roberts-Emery is chair of the Green Party of Hawaiʻi and a long-time activist.

A robust Green Party would create healthy competition in the marketplace of ideas.

If you’re like most Americans, you’ve probably caught yourself saying something like: “I’d vote for a third party, but they can’t win.”

Congratulations — you’ve just identified the single biggest obstacle to political innovation in America. It’s not money, media, or even the mechanics of our electoral system. It’s us.

Here in Hawaiʻi, we’re uniquely positioned to break this self-fulfilling prophecy. As a Democratic stronghold where Republicans rarely win statewide office (it’s been almost 20 years since Linda Lingle last won as governor in 2006), we can vote Green without fear of the “spoiler effect” that haunts mainland progressives.

We can be the laboratory for a new American politics — but only if we’re willing to challenge our own thinking.

The Circular Logic Trap

The belief that third parties can’t win is the primary reason they don’t. It’s a perfect circle of self-defeat: voters won’t support third parties because they “can’t win,” and they can’t win because voters won’t support them. It’s like refusing to eat at a new restaurant because “nobody eats there,” thereby ensuring nobody eats there.

We’ve locked ourselves in this prison of limited political imagination, and we’ve thrown away the key. Meanwhile, we complain endlessly about the two-party duopoly that fails to represent our values or solve our most pressing problems.

When I tell people I’m working with the Green Party of Hawaiʻi, the response is often a sympathetic smile — the kind you give to well-meaning but naïve dreamers. Yet the idea that Green parties can achieve electoral success isn’t fantasy; it’s happening all over the world.

In Germany, Austria, Finland, Ireland, and New Zealand, Greens have served in governing coalitions for many years. Even in first-past-the-post Britain (an electoral system similar to ours), the Greens have elected members to parliament.

These aren’t fringe parties — they’re helping shape voting policy, economic reform, and environmental and social justice worldwide. The question isn’t whether Green parties can succeed. The question is: why not here?

Hawaiʻi: The Perfect Green Testing Ground

Our state stands at a crossroads of extraordinary opportunity. As a solidly Democratic state, we have the freedom to vote our values without “letting the Republicans win.” This is a luxury most mainland progressives don’t enjoy.

Our state faces unique environmental challenges: climate change threatening coastal communities, invasive species and major pests, and over-dependence on tourism and imported food and goods. These are precisely the issues at which Green politics excels — connecting economic security with environmental sustainability and social justice.

The Hawaiʻi Democratic Party has done admirable work on many fronts, but after decades of near-complete control, even the most loyal Democrats must admit we need fresh thinking and stronger accountability. A robust Green Party would create healthy competition in the marketplace of ideas, pushing Democrats to be more responsive or risk losing progressive voters.

Breaking The Spell

The transformation begins with a mental shift: rejecting the idea that political viability is predetermined rather than created. Every successful political movement throughout history — from abolitionists to women’s suffrage to civil rights — was initially dismissed as “unrealistic” by the same convenient logic.

Imagine if Hawaiʻi’s Green Party secured 10-15% in key races this cycle, then 20-25% in the next. Suddenly, the “impossible” becomes inevitable. This growth trajectory is exactly how Green parties succeeded elsewhere — not overnight, but through persistent effort that gradually undermined the “can’t win” mentality.

The Green Party of Hawaiʻi and the national Green Party already have the infrastructure, the platform, and the people. What’s missing is a critical mass of voters willing to vote their values rather than their fears.

Is voting Green a guaranteed win? Of course not. But neither is continuing to support a system that leaves you perpetually dissatisfied. As the saying goes, if you always do what you’ve always done, you’ll always get what you’ve always gotten.

The Choice Is Yours

Hawaii has the chance to spark a national movement — showing that a third party can grow beyond tokenism into a serious political force. We can demonstrate that breaking the two-party spell isn’t just desirable but doable.

The next time you hear yourself say “I’d vote Green, but they can’t win,” try finishing the sentence differently: “I’d vote Green, and that’s how they’ll start winning.”

Hawaii’s political future doesn’t have to be predetermined by mainland patterns or past limitations. We can create something new, something better — but only if we’re willing to believe it’s possible.

The Green wave that transformed European politics didn’t happen because people waited for permission or guarantees. It happened because enough voters decided to make it happen.

Why not here? Why not now? Why not us?

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It’s kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org. The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.


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About the Authors

Tam Hunt

Tam Hunt is a green-energy lawyer, writer and political activist. He is a member of the Green Party of Hawaiʻi working to build a viable third-party alternative in the islands and beyond.

Susan Roberts-Emery

Susan Roberts-Emery is chair of the Green Party of Hawaiʻi and a long-time activist.


Latest Comments (0)

YESSSSS!!! Exactly!!!

wblandfo · 1 year ago

Getting people in the US or even in Hawaii to vote for a third party candidate is a very uphill battle.Having a candidate who has some "third party views" on a single issue run as either a Democrat or a Republican had worked before.I believe they are sometimes referred to as RINO (Republican in name only)DINO (Democrat in name only)

Nikita808 · 1 year ago

"It’s not money, media, or even the mechanics of our electoral system. It’s us"I will argue it really is the money in politics that completely controls the political system, and the media that is also controlled by Corporate money.This leaves us, the distracted apathetic voter, whose confidence has been beaten down due to successive politicians that have dashed any hopes for change, while our shortened attention to the media due to its blatant manipulation and narrative falsehoods."Green politics — connecting economic security with environmental sustainability and social justice"Of the 3 pillars of Green ideology, social justice is a bit problematic to enact due to the lessons learned from the experience with Marxism. Although the power of the oligarchy does need to be broken up, so we do need to implement an American version of a revolution."Green wave that transformed European politics"Ouch! Surely you have seen the evolution of the German Green Party becoming all that's wrong with the status-quo in Germany, especially their banging on the drums of war.I would like to add that I applaud your efforts and hope you continue in your efforts to create positive change.

Joseppi · 1 year ago

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About IDEAS

Ideas is the place you'll find essays, analysis and opinion on public affairs in Hawaiʻi. We want to showcase smart ideas about the future of Hawaiʻi, from the state's sharpest thinkers, to stretch our collective thinking about a problem or an issue. Email news@civilbeat.org to submit an idea.

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