Hawaii Bill to Elect Attorney General Loses in Committee

On March 23, the Hawaii House Judiciary killed SB 1187, which would have provided for an elected Attorney General. The Senate had passed the bill on March 8, 16-9. Hawaii is one of seven states in which the voters do not elect the Attorney General.


Comments

Hawaii Bill to Elect Attorney General Loses in Committee — 3 Comments

  1. Any States elect ONLY a Gov/Lt.Gov ??? — i.e. are de facto executive branch dictatorships — i.e. like the U.S.A. regime.

    RATIONAL regimes have multiple executive officers elected — to watch each other very carefully – in order to have a regime of LAW.

    What has been happening in North Africa and the Middle East for weeks and weeks ???

  2. States that elect no statewide executive state offices except Governor/Lt. Governor are Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Tennessee, Alaska, Hawaii.

    Wyoming elects multiple statewide executive offices but not the Attorney General.

  3. How many hundreds of database classifications does BAN manage to keep track of — hopefully with a computer with multiple backups ???

    Is the percentage of executive branch powermadness and corruption more or less in the #2 States or the other States — making adjustments for relative size of the States ???

    NONPARTISAN App.V – to elect ALL elected executive officers (at least 3 to 5 independent of each other) and ALL judges.

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