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Politics Hawaii title: Politics Hawaii – with Stan Fichtman

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As details continue to unfold, new voices and new interests may begin to enter the conversation — political figures, potential candidates, and institutional players who were largely silent during the opening stage. If Phase One was about self-identification and accusation, Phase Two increasingly looks like a story about positioning.

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Even before definitive answers arrive, this moment offers an early look at how quickly narratives form, evolve, and reshape the political landscape around them. And in Hawaiʻi politics, that process often tells us as much as the outcome itself.

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In the end, this episode should prompt all three players — TSA, the airline, and the State of Hawaiʻi  — to examine how coordination and passenger care can improve when disruptions cascade. Hawaiʻi invests heavily in promoting a world-class visitor experience. Making sure stranded travelers are not left to fend for themselves on an airport floor is part of delivering on that pro...

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For those of us who grew up in the 1980s, there was a word for this kind of move: “psyche.” Someone would wind up like they were about to head-butt you, pause just long enough to trigger panic, then brush their hair back and say, “Psyche.” That, in effect, is what played out here — except this time it wasn’t a schoolyard fake-out. It was federal policy.

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Over the past several weeks, a series of articles in the Honolulu Star-Advertiser and Honolulu Civil Beat marked a quiet but consequential shift in who is interpreting Hawaiʻi politics for the public. Two farewells and one arrival point to a change not simply in political voices, but in how the state’s political narrative is being shaped and understood.

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