Jump to content

Harry Kim (politician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by PilsnerUrquell (talk | contribs) at 04:05, 10 April 2008 (Category:Asian American politicians). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

For other uses of the name Harry Kim, see the disambiguation page Harry Kim.
Harry Kim, Mayor of Hawai'i County

Harry Kim is the mayor of Hawaii County, Hawaii, United States. He was elected in 2000. [1]

Kim grew up in Keaau (also known by its older name of Ola'a). He attended Ola'a School and Hilo High School. He then attended the University of Hawaii at Hilo and Southern Oregon University. He served in the U.S. Army as a medic and was a teacher and coach. Kim was best known for his longtime position as County Director of Civil Defense, a relatively high-profile position which, with his frequent trademark radio broadcasts, gave him broad name recognition as the "Voice of Doom".

After sixteen years as Civil Defense Director, Kim ran for Mayor. The 2000 campaign was noted (like Kim himself) for its humility, refusing to accept any donation over $10, and printing bumper stickers reading "Applicant for Mayor".

To run in the election he was required to choose a political party and opted to run as a Republican. Also on the ballot that year was a provision rendering future Hawaii County political races non-partisan. The initiative passed, and Kim has since disavowed his connection to the Republicans.

After defeating Republican Harvey Tajiri in the primary, Kim won the general election, receiving 50% of the vote. His opponents, Democrat Fred Holschuh and former Green Party county councilwoman Keiko Bonk received 30 and 20 percent, respectively.

In 2004, Kim ran for a second term, easily defeating a plethora of candidates including Dominic Yagong and "cannabis sacrament" minister Roger Christie.

During his time in office, Kim has advocated, among other initiatives, recycling projects and the creation of a new County office complex in the place of the defunct Kaiko'o Mall.

In July 2005 Kim announced he was considering running for governor as a Democrat.[2] On July 22 2006, shortly before the filing deadline, he took his name out of consideration. [3]

References