Donna Oba in lei
Blog Post

Every two years, League gets calls for League to sponsor candidate forums, oftentimes by candidates. League often declines because we can’t find volunteers.

Eileen O'Hara smiling
Blog Post

The LWV was asked by the Chair of the Political Science Department at UH Hilo to provide a workshop to the Political Science (PoliSci) club on how to create and submit meaningful testimony on legislative measures.

LWVHC volunteers around a table smiling and counting votes
Blog Post

Mahalo nui loa to these volunteers for their work on the Waikoloa Village Association vote count and annual meeting on May 10 and 11, respectively, and for braving the stormy weather:  Kit Afable, Brad Clark, Sue Irvine, Iris Fujii, Marva Furmidge

LWVHC Kit Afable and Shana Kukila at a voter registration table organized by the Hawai'i County Committee on the Status of Women
Blog Post

The Hawaii County Committee on the Status of Women organized a voter registration table for the Pahoa Bruddah Kuz Youth Jamm, which was held April 20 at the Billy Kenoi Park Gym in Pahoa.  Vice Chair of the Committee, Shana Kukila is a new member

LWVHC volunteers staff a voter registration table at the 2024 Hilo Pride Festival
Blog Post

Under blue skies and shady palms, the community gathered on June 29 at Hilo Bayfront for the 2024 Hawaiʻi Island LGBTQ+ Pride Festival at Moʻoheau Park and Bandstand.

Margaret Drake
Research & Studies

Matt Kaneali`i-Kleinfelder's Community Zoom Meeting 5-28-24,
6-7 PM was attended by eight citizens of Puna.

Civil Beat Article: how to tell fact from fiction when voting in Hawaii
News

The state Office of Elections has added a Rumors vs. Facts page on its website to combad widespread disinformation.

LWVMO Delegation to 2024 US Convention
News

Missouri sent an active delegation to the 2024 LWVUS Convention Turn Up & Turn Out in Washington, D.C.  By a vote of 843-3, the convention reaffirmed the League’s commitment to fight for reproductive rights and justice and against disinformati

Juneteenth celebrate

The holiday is celebrated on June 19th (thus the name, Juneteenth) because, on that date in 1865, Union soldiers announced to enslaved persons in Texas that the US Civil War had ended and that they had been freed from bondage by the Emancipation Proclamation (two years prior in 1863). Freed Black and Afro-Indigenous people from Texas brought the celebration with them when they migrated to nearby places like Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Mexico and—even farther—to California, Oregon, and Washington state.

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