Hawaii RNC members pay their way to represent state: ‘It’s not a cheap hobby’
Hawaii’s Republican National Commitee members routinely pay their own way to attend quarterly RNC meetings on the mainland, spending roughly $2,000 each on airfare, hotels, food, transportation, and incidentals. Serving is entirely voluntary for many in the Aloha State, who also burn vacation days and balance work obligations to participate.
Committee members say the expense and time commitment are worth it to ensure Hawaii is represented nationally, maintain relationships with RNC leadership, and secure resources. Leaders like Shirlene Ostrov and Laura Nakanelua emphasize the personal financial burden-“it is not a cheap hobby”-while Scott Smart describes the work as a labor of love that helps bring national party developments back to local members.
Hawaii does not receive regular travel funding that some other states do, though the RNC has occasionally provided targeted support (one past allocation amounted to up to $50,000 related to election-audit accountability). With plans underway for a national convention tied to the midterm cycle and at least three meetings a year, members expect the time and financial costs to increase. Some offers to help cover expenses have been made, but members say they are often reluctant to accept outside funding.
Hawaii RNC members pay their way to represent state: ‘It’s not a cheap hobby’
SANTA BARBARA, California — Hawaii’s Republican National Committee members pay thousands of dollars out of pocket, burn vacation days, and still show up to winter meetings to prove their loyalty to the party and the president.
Unlike some states that receive funding, Hawaii’s RNC delegation must cover the cost of quarterly trips to the mainland to get face time with RNC officials and keep its state’s issues top of mind.
At this week’s RNC winter meeting in Santa Barbara, Hawaii’s chairperson, alongside multiple committee members, spent close to $2,000 each on plane tickets, hotel stays, food, transportation, and incidentals.
“It is not a cheap hobby,” Hawaii committeewoman Shirlene Ostrov told the Washington Examiner, adding that “people forget that this is 100% volunteer. You’re all on your own with the cost.”
While a handful of state party chairmen and chairwomen do have their travel paid for, Hawaii is not among them. Typically, there are at least three meetings per year. This year, the RNC is moving forward with plans for a national convention ahead of the midterm elections, which will likely add even more zeroes to the final cost for Aloha State committee members.
“I was properly informed that if I wanted to serve as committeewoman, it would be something that I paid for myself, and I had to be prepared,” Laura Nakanelua told the Washington Examiner. “It wasn’t going to be cheap. And I’m not a wealthy person, per se, but I was a working person, and so my husband and I talked about it and realized in advance the cost that it would incur.”
Not only does she travel on her own dime, but Nakanelua also uses up her vacation days at work to attend RNC events.
“I had to really balance those leave days as well, getting permission from the company, making sure that I cleared the decks before I came here for a full four or five days to get that work done,” she added.
Committeeman Scott Smart, a veteran who came to Santa Barbara with his wife, told the Washington Examiner that it was worth it.
“It’s part of what we can give back to the party,” Smart said. “Not everyone has the resources or the time because, you know, flying back and forth is time-consuming as well.”
Smart agreed it is a labor of love.
“It’s a way to make sure that Hawaii is represented nationally because otherwise, you know, sometimes we feel we’re isolated,” he said. “We’re different. No one cares about us. This way, we’re out in front of everybody else in the country and our leadership in the party, and that’s important to us. We can bring back what we do here, back to our folks at home, who don’t have the opportunity to make these kinds of trips, and let them know, ‘This is what the national party is doing. This is how they’re going to help us. Here’s what we’re going to do, you know, keeping in step with what’s going on nationally.”
Nakanelua said even though Hawaii isn’t a swing state, showing up to every meeting, working with leadership, and getting involved in committees helps the state in the long run.
“Our chair is on the Grassroots Committee, or soon to be, and engaging in those committees gets us the resources,” she said. “If you rattle cages and make the ask and state your case, we do get support from the RNC that has been monumental over the years.”
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A few years ago, the RNC gave the state arm a budget of up to $50,000 to “hold the state of Hawaii accountable for not having followed the laws of our state when it came to auditing the elections,” she said.
Nakanelua said some people have offered to help cover travel costs, but she’s not comfortable saying ‘yes,’ even though it would lessen the stress.
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