Mayor of Honolulu#List of mayors of Honolulu

{{Short description|Executive officer of the City and County of Honolulu, Hawaii}}

{{More citations needed|date=October 2008}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2013}}

{{Infobox Political post

|post = Mayor

|body = the City and County of Honolulu

|insignia = Seal_of_Honolulu,_Hawaii.svg

|insigniasize = 140px

|insigniacaption = Seal of the City and County of Honolulu

|image = 2022-1026-smithsonian-apac-rick-blangiardi (cropped).jpg

|incumbent = Rick Blangiardi

|incumbentsince = January 2, 2021

|termlength = 4 years

|termlength_qualified = Maximum of 2 consecutive full terms

|formation = 1909

|succession =

|inaugural = Joseph James Fern

|website = [https://www.honolulu.gov/mayor.html Office of the Mayor]

}}

The mayor of Honolulu is the chief executive officer of the City and County of Honolulu. An office established in 1900 and modified in 1907, the mayor of Honolulu is elected by universal suffrage of residents of Honolulu to no more than two four-year terms. The City and County of Honolulu's elected officials include the mayor, the prosecuting attorney, and councilmembers representing nine districts.{{cite news |last= |first= |date= |title=Office of Elections - Elected Officials |url=https://elections.hawaii.gov/resources/elected-officials/ |url-status= |work= |location= |archive-url= |archive-date= |access-date=2021-09-04}}

The mayor of Honolulu has full control over appointment and removal of administrators, is invested with absolute control over department heads, wields veto power over the Honolulu City Council and has substantial control over the budget, totaling in excess of US$1 billion.

Honolulu Hale and other offices

The mayor of Honolulu conducts official business from Honolulu Hale, the historic city hall building of Honolulu constructed in 1928 in classical Spanish villa architectural styles. The building is located at the northeast corner of King and Punchbowl streets in the Hawaii Capital Historic District near downtown Honolulu. Other administrative officers under the mayor of Honolulu work from separate municipal buildings on the larger civic campus of which Honolulu Hale is a part.

Domestic policy

From the courtyard of Honolulu Hale, the mayor of Honolulu is mandated by the City and County charters to make an annual State of the City address. In this speech, the mayor of Honolulu outlines the administrative and legislative agenda for the year. It is also a summation of the budget to be implemented compared to the budget of the previous year.

The mayor of Honolulu also organizes the major public services managed by the mayor’s office. The mayor oversees dozens of departments, including: Honolulu Board of Water Supply, Honolulu Fire Department, Honolulu Police Department and the O{{okina}}ahu Civil Defense Agency. Unlike most United States mayors, the mayor of Honolulu does not oversee any schools, a jurisdiction of the Hawai{{okina}}i State Department of Education.

Managing director

Assisting the mayor of Honolulu in overseeing these departments and other domestic policy issues is the managing director of Honolulu. The managing director's most important role is to serve as acting mayor in absence or resignation. The current managing director is Michael Formby.{{Cite web |title=Staff Directory |url=https://www8.honolulu.gov/mayor/staff-directory/ |access-date=2025-02-23 |website=Office of the Mayor |language=en-US}}

Foreign policy

Many people, including Jeffre Juliano and Robert K. Wrede have considered Honolulu to be the "Geneva of the Pacific" due to its commercial and trade, political and military, as well as academic influences over Asia and the Pacific Rim.{{cite web |last=Wrede |first=Robert K. |date=2012-03-04 |title=Honolulu: Geneva of the Pacific? |url=https://digitalcommons.pepperdine.edu/drlj/vol7/iss2/3/ |access-date=2025-02-23 |website=Pepperdine Digital Commons}} Honolulu is the site of several international governmental and non-governmental organizations and summits, as well as the site of high-profile multinational military exercises called RIMPAC. RIMPAC is conducted by the commander-in-chief of the United States Pacific Command whose headquarters is in Honolulu’s Salt Lake subdivision.

The uniqueness of Honolulu’s significance to the global community has forced the mayor of Honolulu to assume a constant diplomatic role that goes beyond the foreign policy roles of almost all other United States mayors. The mayor of Honolulu serves as concurrent chairman of several multinational mayoral bodies and convenes special sessions of international summits regularly.{{citation needed|date=September 2021}}

First Lady of Honolulu

{{See also|Spouses of the Mayors of Honolulu}}

As a Hawaiian tradition, the wife of the mayor of Honolulu is honored with the ceremonial title of "First Lady of Honolulu." Honolulu is distinct in this tradition as most United States cities and towns reserve the title of "First Lady" to the wife of the state governor, the wife of the president of the United States or the wife of a visiting foreign head of government. Honolulu deemed it necessary to bestow the ceremonial title to reflect her role in relation to her husband’s extensive international responsibilities. The title is not codified in modern law but is an honorific.{{Citation needed|date=February 2025}}

List of mayors of Honolulu

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
No.

! Portrait

! Name

! colspan="2"| Party affiliation

!Elected

! Term in office

1

|100px

|Joseph J. Fern
{{small|(1872–1920)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|

| Democratic

|1908

----

1910

----

1912

|January 4, 1909 –
January 4, 1915
{{small|(lost re-election)}}

2

|100px

|John C. Lane
{{small|(1872–1958)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|

| Republican

|1914

|January 4, 1915 –
January 4, 1917
{{small|(lost re-election)}}

(1)

|100px

|Joseph J. Fern
{{small|(1872–1920)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|

| Democratic

|1916

----

1918

|January 4, 1917 –
February 20, 1920
{{small|(died in office)}}

3

|100px

|John H. Wilson
{{small|(1871–1956)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|

| Democratic

|1920

----

1922

----

1924

|February 26, 1920 –
January 2, 1927
{{small|(lost re-election)}}

4

|100px

|Charles N. Arnold
{{small|(1880–1929)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|

| Republican

|1926

|January 2, 1927 –
January 1, 1929
{{small|(lost re-election)}}

(3)

|100px

|John H. Wilson
{{small|(1871–1956)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|

| Democratic

|1928

|January 1, 1929 –
January 3, 1931
{{small|(lost re-election)}}

5

|100px

|George F. Wright
{{small|(1881–1938)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|

| Republican

|1930

----

1932

----

1934

|January 3, 1931 –
July 2, 1938
{{small|(died in office)}}

6

|100px

|Charles Crane
{{small|(1869–1958)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|

| Republican

|1938

|July 15, 1938 –
January 2, 1941
{{small|(lost re-election)}}

7

|100px

|Lester Petrie
{{small|(1878–1956)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|

| Democratic

|1940

----

1942

----

1944

----

1946

|January 2, 1941 –
January 2, 1949
{{small|(retired)}}

(3)

|100px

|John H. Wilson
{{small|(1871–1956)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|

| Democratic

|1948

----

1950

----

1952

|January 2, 1949 –
January 2, 1955
{{small|(lost re-election)}}

8

|100px

|Neal Blaisdell
{{small|(1902–1975)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|

| Republican

|1954

----

1956

----

1960

----

1964

|January 2, 1955 –
January 2, 1969
{{small|(retired)}}

9

|100px

|Frank Fasi
{{small|(1920–2010)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|

| Democratic

|1968

----

1972

----

1976

|January 2, 1969 –
January 2, 1981
{{small|(lost re-election)}}

10

|100px

|Eileen Anderson
{{small|(1928–2021)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|

| Democratic

|1980

|January 2, 1981 –
January 2, 1985
{{small|(lost re-election)}}

(9)

|100px

|Frank Fasi
{{small|(1920–2010)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|

| Republican

|1984

----

1988

----

1992

|January 2, 1985 –
September 17, 1994
{{small|(resigned)}}

11

|100px

|Jeremy Harris
{{small|(born 1950)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|

| Democratic

|1994

----

1996

----

2000

|September 18, 1994 –
January 2, 2005
{{small|(term limited)}}

12

|100px

|Mufi Hannemann
{{small|(born 1954)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|

| Democratic

|2004

----

2008

|January 2, 2005 –
July 20, 2010
{{small|(resigned)}}

style="background:lightyellow"

!–

|100px

|Kirk Caldwell
{{small|(born 1952)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|

| Democratic

|—

|July 20, 2010 –
October 11, 2010
{{small|(lost election)}}

13

|100px

|Peter Carlisle
{{small|(born 1952)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Independent Party (United States)}};"|

| Independent

|2010 sp

|October 11, 2010 –
January 2, 2013
{{small|(lost re-election)}}

14

|100px

|Kirk Caldwell
{{small|(born 1952)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|

|Democratic

|2012

----

2016

|January 2, 2013 –
January 2, 2021
{{small|(term limited)}}

15

|100px

|Rick Blangiardi
{{small|(born 1946)}}

| style="background: {{party color|Independent Party (United States)}};"|

| Independent

| 2020

|January 2, 2021 –
present
{{small|(incumbent)}}

Notable candidates and acting mayors

Resources

  • [http://www.co.honolulu.hi.us/ City & County of Honolulu]
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20040623044711/http://www.co.honolulu.hi.us/agencies.htm Agencies and Departments]

See also

Notes

{{Reflist}}