Hawaii AG Known For Fighting Trump’s Travel Ban Announces Run For Congress

Hawaii Attorney General Douglas Chin speaks at a news conderence about President Donald Donald Trump’s travel ban, Friday, June 30, 2017 in Honolulu. Chin says the scaled-back version of Trump's travel ban has illogical standards for who should be prohibited from entering the country. Chin questioned why a stepbrother or stepsister should be allowed into the country but not a grandmother. The Trump administration set new criteria Thursday barring some citizens from six majority-Muslim countering from coming to the United States. (AP Photo/Caleb Jones)
FILE - In this June 30, 2017, file photo, Hawaii Attorney General Douglas Chin speaks at a news conference about President Donald Donald Trump's travel ban in Honolulu. A federal judge in Hawaii on Thursday, July 6, ... FILE - In this June 30, 2017, file photo, Hawaii Attorney General Douglas Chin speaks at a news conference about President Donald Donald Trump's travel ban in Honolulu. A federal judge in Hawaii on Thursday, July 6, left Trump administration rules in place for a travel ban on citizens from six majority-Muslim countries. U.S. District Court Judge Derrick Watson denied an emergency motion filed by Hawaii asking him to clarify what the U.S. Supreme Court meant by a "bona fide" relationship in its ruling last month. (AP Photo/Caleb Jones, File) MORE LESS
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HONOLULU (AP) — Hawaii Attorney General Douglas Chin, who has been fighting President Donald Trump’s travel ban and other policies over the past year, has announced he will run for U.S. Congress.

Chin seeks to replace Hawaii’s Rep. Colleen Hanabusa.

Chin made the announcement Monday saying that the last year of legal battles over White House actions sparked him to run for the seat.

Chin has been a vocal opponent to decisions by Trump’s administration.

Before Trump was sworn in, Chin and five other attorneys general asked the Senate Judiciary Committee to reject the nomination of Sen. Jeff Sessions for attorney general. The prosecutors said in a letter dated Jan. 17 that they had “grave concern” that Session would “diligently and fairly enforce all laws protective of civil rights, public safety, health and welfare.”

Chin told The Associated Press in a telephone interview Sunday that he first considered running for office while listening to a Sessions speech.

“He actually made some speech to all 50 state AGs where he announced falsely that crime was at an all-time high in the United States and that the reason why it was at an all-time high was due to illegal immigrants being in the country,” Chin said. “I found that statement to be so troubling that it really woke me up in terms of the actions I think all of us need to take responsibility for in order to make a difference.”

A week after taking office, Trump issued an executive order aimed at temporarily banning travel from seven Muslim-majority countries.

On Feb. 3, the state of Hawaii sued to stop the ban.

Trump’s executive order keeps Hawaii families apart and keeps residents from traveling, Chin said.

“I think we live in very extraordinary times, I think Hawaii’s progressive values that it fought for for the past decades has been under attack in a lot of different ways, and I’ve experienced it first hand, starting with the travel ban and then extending to attacks on transgender people in the military or the children of immigrants,” Chin said.

Chin has sued over every version of the travel ban, calling the measure discriminatory toward Muslims.

“I’ve ended up being in court over and over again to stop some of the different actions that have been taken by the Trump administration,” he said. “To me, going to Congress, it feels like the right next step.”

Hawaii argued that the ban discriminates on the basis of nationality and would prevent Hawaii residents from receiving visits from relatives in the mostly Muslim countries covered by the ban.

“It’s the daily attacks on people’s civil rights and the attacks on different protected classes that really motivates me,” he said.

Chin said affordability in Hawaii and the state’s strategic military importance would also be major issues if he were elected to Congress.

“Words and tweets that have come from this administration have been exceptionally troublesome and has raised a lot of fear here in Hawaii,” Chin said of the tensions between North Korea and Washington. “I think that’s all the more reason to advocate for a strong military presence but also strong diplomatic relationships with all foreign countries. That seems to be absent right now.”

Chin is the son of Chinese immigrants who came to the U.S. in the 1905s. His father was an interpreter for the U.S. during the Korean War, he said.

Chin is married with two children.

He was appointed to be Hawaii’s attorney general in 2015.

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Notable Replies

  1. Avatar for marby marby says:

    We need many more like him to run for office - yeah! (It’s the best hope we have for eventual, longterm change.)

  2. Wish he’d primary Tulsi Gabbard instead…

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