Ikaika brings decades of collaborative leadership and experience to the Hawaii legislature.
Let’s get him there 🤙🏽
Ikaika fights for seniors
In 2018, 75 residents of a senior housing apartment building were notified that their rents would be doubled. Ikaika brought together the residents, the developer, and the Governor to protect our senior citizens and win permanent affordable senior housing.
“We were being squeezed out of our senior housing.
Ikaika fought for us and we won.
DAMIANA VIERRA
UNITE HERE Local 5 retiree, senior housing resident
Ikaika fights for keiki
His experience as a school leader, an expert in education budget and policy, and his climate leadership makes him a champion for the issues and systems affecting our keiki.
Ikaika’s campaign is endorsed by Hawaii Children’s Action Network Speaks!.
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"Farrington has been waiting for years for air conditioning and computers."
Rhea Charla Valdez, Farrington parent
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"Ikaika will fight for all our keiki. He's got my vote."
Lauta Shen, School Community Council Member, Farrington HS
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"Ikaika has a good heart and innovative ideas."
Pete Shimazaki Doktor, Former Farrington teacher
“Ikaika is for the community, not for himself. He fights for working families.”
Lydia Agustin
UNITE HERE Local 5
Ikaika is proud to be a former staffer of UNITE HERE Local 5, and is honored to have received the endorsement of ILWU Local 142 and Local 5.
The Nakasato ‘Ohana
Senator Nakasato and Ikaika Hussey
“I strongly support Ikaika Hussey to be our next representative.
I want somebody that's going to take care of us, someone that’s going to take care of our district, and deliver the changes we’ve been waiting for.
Please support Ikaika for the House.”
Dennis Masaru Nakasato
Former State Senator
Experience
Climate tech and decarbonization
Shake Energy Collaborative, VP Development
Writing & Journalism
Co-editor, A Nation Rising: Hawaiian Movements for Life, Land, and Sovereignty (Narrating Native Histories) Duke University Press, 2024
Finance & Policy
Budget Analyst, State House of Representatives Committee on Finance — 2001
Committee Clerk, State House of Representatives Committee on Education — 2002
Boards
Lāhui ʻIlau Mālama ʻĀina Community Development Cooperative / Founder, 2024
‘Aina Aloha Economic Futures
Kamehameha Federal Credit Union / Board President, 2017-2023
Men's March Against Violence / Chair, 2017 & 2018
The Arts at Mark’s Garage / Board of Directors, 2018-2020
Kalihi Valley Neighborhood Board, 2017-present
Hanahauoli School / Board of Trustees, 2001-present
KAHEA / Vice-President, 2012-2014
Domestic Violence Action Center / Board of Directors, 2013-present
Hawaiian Journalists Association / Founding Board of Directors
Hawaii Alliance for Progressive Action / Founding Board, 2014-present
Roots
LARDIZABAL OHANA (Maternal)
Ikaika Michael Lardizabal Hussey's family tree bridges the archipelagos of Hawaiʻi and the Philippines. His maternal grandfather Ben Lardizabal left Tagudin (Ilocos Sur) in the 1930s, settling first in Chicago and Los Angeles, returning briefly to the Philippines after World War II and then moving to Honolulu to open Ben's Barber Shop, a Bethel Street enterprise which bustled with activity for 40 years. Coming with Ben to Honolulu was his wife Consuelo, a schoolteacher whose family was one of the founders of Tagudin High School, the first municipal high school outside of Manila, in 1915. Consuelo's sister, Juanita, led the school as its principal from 1968-1975, and Consuelo herself taught 3rd Grade at Cathedral School in Nuuanu, not far from her home on School Street in Kalihi. Ben and Consuelo's daughter, Edna Lardizabal Hussey, is the principal of the elementary program at Mid-Pacific in Mānoa, which is the only Hawaii school that offers the Reggio Emilia branch of Italian pedagogy.
HUSSEY OHANA (Paternal)
Though his family originates in Niuliʻi in the Kōhala district of Hawaiʻi, Theodore Hussey was born in Hilo, where his uncles served in the police and fire departments. Theodore himself served in the US Army during World War II, and went on to become a labor inspector and finally an organizer of the HGEA Retirees Unit. Teddi Huliheʻe was born in Liliha but adopted by a Hawaiian family from Kona. She travelled aboard the ferries of the day between the two Kona districts of Hawaiʻi and Oʻahu, attending school in Honolulu during the year and spending holidays on the slopes of Hualalai. While attending high school at Farrington, Teddi was recruited to work as a school bookkeeper, where she acquired skills which served her well in her career as an assistant to the commandant of the Marine Corps. She and Theodore met in a Honolulu office and were wed in Hawī, Kohala; their eldest child, Herbert married Edna Lardizabal in 1976.
Hussey-Townsend Ohana
Ikaika met his spouse, Marti Townsend, while working together on state education policy at the Hawaii State House of Representatives. Ms. Townsend’s mother is a registered nurse from Tennessee; she married award-winning emergency room physician Dr. Fred Ching, a graduate of Saint Louis High School in Kalaepohaku. Marti is a graduate of Moanalua High School where she was a leader of their speech and debate squad; she went on to Boston University and finally completed a jurisdoctorate at the University of Hawaii William S. Richardson School of Law. Ikaika’s advanced degree is a Master’s in Political Science from UH Mānoa, earned while organizing numerous social justice rallies, teaching, and starting small businesses. Hussey and Townsend’s first date was a union rally, and they were married a week after ending a nonviolent occupation at UH opposing classified military research. Marti is an environmental attorney and an early advocate for defueling the Red Hill storage tanks. They have three children, and live in Kalihi Valley with a cat, two fish and a dog, Clover.
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