Indivisible Hawaiʻi Statewide Network

United, we push back

To protect our rights and values

To elect the leaders we deserve

To build a better Hawaiʻi

We are Indivisible Hawaiʻi

Even in Hawaiʻi, democracy is not a given. Across the country, the systems and institutions that protect our rights are under pressure.

Indivisible Hawaiʻi Statewide Network (IHSN) organizes residents across all counties to take strategic action. Together, we can put the right people in office, and protect what’s important to us.

Join your local chapter to find out what’s happening near you — on your own island, or even in your own neighborhood.

Indivisible Maui Chapter
Rally at Hawaii State Capitol
Group of people posing with their postcards at the weekly postcarding party in Kailua, hosted by the Blue Wave and Indivisible Windward Oahu.
Protesters carrying sign at the 2026 No Dictators march in Hawaii

Raise your voice.
Make it count.

As a grassroots organization, we fight to defend civil rights, our communities, and the Spirit of Aloha that defines Hawaiʻi.

Our newsletter tells you what's needed when: write postcards, make phone calls, show up to protest, or submit testimony. You can also volunteer around specific issues or for longer-term commitments.

Upcoming events

Indivisible Windward logo, showing 3 abstract figures wearing a traditional lei, blowing in the wind

Weekly Rally in Kailua

Let’s call out policies that hurt our community. Bring a sign.

Image to illustrate Rush Hour Resistante protests in Honolulu. Image also mentions "No I.C.E. in Paradise", as well as the Hawaii Indivisibile State Network logo.

Rush Hour Resistance in Honolulu

Join us to raise awareness during rush hour every Wednesday.

Image of a postcard with Indivisible logo, to illustrate the Thursday postcard social in Kealakekua.

Thursday Postcard Social

Every Thursday in Kealakekua

Group of people posing with their postcards at the weekly postcarding party in Kailua, hosted by the Blue Wave and Indivisible Windward Oahu.

Weekly Postcard Party

Postcarding and friendly conversation – Wednesday evenings in Kailua

Hawaiʻi deserves better representation

In a democracy, we get to choose our leaders — and hold them accountable when they let us down. The 2026 primary is our chance to do exactly that.

What Ed Case has done to Hawaiʻi

Ed Case has represented O’ahu in Congress since 2018. Here’s what he’s actually done — and who he’s really done it for.

Meet the challengers: Talk Story interviews

IHSN invited all 3 Democratic candidates for Congressional District 1 to a Talk Story interview. Two of them accepted.

Voice of Hawaiʻi: November 2025 voters' survey

We surveyed Hawaiian voters to hear about the leadership they want to see in Congress. These are the full results.

Shape policy

From basic democracy to keeping daily life affordable, many new policies put Hawaiian families and individuals at risk.

But when we work together to testify on legislation, engage with lawmakers, and keep them accountable — we have the power to protect our communities.

Join us to raise your voice on issues that matter!

Migrant Rights

Affordability

Healthcare

LGBTQIA+

Gun Safety

Free & Fair Elections

Like what we’re doing? Support us by donating

Indivisible Hawaiʻi is completely volunteer-run. Your donation will support the direct costs of our activism across our statewide network; things like meeting room rental, posters, art supplies, clipboards, transportation, and more.

Indivisible Hawaiʻi is part of the Indivisible National Distributed Fundraising program, which is a registered 501(c)(4) not-for-profit corporation.

Featured resources

Democracy 101: Know What You're Fighting For

Democracy is built on the idea that power belongs to the people, and leaders are accountable to those who serve. But democracy erodes when people […]

Your representatives in Hawaii: Who they are and where to find them

If you live in Hawaiʻi, you could have several representatives — at the federal, state, and county levels. This is how to figure out who […]

How to document and report an ICE incident

This resource tells you how to safely document an ICE enforcement action, what to capture, and what to do with what you’ve recorded.

How the 3 levels of government work in Hawaiʻi

Voting happens at three levels in Hawaiʻi: federal, state, and local (county). Each level handles different issues.

How to vote in Hawaiʻi

Voting in Hawaiʻi is straightforward, and happens entirely by mail – here’s how it works in 4 easy steps.

How postcarding works

Research shows that personal, handwritten postcards moves people to vote or take action in ways that ads and mass mailings can’t.