Come August 8, and the evaluation of the votes on August 9, voters will provide the answers. Some incumbents will validate their standing with decisive victories. Others may discover that support they once assumed was secure has become less certain. Either way, beyond the campaign signs, endorsements, and advertisements, the primary election may serve another purpose altogether.
The hallmark of Phase III can be summed up in one word: change.
Younger candidates are challenging Case with a much more nuanced — and far less taboo — appeal to generational change. What Case once invoked against Akaka, and paid dearly for, is now tolerated, even expected, by an electorate seemingly more comfortable weighing leadership through the lenses of age, urgency, and readiness.
