U.S. Sen. Mazie Hirono
says her ongoing cancer battle has not detracted from her congressional duties, and that she’s running for re-election to continue fighting for
Hawaii’s families and kupuna.
“I know who I fight for and why,” Hirono said Wednesday, surrounded by supporters after signing her nomination papers.
“There are people in our country, in our communities who are being marginalized and discriminated (against) every single day. I fight for them,” she said. “Whether it’s families who just want health care as a right — not a privilege — or our kupuna who rely on Medicare and Social Security, or workers who want to be able to organize for better wages and conditions. … For immigrants who just want a chance at a better life, or LGBTQ communities … who just want equal rights,” she said.
Hirono, 70, said she continues to undergo long-term immunotherapy treatment for cancer in her thyroid gland. The senator disclosed last year that she had been diagnosed with stage 4 kidney cancer and had surgery to remove a kidney and part of her rib.
“I’ve been very open about my health challenge because I think it’s really important to let my constituents know that in spite of the fact that I am still in treatment, nothing about this treatment prevents me from doing my job,” she said. “I’m optimistic and certainly that optimism is shared by my doctors.”
Hirono has taken on a higher-profile role in Washington as an opponent of some of the Trump administration’s policies and actions. As a Japanese immigrant, Hirono has been particularly
vocal against the president’s immigration policies.
Hirono said her voice in Congress “remains strong” and she’s up for the rigor of campaigning for re-election.
“If anything, I am even more vocal and visible than ever because this administration gives me a lot of opportunities to be vocal,” she said. “Every single day there’s some new thing that makes my head explode.”
No other candidates had formally filed to run for Hirono’s seat as of
Friday.
A former state lawmaker and lieutenant governor, Hirono was elected in 2006 to the U.S. House seat representing the Neighbor
Islands and rural Oahu. She was later elected to the U.S. Senate in 2012, following Sen. Daniel
Akaka’s retirement.