Thomas Gill

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For the comic book artist, see Tom Gill (comics)
For the soccer player, see Thomas Gill (footballer)
Thomas Gill was Congressman and Lieutenant Governor of Hawai'i.
Thomas Gill was Congressman and Lieutenant Governor of Hawai'i.

Thomas Gill, formally Thomas Ponce Gill (born April 21, 1922), a Democrat, served in the United States Congress from 1963 to 1965 and was Lieutenant Governor of Hawai'i from 1966 to 1970.

Born in Honolulu, Hawai'i, Gill was a decorated infantryman in the Pacific Theatre during World War II. After the war, he attended law school and began practicing law in Hawaii.

Gill served in Hawaii's territorial state legislature and, after statehood in 1959, became a member of the first state house delegation. He was elected to one of his state's two Congressional seats in 1962 and served one term. In Congress, he was a staunch supporter of liberal causes, including civil rights. He then worked as the director of Hawaii's Office of Economic Opportunity. In 1966, he was elected Lieutenant Governor with incumbent Governor John A. Burns.

During his term as Lieutenant Governor, Gill, considered outspoken and acerbic, developed differences with Burns, and was never shy about criticizing the incumbent, despite being part of his administration. In 1970, Gill challenged Burns in the Democratic Primary. Gill ran as a reformer, campaigning against what he described as an entrenched, somewhat corrupt, political machine. He narrowly lost, even though Burns significantly outspent him in a savvy campaign that included sophisticated use of expensive image-building television spots. Most in the state's large Japanese population remained loyal to Burns, who had spearheaded their rise to political power during the 1950s. The race still stands as the closest anyone has come to a primary defeat of an incumbent governor of Hawaii. Gill ran in the primary for governor again in 1974, but lost again in the primary to George Ariyoshi, who had succeeded him as lieutenant governor. After failing both campaigns, he resumed his career as a lawyer.

Gill has two sons who have been involved in Hawaiian politics. His son Gary served on the Honolulu City Council and son Tony is a labor lawyer who considered seeking the governorship in 2006.

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Preceded by
Daniel Inouye - D
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Hawaii's 1st congressional district

1963-1965
Succeeded by
Patsy Mink - D