Andria P. L. Tupola (born December 6, 1980) is an American politician and member of the Honolulu City Council, representing the 1st district since January 2021. She was a Republican member of the Hawaii House of Representatives from 2014 to 2018, representing District 43 (Māʻili, Nānākuli, Ko Olina, Honokai Hale, Kalaeloa, Ewa). In 2015, Tupola served as the minority floor leader for one year. She served as the state house minority leader, making her the first Samoan woman to serve in that position. In 2018, Tupola was the Republican nominee for Governor of Hawaii. She garnered 33% of the vote and lost to incumbent DemocratDavid Ige.
Early life
Tupola was born at Kahuku hospital to Bode Uale and Beth Parker on the island of Oʻahu. Her father was the first Samoan judge in the United States of America and a third generation immigrant from Samoa. Her mother is the daughter of the Grandmaster of Kenpo Karate, Ed Parker, and was named mother of the year in 2004.[1]
In 2014, Tupola was unopposed for the Republican primary in District 43, winning with 771 votes.[4] In the general election, she faced incumbent Democrat Karen Awana and won with 56% of the vote, unseating the only incumbent in the 2014 general election.[5]
In 2016, Tupola was unopposed for the Republican primary in District 43, winning with 747 votes. In the general election, she faced Stacelynn Kehaulani Eli, a former employee of Karen Awana. Tupola won by 65% with 3,859 votes.
In 2018, she ran as a candidate in the election for Governor of Hawaii.[6] On August 11, 2018, she won the Republican primary receiving 53.0% of the vote, 17,282 votes. Other candidates John Carroll and Ray L'Heureux received 33.7% and 8.8% respectively.[7] She garnered 33% of the vote in the 2018 general election with 131,719 votes. She was the youngest candidate and only native woman running for governor as a Republican in the 2018 cycle.[8]
In 2020, Tupola competed in the non-partisan election for the District 1 Honolulu City Council Seat against four other candidates including Kathy Davenport, Naomi Hanohano, Galen Kerfoot, and Anthony Makana Paris. Tupola received 53.6% of the votes in the August 8 election,[9] avoiding a runoff election and guaranteeing her a four-year term on the Honolulu City Council.