In
1966, Carroll ran for one of Hawaii's two
at-large congressional district seats; he came in third behind incumbents
Patsy Mink and
Spark Matsunaga. He briefly ran for the House again in
1968, but dropped out of that race and ran instead for one of the
Honolulu City Council's six at-large seats; he came in eighth of twelve candidates.
State Legislature House On August 17, 1970, Carroll announced that he would seek the Republican nomination for one of three
12th state house district seats; he came in first, ahead of five other candidates. A residency challenge argued that he was currently living in the 13th District, which would have rendered him ineligible to run, but the challenge was rejected by Lieutenant Governor
Thomas Gill. On July 24, 1972, he announced that he would seek reelection; he came in second of six candidates. He was redistricted into the 11th House District, which only had two seats; on July 31, 1974, he announced that he would seek a third term, and placed first out of four candidates. On July 29, 1976, he announced that he would seek a fourth term; he placed second out of five candidates. Carroll proposed a bill that would create the procedure for the state constitution's impeachment provisions for a governor or lieutenant governor (the state constitution specified that the state legislature
could do it, but not
how to do it), the ability to recall elected officials, and also proposed a constitutional amendment for an environmental bill of rights. In 1971, the state legislature was rewriting the state's penal code and considering the possibility of repealing its
sodomy laws. Carroll supported repeal; he read a letter written by students from the University of Hawaii Gay Students Union, asking the state legislature to legalize homosexual sex between consenting adults. In 1973, he introduced a bill that would prevent the charge of marijuana possession from appearing on arrest records, and would reduce the penalty for possession to a $25 fine. Later that year, he and three other Republicans also supported a bill increasing the minimum wage from $1.80 to $2.40. In 1975, he proposed multiple bills that would create voter initiative and referendum systems. He also proposed a bill (later defeated) that would allow for the recalling of elected officials and a
Castle doctrine amendment to Hawaii's penal code. During his tenure in the House, he served on the Judiciary and Environmental Protection committees.
Senate In late 1977, Carroll stated at a fundraiser that he was considering running for a seat in the Hawaii Senate. On July 6, 1978, he announced that he would run for one of Hawaii's four 6th Senate District seats; he came in second out of seven candidates. During his tenure he served on the Judiciary, Agriculture, Economic Development, Consumer Protection and Commerce, and Government, Operations and Efficiency committees. He introduced legislation that would ban public employees from striking. He was against Hawaii's expansion of its fishing industry; he and asked Governor
George Ariyoshi to ban lobster harvesting along the
Leeward Islands, and voted against a resolution supporting the
District of Columbia Delegate Act. The 6th District was redistricted from four seats down to two; in the 1980 election, both incumbents, John Carroll and Anson Chong, narrowly lost reelection.
Post-Legislature In June 1981, he was elected chairman of the
Hawaii Republican Party with 341 out of 572 votes. During his tenure as chairman, he attempted to change the party's predominantly Caucasian image and to organize the party in every precinct. He refused to resign after the party's poor performance in the 1982 elections; on November 5, 1982, two party officers resigned in protest. Carroll eventually chose not to seek reelection in 1983. In 1979, he had invested in a diamond mine; in 1994, he filed for bankruptcy, claiming that two business partners attempted to take over his company. In 1998, Carroll ran for Hawaii's 1st Senate District, but was defeated in the general election by
Lorraine Inouye. On May 25, 2000, he announced that he would run in the
Senate election against Senator
Daniel Akaka, and easily won the Republican nomination. In May, he had stated that he would need $1.5 million to launch a viable campaign against Akaka, but by late October Carroll had raised less than $2,000 - while Akaka had raised $430,000. He ran campaign ads that opened with, "Aloha, I'm John Carroll, and in no way am I a racist;" in the general election, he lost to Akaka. On November 10, 2001, he announced that he would challenge
Linda Lingle for the Republican nomination for governor in the
2002 election. He described Lingle as "unelectable," referencing her support in 1998 from anti-
Cayetano voters who would remain Democratic in the 2002 election. However, he was defeated in a landslide in the primary, receiving less than 10% of the vote; Lingle received almost 90% and went on to win the general election. Carroll ran unsuccessfully for the
United States House of Representatives in
2002. On May 27, 2009, he announced that he would challenge Lieutenant Governor
Duke Aiona in the Republican
gubernatorial primary, but received less than 5% of the vote. On September 21, 2011, he announced that he would run for the Republican nomination for
Senate against Linda Lingle; he campaigned against the
Jones Act and a Native Hawaiian federal recognition bill. In the primary, he was again defeated by Lingle (she took over 90% of the vote); Carroll later endorsed Democratic Representative
Mazie Hirono in the general election. In 2016, he announced that he would run in the
Senate election and easily won the Republican nomination against other perennial candidates, but was defeated in a landslide by incumbent senator
Brian Schatz. In 2017, he faced potential disbarment over two 2015 complaints of professional misconduct and agreed to give up his law license. Following the
2018 Hawaii false missile alert message sent by the State of
Hawaii's Emergency Management Agency to hundreds of thousands of Hawaii residents via their phones on January 13, 2018, Carroll dubbed the incumbent Democratic governor
David Ige "Doomsday David" and called on him to resign. In 2018, he announced that he would seek the Republican nomination for
governor. In mid-March, Carroll was leading state House Minority Leader
Andria Tupola in the
Honolulu Star-Advertiser's statewide poll of likely 2018 Republican voters by a margin of 12 percentage points, with 40% of potential Republican voters supporting Carroll as opposed to 28% supporting Tupola. Carroll was eventually defeated by Tupola by a 20% margin in the August 11 primary. On June 14, 2019, Carroll announced his candidacy for the
2020 Honolulu mayoral election. He placed eighth in the primary, receiving 0.7% of the vote. He died on September 19, 2021, in
Oahu,
Hawaii, at age 91. ==Electoral history==