As a member of the post-80s generation, gabat has chosen an unusual route, whether studying or participating in politics. She was home-schooled in high school and spent two years at an informal missionary college for women in the Philippines. Before college, gabbard ran for the state legislature in Hawaii in 2002, winning the primary with 48 percent of the vote and then defeating his republican opponent 65 percent to 35 percent.
At 21, she became the youngest state legislator. In the meantime, she volunteered for the Hawaii national guard. In 2004, she wanted to run for re-election as a state senator, but in April of that year, she volunteered to serve in Iraq with the national guard for a year, working as a specialist in the medical corps, though she had no medical experience. In 2006, she came to Washington to work as a legal aide to senator akaca of Hawaii. The following march, she graduated from the Alabama military academy, the first female graduate in the academy's 50-year history. After graduation, she was assigned to the 29th army, Hawaii national guard. In 2008-2009, she traveled to the Middle East again, this time to Kuwait. In 2009, she received a bachelor's degree in business administration from Pacific university in Hawaii. She ran for congress in 2012, beating hanneman, a veteran politician, by 51% to 34% in the primary and her republican opponent by 77% to 19%. In the 2014 mid-term elections, she easily defeated her republican opponent with 76% of the vote, who received just 18%. In a circle, gabbard's academic career was like that of the gilded age, with brief periods of schooling punctuated by brief social practices that straddled the military and political boundaries.
In the cnn-new york times televised debate between the democratic candidates, the 11 other democratic candidates were all united in their differing narratives, except for gabbard, who sounded what trump called a "voice of reason."
Since the cold war, the us has been adept at propping up institutions in the Middle East that share American values to topple regimes it does not like. Speaking of terrorism, she said that thieves cry "stop thieves", that the United States supports terrorism and spends money on counter-terrorism, wasting taxpayers' money. She and Mr Trump share a common understanding of the relationship between foreign and domestic affairs, arguing that neoconservatism has dragged the us into costly foreign interventions that should have been spent on domestic needs. She said she was a dove and an eagle, if it was to interfere in foreign affairs, she was a dove; If it's terrorism, she's a hawk.
On October 18, Democratic Party leader Hillary Clinton said: "Russia is grooming a democratic primary candidate to support him as a third party candidate in the 2020 presidential election, ultimately polarizing the electorate and helping Donald trump win re-election." The so-called "russia-trained" democratic candidate is representative Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii.
Gabbard herself may not have a winning streak, but building a cross-party image in a national election is also crucial, as she puts it, for her brothers and sisters. Perhaps that is what Mr Trump likes, too: the girl is a strong vote-maker with strong support among indian-americans, while minority support is missing from the republican ticket. By all accounts, she poses no threat to Mr Trump, but rather diverts votes from a multicultural democratic minority.
In American politics, Russia is nothing less than treason. The Democrats first handed the Russia charges to Mr Trump and now to their own candidates. From Ukraine to Russia's darling, it has become a hotspot in the 2020 us presidential election. Looking back at American history, whenever treason and ideological propaganda have been seen as effective means of political competition, rational, dispassionate, future-oriented policy planning has been absent.
(Picture Source:Baidu)
Mr Gabbard, who was hammered by his party boss, Hillary Clinton, is backed by Mr Trump. Mr Trump hailed Mr Gabbard as the voice of reason among a group of morbid Democrats.
"It may come as a great surprise to the political establishment in Washington," she said. "I have good connections with a lot of republicans, like trey gowdy, who have helped me in my difficult times... There is much more we need to do than just defeat trump... To this end, we must unite... In America, as far as we can see, we are all brothers and sisters. Even for those with whom I have a major difference in politics, I deal with them with respect."
Mrs Clinton's choice of Mr Gabbard is just the politically correct reason. Of the four female candidates left on the democratic ticket, gabbard is the youngest with the most unusual resume: born on tutuila, the main island of American Samoa, in April 1981, she came to Hawaii with her parents when she was two.