The Tucker Carlson Show - Tulsi Gabbard
Episode Date: March 26, 2024Tulsi Gabbard could be the next vice president. Here's what she believes. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
Transcript
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So try to think back to 2013. It wasn't that long ago we had air travel and electricity and
air conditioning. It was part of the modern era. 2013, Tulsi Gabbard, who was in her early 30s,
had just been elected from Hawaii.
She was a member of Congress, first term, a Democrat.
And not just a Democrat.
She was the single most famous freshman that year.
And she was feted by her party.
The Democratic Party made her vice chair of the DNC as a freshman that year.
And she was on the cover of magazines.
She was the future of the Democratic Party. It was 2013. Fast forward 11 years to the beginning of 2024. That very same person
was a headliner at CPAC, the Conservative Political Action Committee. And not only did
she speak there, she was arguably the most popular person who spoke there this year, 11 years later. Here's part of what she said.
Our democracy is under attack. The perpetrators of this attack are those who, in the name of saving
our democracy, are destroying it. I don't use these words lightly. Every one of us who loves this country
and who cherishes peace and freedom should be very alarmed by those who, driven by their
insatiable hunger for power, are actively undermining all that we stand for. And almost
every single day, if you're paying attention to the news and the headlines, there is some new assault and some new attack.
Now, it's the Democrat elite and the swamp creatures in Washington who are doing all that they possibly can to keep us, the American people, from a very simple thing, having the freedom to choose who we want to be our next president.
And it is clear through their actions they have no respect for us and they have no respect
for our fundamental rights as citizens of this democratic republic.
They are so terrified that we the people may make what they think is the wrong choice.
That in the name of protecting democracy and saving us from ourselves, they're actually destroying our democracy and taking away our freedom.
Wow. You can see why she was the most popular speaker at CPAC this year.
But again, 11 years from vice chair of the DNC to headlining CPAC.
Some people have asked, well, wait a second,
that's awfully fast. This must be an op. She must be a secret lefty or a CIA agent.
Well, of course, we can't know. But if she was, she'd probably be getting something out of it.
She'd be really rich. But no, Tulsi Gabbard is probably the least rich famous person in the
United States. She is not cashed in, just the opposite. She's actually really suffered for her change of heart. So what
was the process that led her from freshman in Congress 11 years ago to headliner at CPAC this
year? It's a very interesting story. And she's written it in a book that's just come out,
For Love of Country, Leave the Democratic Party behind. And she's joining us today to
explain what exactly happened in her life. Tulsi Gabbard joins us now.
Thank you very much.
Tulsi Gabbard, thank you so much. And congrats on the book. And I have to say the first thing
that jumped out, Tulsi is one of the most rock solid, honorable people I've ever met,
says Joe Rogan. And I can attest to that. That is true. I feel the same way.
Thank you.
So how, but I can also see why people are like, what is this? Yeah.
Tulsi Gabbard from Hawaii, probably the most reliably Democratic liberal state argument there, maybe a bit subjective, but pretty close, if not the most.
And now this like what happened? It's it's, you know, a lot has happened in that 11 years.
As you were talking, I'm just thinking through like, gosh, has it only been 10, 11 years?
But to me, it just shows how insane today's Democratic Party has become.
Yes.
Really, truly.
You know, I joined the Democratic Party in 2002.
I was 21 years old when I ran for the state house in Hawaii. And as you know, I come from, you know, my parents have are very independent minded people. They raised all of us five kids to be critical thinkers and independent minded. Make make your own decision. But do your research and figure out why you are coming to this conclusion or why you are coming to this decision.
And so when I decided to run for office in Hawaii, there wasn't just like, well, of course,
I'm going to be a part of this party or that party because, you know, somebody told me to
or because it was like a family generational thing. None of that was there. And so I really
started to look at, you know, Hawaii's history in politics. Why was Hawaii such a strong democratic state?
As it still is now, it's a little bit less so. But at that time, what I saw was a party that
welcomed free thinkers. It was truly a big tent party, even in their own words.
It was a party that stood up for civil liberties. It's a party that stood up for freedom of speech and was willing to fight for it.
That is true.
It was a party that in Hawaii's history fought for working people, fought for average everyday Americans against the corporate industrial complex, which in Hawaii was the big four plantation owners back in the day.
And so it was because of those reasons and looking at leaders like JFK.
So can I ask you, for people who aren't familiar with the history of the state,
which is actually very interesting, completely different from the history of any other of the
49 states. It was almost like a feudal system in Hawaii. Is that fair?
It was. It was. And going back, and this is where there was a big shift. And people in the political world ask all the time is like, why? Why did Hawaii become such a strong Democrat state? It was because there were four major landowners that came in and essentially took the land from the local people through the queen in jail and decided, OK, well, here's what we're going to do. We're going to start growing sugarcane. We're going to start growing pineapples. And they essentially installed themselves as the government of what was then the territory of Hawaii. And local people really didn't have a whole lot of say in it. But through that process, there were immigrants coming from Japan and from the Philippines, from Portugal, from places all over the world, seeking opportunity, getting work visas and work contracts
to go and work in the fields.
And these massive plantation owners essentially treated them like crap.
Subhuman living conditions, abysmal pay, and essentially what we would call complete abuse
in this day and age.
But they got away with it because the people had no voice.
When one group started to rise up and say, hey, we got to stick together and demand better living
conditions and better pay. Let's say it was the Filipinos who did it. And they said, OK, well,
fine. We're just going to have the Japanese workers come in and take over your fields and
leave you with nothing. And so pitting one group against the other. So in Hawaii, it was the ILWU union primarily that came in and actually started to
organize workers. And there was a couple of Democrat political leaders who had failed at
the polls previously because they didn't have the votes. They came in and said, hey, look,
we're going to fight for you. And they did. And that was when Hawaii shifted from Republican to Democrat control
because the Democrat Party at that time was the party of the people.
Didn't matter where you were from.
Didn't matter your background, how much money you made
or didn't make, your education or anything else.
They were the party of the people battling against the elite.
And so the reason why this story is important is because
you look at that legacy in my home state of Hawaii, and then you look at what's happening
in our politics today, where unfortunately the Democrat Party and those in charge of it are now the party of the elite who are way out of touch
with the experience of everyday working people across this country. And it is unfortunate
that that party has gotten so far away from its roots, its roots of being a party that celebrated
freedom, its roots of being a party that fought for civil liberties to one now where with the Biden-Harris administration
and the Democrat elite across Washington are intentionally politicizing and weaponizing the
tools of our own government and their friends in big tech and social media and their friends in the mainstream media to take away our freedoms, to take away very fabric of our country, of our freedom, of our Constitution and the rule of law, which is why ultimately I left the Democratic Party.
And it's why I am sounding the alarm bells as we head into this very critical election year about really what's at stake. The reason that I know you're sincere is because you left the Democratic Party at exactly the
moment that it solidified its position as the party of the rich.
And there's so many rewards that you can receive if you sign up.
So I know a million people who've moved in the other direction.
Joe Scarborough or Stuart Stevens or Steve Schmidt or all the guys from the Lincoln Project,
Bill Kristol.
And they've all been rewarded for it a lot because there's a lot of money to pass around if you do that.
But you left at exactly the moment
when you could have gotten kind of rich
by staying and reading the talking points.
Yeah, when I first got elected in 2012,
it was a race that I was not supposed to win,
if you listen to anybody who knew anything about politics.
And I won that election.
Zero support from any local or national Democratic Party individuals
or the party as a whole.
It was, imagine this, the people's voices were heard through their votes and they were sick and tired of of the pay to play corrupt politics and wanted a new direction and a fresh direction of leadership.
And so it was it was a hard fought election. But I had no idea what was in store when I actually went to Washington.
So what did you notice? I mean, Hawaii, I should tell you, the obvious is very far away. It's just
so far physically from D.C. It is. And you would think in the age of technology, that distance
wouldn't matter so much, but it kind of does in some ways. Yeah, it does a lot.
But shortly after my primary election, I got a call from Nancy Pelosi saying, hey, do you want to speak during prime time at the Democratic Convention coming up? And I was like,
yes. How old were you? I was 31. What a trip. And I said I would like to speak about veterans.
I was serving in the Hawaii National Guard at the time. I'm still serving the U.S. Army reserve now, but to me, Hey, here's an opportunity to speak to millions of people across the country
about the people who are nearest and dearest to my heart, my brothers and sisters. And so
the whole thing was, it was quite surreal because I didn't, I didn't seek it out. I didn't know,
I didn't know how that machine worked. But I found myself getting these phone calls
from people within the Democratic Party, like, hey, go and speak at this like, premier event
that like, most people don't get invitations to. And a couple of weeks after I was in office,
I got a call saying, hey, what would you say if you were asked to serve as vice chair of the DNC? And I was just literally my response was like, what is a vice chair of the DNC do?
I don't know nothing about this. What do you really want from me? What are you asking of me?
Ultimately said yes, because this is an opportunity to be in a position to make some
positive change. But these kinds of things kept on happening over the, yeah, it was kind of my
first year, first couple of years in office. And you'll appreciate this. One of the major
turning points that started to slow down the fanfare and the headlines of like, I remember
there was one at the Democratic Convention. I don't know if it was CNN or MS, the headlines of like, I remember there was one at the democratic
convention. I don't know if it was CNN or MSN, some, someone was like, Oh, I wonder who's going
to play Tulsi Gabbard in a movie. Like all this stuff. I'm like, this is so weird. But that summer
of 2013, my first year in Congress, um, as you know, one of the main reasons that I ran for
Congress was because of the experiences that I'd had on both of my Middle East deployments, where I experienced the cost of war firsthand serving in a medical unit.
And I wanted to be in a position where I could help influence and impact those foreign policy decisions that were directly impacting my brothers and sisters in uniform.
I didn't realize that my opportunity to be able to do that would happen so quickly.
But it was August of 2013 that President Obama announced, then President Obama announced
that he was going to seek authorization to use military force from Congress to go and
drop some bombs on Syria in what would be kind of the first
volley of regime change war there. And I was on the Foreign Affairs Committee at the time,
August. Most members of Congress are at home during recess. And I was home in my district.
And I remember, like it was yesterday, pumping gas at the gas station. And this woman came up to me and I'd never met her before.
Local, local lady came. She grabbed my arm and looked at me with this intensity in her eyes,
telling me that her son had just come home from Iraq and she had been terrified that he wouldn't come home.
He was finally home with her and now they wanted to send him back to another war
in another country and begged me, please Tulsi, don't let them take my son from me. Jeez.
And as the next couple of days went on,
I would bump into more people like that in the supermarket or just around town who were absolutely terrified.
I went back to Washington.
We held all the committee hearings, open hearings, classified briefings, and I went in with an
open mind saying, give me all of the information.
I want to make sure that I do my due diligence before I take a position or make a decision
on this.
And ultimately, Secretary Kerry came in and briefed us.
The answers to very direct questions that I had, such as what is our objective?
What what is your objective in wanting to go and start another war in another country?
What do you how do you think they will respond?
What will you do next? What is that second, third, fourth order of effects and consequences that will always happen? And the question, you know, when I said, what is your objective?
I believe it was Secretary Kerry or someone from the State Department who said, well, you know, we don't want to deliver a decapitation. We don't want it to be a pinprick.
We want this to be a punch in the gut and send a message.
And my question was, okay, so a punch in the gut,
like what will you do when they respond?
And they said, well, we don't think there'll be a response.
That's your plan?
You don't think there will be a response?
Gary said that. If somebody came up and punched you in the gut would you like just not respond if they don't respond they've got some pretty
you know weaponized powerful friends uh you don't think they'll respond and what if they don't
respond to us but they respond by attacking some of our friends who may be in the region all of of these different kinds of questions, there's like, well, we just don't think they'll do that.
Well, what happens next? Well, you know, we think this will send a strong message.
And it's the same kind of like political BS talk that means nothing and is so disconnected from
the reality of the people on the ground who have to live with those
consequences. And it really surprised me. And maybe I shouldn't have been surprised,
but it surprised me that after so many years of looking back at the massive mistakes of Iraq,
that they could be so glib and just saying, oh, we'll just go drop some bombs and
send a message and that'll
be it.
They learned nothing.
They learned nothing.
And so I penned an op-ed and published it.
And I was certainly the first Democrat, maybe the first member of Congress to come out in
opposition to President Obama's request.
And within hours of publishing that op-ed, I got a call from the White House. And essentially, what they said was, how dare you? How dare you go against your president? How dare you go against the president who came from your home state. Not a moment of the conversation. There wasn't much of a conversation, first of all,
but they were not interested at all in the reason for my opposition, which I stated pretty clearly
in the op-ed how well thought out this decision was. It was not made haphazardly. They weren't
interested in my experience that I brought that helped inform my
decision of having deployed twice to the Middle East before. And it told me a lot about them that
they were more concerned with and they cared more about like being a good member of the team and
go team Obama and go team Democrats than they were concerned about the actual consequences of the very serious request
that he was saying he would come to Congress with. It sent a strong message to them as well
that I wasn't the person that they thought I was going to be. And someone who could be puppeteered, who could be bullied into just going along with the boss
or whatever they had in mind.
That was kind of the beginning of their realization that,
okay, this one thinks for herself
and she's not afraid to take a stand.
So, I mean, at that point, they have two options.
They can either try and crush you, you're a freshman,
so it's a little early for that. And they've also ginned up the publicity machine on your behalf you probably
weren't even aware of this but most people come most congressmen come to Washington no one ever
hears no one knows they're there yeah everyone knew you were there yeah so they can try and
crush you or they can try and suborn you bribe you give you stuff to win you over. What did they try?
You know, it is kind of the public things. Like I remember, and I think you'll get a kick out of
this, being invited to the White House Correspondents Dinner my first year in Congress.
I had guys who've been in Congress, they're coming up to me saying, gosh, Tulsi, how come
you got invited? I've been here
for four terms, eight years, and I still haven't gotten invited to that. And I was like, do you
want to go? I really don't like going to these kind of things. I hate these big kind of parties
and social things. Like you can have my seat. But it was that kind of thing where, oh, go to this embassy for this fancy party, like all this stuff that unfortunately too many members of Congress find very, very appealing and get some kind of, I don't know.
I don't want to use the word fulfillment because it's not fulfilling, but I guess it's what they want.
And I didn't want any of that. So the things that they were putting before me
were not attractive to me at all. And it all kind of definitely came crashing down in 2016 when I took a step to go after Hillary Clinton
when she was running for president in the Democratic primary. I was vice chair of the DNC
and I saw that the mainstream media, they were all saying she was the most qualified person ever
to run for president and listing out all of the titles that she has held.
But not a single one of them was questioning or holding to her account, holding her to account for her record on foreign policy or or challenging her on what kind of commander in chief.
Sure. The job that she had done in any of those jobs. Right. It actual record of what happened. Tell us what happened in Libya, actually, for her pushing for the regime change in Libya and what happened as a consequence. There are so many different examples.
For sure. So you said that out loud. What happened then?
I resigned as vice chair of the DNC.
Why? Because the rules said that as officers of the DNC, you can't take sides in a partisan
primary. The DNC itself under Debbie Wasserman clearly was in every way tilting the scales for
Hillary Clinton. But I resigned as vice chair of the DNC and endorsed Bernie Sanders around
this single issue of foreign policy.
Yes.
Specifically because while I disagreed with Bernie on a bunch of things, he was certainly more of a non-interventionist than the warmonger that Hillary Clinton is. And I knew that would provide me with a platform to have a voice and actually speak the truth to the American people about her record and how dangerous she would be if she were ever our president and how how personal this was for me, because the cost is real. at Desjardins Insurance
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So what happened when you did that?
I did, I announced it on Meet the Press
on a Sunday morning.
Didn't tell anybody I was doing it, no one,
before I went and made that announcement on that show. Monday
morning, came back to work. And a lot of a lot of my Democrat colleagues were basically reading,
you know, drafting their political eulogies for me, just like you're done. You're done, Tulsi.
Hillary will be president. You will not
get a single dime for your district, anything that your community needs.
For your district?
For my district.
Not for your campaign?
Not for me. For my district. They've never given me anything for any of my campaigns, and
I'm totally fine with that. But that my district and my constituency in Hawaii would be punished for doing what I did.
I also learned that there is an actual list of people who are blacklisted, I suppose.
And I was told that it would take years and years and years to ever work my way off that list.
I was chuckling at all of that.
So they said this out loud? They thought this or they said it out loud?
Oh, yeah. No, no, no. These were many conversations walking to and from votes
with different people who were pulling me aside and offering their condolences,
their political condolences to me because I had made a decision that they said would be
equal to the death of my political future.
That's crazy.
Yeah. MSNBC, I remember doing an interview. I think it was one of the first debates that
Bernie and Hillary had in Florida, I think it was. And an MSNBC anchor said, aren't you afraid of the Clintons and what they'll do?
And I said, no, I'm not afraid. But I thought it was quite curious that
he felt compelled to ask that question with concern in his voice.
Yeah, well, people who've been around them knew.
Yeah.
So you still, though, were in the party. When did it become clear? Like, I can't I can't represent this party anymore.
It was in the fall of of 2022. There were a lot of critical midterm elections happening that year, increasingly over time.
And it wasn't one specific thing that that caused me to make this decision, but it was increasingly over time. And it wasn't one specific thing that caused me to make this
decision, but it was increasingly over time. A couple of things, obviously, the radical change
that the Democratic Party leadership went through in really, truly become a woke,
warmongering party of the elite. But also it was a recognition that I had done all I could
to try to change the party from within
I tried as vice chair of the DNC
I tried as a candidate running for president in 2020 in the Democratic primary
and the things that I was talking about
about bringing the party back to about, about bringing the party back
to its roots, bringing the party back to being the party of the people and the party of freedom,
the party of peace and security. It not only fell on deaf ears, I was booed by the party elite
for having the audacity to push for these sorts of things.
You're yeah, you're this is a very restrained version of what I saw.
They didn't just boo you.
They accused you of being an agent for a foreign power
and a disloyal American and an evil person.
I mean, I saw that.
It's true.
And it's such a crazy, crazy accusation to make, obviously completely baseless.
The media never asked Hillary Clinton for evidence of this traitorous treasonous act that she's accusing me of as a sitting member of Congress and as a soldier wearing our country's uniform.
An officer, right?
Yes. And here's the problem is, is that it works.
And that's why they continue, even now, how many years later, they continue to fall back
on the Russia, Russia playbook.
It's a Russian asset.
They've used this against you.
They've used this against Donald Trump.
And they continue to come back to this.
But I'm not an officer in the United States Army, and you are.
So it's a little weird to say, I mean, Hillary Clinton, I will never forget it, accused you of being a disloyal person. That's a crime under the military code, I think. my security clearance, but it would be grounds for discharge and it would be grounds for
enforcement under the uniform code of military justice.
Yeah. If you're actually working for a foreign power as a military officer,
you can be executed for it. So it's not a small thing to say. So rather than just saying,
Tulsi Gabbard's an idiot or I disagree with her or whatever, they went right to that,
the heaviest thing you could ever say about somebody, about an American. That was all foreign policy related,
right? Yes. That's the way it felt to me. It was foreign policy related and it was related to the
fact that I had the audacity to go against them, to challenge the elite of the Democratic Party, which is Hillary Clinton and it's Barack Obama. And it's it's the people who surround them in the military Mitt Romney also called me a treasonous person who is a Russian asset or something along those lines. allow for those who challenge them to go unscathed because their whole existence is based around
that. It's based around power and where they get their power from.
And the main source of power, obviously, is the exercise of military force.
Yes. It's the most powerful thing. We are the most powerful it's the most powerful thing we are the most powerful military
right in the world and that's what's so offensive about them and what they're advocating for is is
they they treat our military um it's like and actually i don't want to say they forget
uh because they're not stupid they really don't care about the men and women who make up our military and who live and die by the consequences of their actions, whether they're holding office or not.
Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are not in office right now, but they still continue to wield immense power in influencing
the decisions that are being made.
So can I just sort of sidebar, but I think relevant, interesting.
Are you answering the question that everyone watching has, which is who is running the
government at this point?
It's obviously not Joe Biden.
You think Hillary Clinton?
It's not a leap of imagination to know that that's true when you look at the people who
are in Joe Biden's
administration. They are the people who were the right hands for the Obama administration,
for President Obama and for Hillary Clinton. When Hillary Clinton said herself the other day,
she said, oh, yeah, I talk to the White House every day. So it's not it is no shock or surprise who the influences are behind the
policies that are coming out of this White House that many people say is the most radical and woke
White House that our country has ever seen. Oh, well, there's no question about it.
But as this was happening to you, I mean, I'm sure you don't want to go to the White House Correspondents Dinner.
Good for you.
Tiresome.
But on the other hand, it is a lot easier and much more pleasant to be loved than it is to be hated.
I think it's just true.
And so as you became like really hated by the leadership of the Democratic Party and they weren't hiding it at all.
Did you ever think like maybe it's just easier to kind of pretend bombing Syria is a good idea? came like really hated by the leadership of the Democratic Party and they weren't hiding it at all. No.
Did you ever think like maybe it's just easier to kind of pretend bombing Syria is a good idea?
Did you ever question your decision to say no?
No.
I knew that that would be true.
I knew that there was certainly an easier path to take.
You think?
It was kind of laid out for me when I first got there.
But I never second guessed my decision, my decisions about these different positions that I took.
I never regretted them.
Never, not to this day.
And I never will because I didn't go to Washington to be loved by the people who live
and exist and thrive in that bubble. Well, sure. I get it. And their love is not worth having.
No. I totally agree. But their money's good. Yeah. And I think you're the only famous person
I've ever met who flies coach. And you're certainly the only very, very well-known member
of Congress and former presidential candidate I've ever met in my entire life who didn't cash in personally.
And I know that is factually true.
Yeah.
So, like, do you ever think, like, maybe, I don't know, it's easier to fly first class.
Maybe I should have just.
It's not worth it.
Okay.
It's not worth it.
Do you think it's weird that we never talk about the money involved?
Like, I just know that from living there.
Yeah.
And from knowing a lot of well-known people who've, you know, become famous in politics.
Yeah.
And there's not one of them.
Not one.
Literally not one on either side who's not in the top 1% for income, but you're not.
No.
Why doesn't anyone ever say that?
Yeah.
Because it is the assumed norm. It's not the
exception. What they're doing is the norm. So why would they talk about it? There's nothing to talk
about because they assume that every member of Congress, whether you're a Democrat or Republican,
the day you walk out, you get your payday. What did you get when you walked out?
Nothing. Nothing. I had to come up with a plan of, you know, like, all right, uh, we got to figure out how we're going to pay the bills.
How much, how much money had you amassed during your time in Congress? My husband and I were like, okay, we got a couple of months.
We got a couple of months that we can make it through.
We got to come up with a plan otherwise.
Before you'd have to sell your weekend house?
Sure.
The imaginary weekend house.
Were you able to buy a big house when you were in Congress?
No.
No.
No.
We bought a house.
I don't think you ever came to our house there. But here's, I'll give you a little hint where,
and we shared it with my sister and her husband,
but we did buy a house in a neighborhood
that was affordable in D.C.
And we found out the first week that we were there
that we tried to order takeout from someone.
Oh, in DC.
Oh, you lived in the hood.
I knew that. In DC.
And as soon as they were like,
okay, put the order in and everything else.
And as soon as I gave them the address, they're like,
oh no, we don't deliver to that neighborhood.
We won't cross that bridge.
We won't cross the Anacostia Bridge to get to your house.
You lived on what we call the other side of the river.
Literally. Anyway, there was a question that a reporter asked me a couple of years,
two or three years after I'd been in Congress. They're like, okay, you've been here a while now.
Do you feel like you fit in? And it was a surprising question to me. And I said, no,
I don't ever want to fit in here. This is not my home. I'm grateful to get out of here as
quickly as possible, as soon as votes are done, as often as possible, get back to my community
in Hawaii or get out and visit other communities in the country and and remain very closely connected to the people who I am. I am, you know, I'm there to serve. politicians from both parties who spend their time at social hours and happy hours with lobbyists
than they do actually spend time at home. Does anyone ever, oh, that's certainly true.
And they have sad, sad personal lives, almost, not all, but most, as you know. But I'm always
amazed by the financial disclosures. And again, this is the last question, but since no one else talks about it, I will.
And you see these members of Congress who are, in some cases, they're clever, maybe even smart.
In some cases, they're just pretty ordinary, actually.
And they're so rich relative to the mean.
Oh, yeah.
And I have no idea how they made all that money.
I have no clue at all how Nancy Pelosi is just so rich or how her stock picks are like way better than Warren Buffett's.
Like how does that happen?
But does anyone ever talk about that internally like on the Hill?
No, because most of them benefit from it.
I love these like accounts on X and on Instagram that pop up now that are actually tracking.
I don't know how they do it.
I really don't know how they figure it out, but they are tracking what she's buying and what other members of Congress are buying.
Nancy Pelosi's stock tracker?
Oh, yeah.
That's definitely one of them.
It's incredible.
But they're like, hey, everybody pay attention.
It is.
It's incredible to see.
And when you watch that, and I'm so glad for the transparency that they're providing to people in real time almost, but it's no wonder why she and others, Democrats and Republicans, who could very easily pass the legislation that says no member of Congress or the Senate or their spouse or their senior staff should be allowed to trade in stocks,
period, full stop. It's such an obvious way to stop even the perception if you want to claim
like innocence or whatever. There should be no perception that our elected leaders are profiting
off of the knowledge that they have as policymakers that directly impact industry and businesses.
That's a no-brainer to me. I introduced legislation when I was in Congress to do that.
Many people have since then. There's been a lot of talk and conversation.
Why hasn't it gone anywhere? That's why. Because they profit off it. So they don't,
of course, they don't want to talk about it. That's just an easy one.
It is. And frankly, like, why do they need to be forced?
When I, you know, I'm not some kind of stock trader, but, you know, when I was like 23 and 24, I had like $5,000 in my savings account.
I was like, okay, cool.
Let me learn a little bit about stocks.
I put some money in some stocks and I don't remember how they did, but I knew immediately like going into Congress, perception is reality. And so it doesn't matter like, well, I've had this stock for 15 years or whatever. It doesn't even matter what it is. I
got rid of, I did not participate in anything related to stocks or stock trading or buying
or selling or anything for the entire time that I was in Congress. And it's not some like,
oh, look at me, I'm so great. It's just common sense that we have people in great positions
of power. Why should they be forced to do something with the passage of a law? Why don't
they just do the right thing and say, you know what? We get that even an innocent thing could
be perceived as insider trading. We're just not going to go there. Because it's too lucrative to give up.
And they know they can get away with it. So it's interesting. So you have explained,
and thank you, the history of Hawaii, which I think is directly relevant to the choices that
you've made. And as far as I know, everything is true. And so the party has changed a lot in just the brief time that you were that you remember of it a lot, dramatically unrecognizable.
But also in the process of going through all these experiences and being attacked by people who thought who said they were your allies.
You've got to change. Yeah. I've changed dramatically in 20 years just through, you know, we all do, if we're honest.
So how have you changed? Like what perceptions of yours are different from what they were five years ago?
You know, it is it is that that the like the last five years that it became more and more clear to me how many people, especially in the Democratic Party, in Washington specifically,
how little they think of the Constitution. And, you know, I think the last five years especially
are pretty pivotal because you look at what happened with COVID, for example, as a starting
point of how people both at the federal level, at the state level, county level, and a lot of places when given just a little bit of power, man, they, they took advantage of that and continued
to abuse that power in a way that just didn't make sense. It didn't make sense. You know,
when they were like, oh, okay, well for public safety, everybody's got to stay in indoors and
you can't go to church and you can't even worship, you know, out like in Hawaii on the
beach. You can't you can't have like an outdoor service. But if you're going to go and do a Black
Lives Matter march, that that actually rises above any public health and safety concerns that we
talked about. And so that's OK. The the politically motivated decisions that were being made in the
midst of what they were calling
this, you know, the greatest health epidemic of our time, I think exposed pretty deeply to a lot
of people that it was really all just about power and how little they were concerned about things
like freedom and civil liberties and the ability for us to make our own choices for ourselves.
And then it just continued to escalate more and more with the Biden-Harris administration in how they were undermining the
rule of law, continuing to this day, and how willing they were to both directly and indirectly
censor, blacklist, and smear everyday Americans across the country if you happen to
challenge them, whether it be on COVID or it be on things like it. And I think this was the thing
that caused Mitt Romney to call me a treasonous liar was saying, hey, there are U.S.-funded,
DOD-funded biolabs in Ukraine that should be secured
because there's a war going on over there,
and the last thing we or the world needs
is anything going on in those biolabs being unleashed
in a way that could pose a threat to people.
That was seen as-
But I should just say, you weren't guessing.
No.
You got that.
It was confirmed, in any case, in a public exchange in the Senate between Marco Rubio
of Florida, the sitting Republican senator, and Victoria Nuland, the undersecretary of
state, who volunteered it on camera.
Yes.
So- And it was camera. Yes. So.
And it was on the DOD website.
Talking about their long history.
Right.
Of funding these biolabs, not only in Ukraine, but in many other countries.
Of course.
Because they.
Around the world.
It's outside U.S. law.
Right.
So they can.
And it's, it's bioweapons research, obviously.
But you were just, you, I don't even think you said that. You just said basically what the undersecretary of state said in the Senate. Right. And then he be so committed to a lie that he'd be willing to try to destroy your character? our republic, to our democracy and to our freedom. And that that really is at the heart of why I
chose to leave the Democratic Party, seeing people and and yep, got it. He's a Republican,
but he took the same position as Hillary Clinton and many other Democrats who don't care about our
country. That's what it comes down to. They don't care about our country.
I challenged Mitt Romney.
I sent him a legal letter challenging him on his accusation
for the very reason that we talked about,
as a uniformed officer serving the United States Army.
His accusation as a U.S. senator is a crime punishable by death.
So if you're going to make that accusation,
as he did on what was then known as Twitter,
you better freaking back it up.
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If you take three steps back,
it's like obviously Mitt Romney is emotionally a child.
He's very much a subgenius.
He's not a genius. Let's just
put it that way. And he's made hundreds of millions of dollars in our economy. What does
that tell you about our economy? How could a guy like that get so unbelievably rich? There's
something systemically wrong, right? Yeah. Yeah. I mean, there's a whole,
I think there's a huge, and I think this will be
the topic of the next book that I'll write, is as we talk about the military industrial complex,
there is a corporate industrial complex that exists as well. I'm all about capitalism,
but when you look at the monopolies of the fear, that's not capitalism at all. You look at how
many small businesses are suffering
in this country because of overregulation by government and because they can't afford to pay
millions, tens of millions of dollars to have lobbyists going and scratching the back of
politicians so that they can create the loopholes that allow their business to thrive at the cost
of the mass majority of the small businesses in our country and the elimination
of competitiveness, true competition, which is what capitalism is all about, true competition
in our country. And that's how, when you look at people like Mitt Romney and you see how they have
done so well, that's the reason why. He's just so disgraceful. It's hard to believe he's real,
but he is. So how did he respond when you said
didn't his silence was he didn't respond at all did not respond at all not to my lawyer and not
on twitter and and not in any way uh shape or form uh which it it didn't it didn't surprise me. It's so dishonorable. It is. It is.
It is. I am so grateful and really, truly feel like it is a privilege to be able to serve our country in uniform.
April makes 21 years for me. to serve as a battalion commander currently where I have the opportunity to work with incredible
Americans who come from all over the country and who deeply love our country. It's not a small
sacrifice to make both for those who are serving as active duty service members as well as those
who serve in the reserve component. There's a reason why we do it. And it stems from a deep love for our country. And to
have a guy like that make such an accusation, yeah, it hits close to home, not only for me,
but the real issue with that and why I challenged him on it is because when people like Mitt Romney
make that kind of accusation, people like Hillary Clinton
call me a traitor and a Russian asset or a puppet of Putin,
this is not about me. It's about the message that they're sending to every serviceman and woman in
this country and every American, that if you dare to challenge us, we will come
at you. It's always the least American people who make the claim that you're not American enough.
So, but do you ever think, so again, this is demonstrable if anyone who's made it to this
point in the conversation can decide, you know, do I agree or disagree with Chelsea Gabbard? Fine.
But I don't think any fair person could say you're in this for the money or the accolades,
just the opposite.
You're continuing to get deployed and you're not making any money doing that.
You're doing it anyway.
It's quite a time commitment.
Do you ever think like maybe politics is not the business for me because I'm just,
I believe what I believe and I'm, and I'm kind of never going to sell it out.
Maybe you're not transactional enough for that.
No, I'm serious.
Uh, I, I, I have never thought of, of quote unquote politics as a career at all, ever. And so the different times in my life where I have held public office, it's never been, well, this is what I'm going to do for the next
few decades, and then I'll retire. And it's why I have left at different times. I did not run for
reelection when I was serving in the state house because I decided to volunteer and deploy to Iraq with my there and I could I could be of more influence at that time
on the outside, kind of holding their feet to the fire and being able to share exactly
what I am now at the American people, the truth about what's going on in Washington
and the truth about these politicians who claim to care for you, but show through their
actions that they don't more and more brazenly.
And this is this is really, you know, you'd ask the question about what happened over
the last five years and how was the change?
The change really where there has been a change. It has come from a much deeper appreciation, frankly, of our Constitution and the
role that our leaders must have in truly upholding the Constitution. It's obviously something I've
sworn oath to twice in my life and I care very deeply for, to see how those in power were so brazenly and continue to so brazenly
abuse their power and weaponize our law enforcement, the national security state,
all of these different tools that are at their disposal, increasingly pushing us
towards a place
where our country is being led by a tyrannical government.
Yes.
The problem of the Constitution.
It's a very real danger.
Oh, I agree.
That I frankly couldn't, you know,
10 years ago, maybe even less than that.
I don't think I would have said that.
Oh, I don't think most people would have said it at all
because it seemed like just the normal disagreements
between people with the same goal,
which is to help the country.
That's not the case, obviously.
The problem of the Constitution, though,
is that the whole document basically
is just like limits on the power and authority of politicians.
That's the whole purpose of it.
Here's what you can't do to the population.
But it's in the hands of politicians to uphold.
Yeah.
So, I mean, maybe that's like the core problem with our government, our system of government is they have to restrain their own power.
Like, what if they're like, well, we don't care about the Constitution.
Like, old white guys wrote it, and they were racist, and like, it's now invalid.
And that's exactly where the leaders of today's Democratic Party are.
For sure.
That is their mindset.
But what do you do about that?
That's where going and actually looking again at our founding documents,
looking at the Declaration of Independence, looking at the Federalist Papers,
where we are reminded over and over and over again about how our nation's founders
continued to say it's we the people, that our government does not exist without the consent
of the governed. And this is the message I'm carrying everywhere across the country,
is that if you are not happy with the direction that our country is headed, and I think that most people are not happy with it, this changes only when we take action.
Only when we take action. There's no knight in shining armor that's coming to save the country.
Our founders specifically built our country on the foundation of we the people taking ownership and responsibility for
the kind of leadership that we want and the kind of future that we want. And right now,
I am sounding the alarm and encouraging everyone to sound the alarm. The name of my book is For
Love of Country, Leave the Democrat Party Behind, specifically and very directly pointing to those who pose the greatest threat to our democracy,
to our freedom, to our security and our ability to live in peace right now. And my concern,
my grave concern is that in this next election, if President Biden or Harris or whoever they may
put up, if it's not President Biden, if they are allowed to remain in
power, then we will get to a place where the country that I love, that you love, that so many
of us love and appreciate will become unrecognizable and to a place where the freedoms that we are already starting to lose, that we won't be able to get
them back? I know a lot of people have been to jail in the last three and a half years, like a
lot. And I've interviewed a lot. I just interviewed one today. And they've gone to jail for their
political views and for their willingness to challenge the people in power. If Biden or if Clinton, Obama get reelected using Biden as a cutout and Kamala Harris,
are you worried that, I mean, we're talking about like actual Americans,
American citizens going to jail, we're going to see a lot more of that, it feels like to me.
We are already seeing more of that.
And I have no doubt that that will only escalate dramatically because every time,
you know, they could win the election by theoretically one vote and they will run around the country and say, well, the American people have given us a mandate
to continue the great work we are doing for this country well
the great work that they see they are doing for this country is actually for themselves
and they are completely undermining uh the fabric uh that that makes this country what it is that's
for sure but are you worried i mean you're in this interesting position because you know they've
always they've disliked trump for a long time
dislike me for a long time they thought they could use you they thought they loved you and so they
hate you with a very intense and very specific kind of hate and you've given them the finger
at every turn yeah like and you won't stop so like do you ever think to yourself wouldn't be
surprised yeah why wouldn't be surprised.
Yeah. Why wouldn't they indict you for being a Russian agent or whatever? There there's as we are seeing now, they are completely willing to use the Department of
Justice and law enforcement to serve their own political means. So so no, it wouldn't surprise me at all. They are they are showing that even
without evidence, without basis, without anything to back up their claims, they are, you know,
they and this is what they've been doing this against Trump since he first ran for office in
2016, launching years long investigations into him, this whole Russia
collusion thing, things that were, you know, proven through those investigations. Like, no,
there there was nothing here. And there's been no accountability for them whatsoever,
which goes back to just emphasizing how critical it is. If you are a person who cares about freedom, who cares about our country,
who cares about being able to make your own decisions as parents about what kind of education
you want for your child, if you care about having a safe community for your child to live in,
if you care about having a secure country with borders, the Democratic Party is not the answer. It is not the answer.
They are, in fact, the problem. So you've been in a lot of different news stories
talked about as a potential VP choice for Trump. I have no idea if that's going to happen or not,
probably unknowable. Are you open to that? If you don't do that, what else are you open to?
What's your plan? I would be honored. I'd be honored to serve our country
in that way or in other ways. And to in a position to help President Trump, if he is
reelected, to actually address these challenges, to help execute those policies that will bring
back a secure border, that will breathe new life into our economy and start to get this radical
inflation out of control. Which on that note,
I was in a conversation the other day with like two different groups of people.
One was with a very, very wealthy couple. And they were saying, well, gosh, you know,
and they're not fans of President Biden either. But like, you know, the economy is not actually
that bad. Stock market's doing all right. And, right. And it's not really as bad as a lot of people are saying it is. And then the next conversation was with people who
were not part of that wealthy class who were talking about a loaf of bread is three times
more expensive today than it was six months ago or a year ago. Basic necessities, electricity, food, medicine, all of the things
that people need just to live and to try to live in a healthy way are far more expensive,
but they're not making a whole lot more. The dollar is not going nearly as far as it needs to
in order to be able to afford this inflation. And so I just mentioned
that because this disconnect still continues between the elite in Washington and the reality
that they live in versus the reality that the rest of us live in in this country. And President
Trump recognizes that. I'd love to be in a position to help to help secure our country and to get us off this path towards World War III and nuclear war
that the Democrat elite and President Biden's policies have us on right now.
So my last question, a lot has been written about you. And a lot has been written about you.
And a lot has been written about your spiritual life.
I don't know if any of it's accurate or not.
Most politicians don't have a spiritual life.
So I think it spooks our media that you clearly do.
You can feel it.
But I want to ask you a specific question. So there was a fairly famous exchange on MSNBC a week or two ago with a reporter from Politico who was attacking
Christians. And that reporter said, the crazy thing about Christians is they think their rights
come from God. When, of course, the implication is they really are granted by Joe Biden. Like what?
Where do you think our rights come from? Our rights come from God.
And I saw that clip, and I laughed when I saw it.
And then I was concerned because I saw the people sitting around the table in one of those panels, and they all had serious looks on their faces
as they were nodding along with this woman saying this as though like first of all whatever her spiritual beliefs are or the lack thereof that's her
business yeah but have you read the declaration of independence ever certainly not recently because
again whatever your own personal thoughts may be, the Declaration of Independence is not, they don't mince words.
Yes.
That our God-given rights are inalienable and they do come from our creator. documents is a very powerful message to every person in politics or in power that you don't
get to try to take away those rights.
God gives us those rights.
Only God can take them away.
And this God complex that so many of our politicians have is at the heart of the problem is they're so eager to
put themselves in a position of power where they they believe that they have the power to say what
is true and what is not true that something as undeniable as the fact that i am a woman and
you're a man is something that they have now declared to be a fungible label, I suppose, that you can just say,
I believe I'm a man, so I'm a man, and let it be so. It would be laughable if the consequences
weren't so dangerous, to have people in power who don't recognize that our rights and freedoms come from God. And you follow that track.
And where does it lead is they really do believe that they are God or should be God and that they
are self-appointing themselves to be in that position of authority and have a lot of tools
at their disposal to try to enforce that.
And that is what is at the heart of the danger that we face as a country right now.
This is something that transcends party affiliation.
It transcends how you may like or dislike certain candidates.
This is the fact and it's the reality that we have to confront ourselves with.
If we care about peace, if we care about freedom,
if we care about security, if we care about our country and our future, the choice is very clear
in this election and what we must do in leaving the Democrat Party behind.
Tulsi Gabbard. I don't know what's next for you. I don't know what's next for any of us,
but I hope you will keep talking. I will. Thank you for having me.
Thank you. It's so good to see you.