Tulsi Gabbard is full of surprises. Like the fact that she’s actually running for president.

Unfortunately for her, the biggest surprise may be this: She has lost valuable political skills just when she needs them the most.

Her current lack of mojo has roots tracing back to soon after she was elected to Congress.

When Gabbard first ran for Congress in 2012, she became a shining star very dramatically and very fast, coming out of聽nowhere to beat former Honolulu mayor Mufi Hannemann. She convinced Democrats that she no longer held her anti-gay marriage views and that she was a true progressive.

Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard announces her run for president at the Hilton Hawaiian Village.
Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard made her presidential candidacy official with an appearance at the Hilton Hawaiian Village on Saturday, but her political mojo had already faded. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

At the time, no Hawaii politician was better at communicating. Gabbard was telegenic, well prepared, and ran circles around any other politician when it came to getting her message across.

There was a real openness there, a no-bullshit willingness to engage and a kind of a jump-the-line rebelliousness that pissed off a lot of pols but was well received by the public.

That鈥檚 all pretty much gone. She still says a lot of outrageous and surprising things. But what she does with these statements, how she justifies them (or more accurately how she does聽not justify them), does not seem to be working any more.

Gabbard has become closed-off, managed, overly defensive and secretive. Good luck acting that way during the pressures of a presidential race.

The getting the nomination are bad, but that鈥檚 no reason for us to be dismissive.

For people in Hawaii her campaign will be especially relevant because of what it will tell us about Gabbard herself.

Her presidential campaign is off to a stumbling start. Despite the glitz, Gabbard seems to lack the ability to deal with聽 the early stages of a presidential campaign.

The Crucial Early Days

Two important things happen during this early stage: advertising and scrutinizing.

The advertising stage is absolutely essential for lesser known candidates like Gabbard. It鈥檚 pretty easy.聽 Your very candidacy creates a buzz. Hey Fresh Face, we in the media world are waiting for you.

Remember Herman Cain’s presidential campaign in 2012? Essentially a media discovery. A flash out of nowhere.

You don鈥檛 remember Herman? That’s because this聽honeymoon stage doesn鈥檛 last long.

Gabbard has developed a tin ear and substitutes exaggerated, off-putting phrases for real engagement.

It鈥檚 the scrutinizing stage that makes or breaks candidates like Gabbard. In this social media age, that stage begins about as quickly as it takes Kirk Caldwell to say sunny things about rail.

Presidential candidates who are nationally known already have the chops. They know how to respond to the metric tons of information about them that is now all over the news. Joe Biden is a good example.

Less experienced candidates often go boom and disappear under this scrutiny because their flaws come out and they are too politically inept to keep the scrutiny from doing lasting damage.

So off they go even before primary season, never able to regain the momentum necessary to stay in the race.

Herman Cain, flash in the pan.

Gabbard has already received an enormous amount of scrutiny, most of it negative.

Much of it is rehashing stuff about her religious beliefs, her former views about gay marriage or her visit to Syria.

Some material, like the , her sympathy toward India鈥檚 repressive Hindu nationalist regime, or her campaign staff disarray, is new.

Will she be able to explain herself and avoid becoming Herman Cained? Probably not.

Like that line that Ricky , Gabbard sure is going to have a lot of ‘splainin鈥 to do.聽 And like Lucy, Tulsi is not a good 鈥榮plainer.

Downward Communicative Spiral

Consider religious issues, which have always been a hot button for Gabbard. On religious matters, Gabbard is typically either ham-handed or unavailable.

Since she first ran for office, critics have been after Gabbard about her religious beliefs, particularly her association with Chris Butler, also known as Jagad Guru Siddhaswarupananda Paramahamsa, which they labeled as cultish.

鈥淐ult鈥 is a word that many experts on religion don鈥檛 use because of its brainwashing connotations. It鈥檚 an insensitive and misleading term.

So when Gabbard calls these criticism 鈥渞eligious bigotry,鈥 she is right, but only a little.

In today鈥檚 politics, the terms 鈥渞eligious bigotry鈥 and 鈥渨eaponizing religion鈥 are dog whistles for religious conservatives.

Simply calling it 鈥渂igotry鈥 is a clumsy way to respond. It鈥檚 an excuse to avoid discussing her religious beliefs, which many potential Democratic voters and party elites are going to want to do whether she likes it or not.

Recently Gabbard attacked Sen. Mazie Hirono and other Democratic senators for asking a judicial nominee whether his membership in the Catholic anti-abortion group Knights of Columbus would bias his view of abortion cases.

Gabbard accused those senators of having 鈥渨eaponized religion for their own selfish gain.鈥

Oh please. First of all, that鈥檚 a perfectly common and justifiable kind of question asked by both Republicans and Democrats.

Second, in today鈥檚 politics, the terms 鈥渞eligious bigotry鈥 and 鈥渨eaponizing religion鈥 are dog whistles for religious conservatives.

More dog whistling, just what we need.

More to the campaign point, it鈥檚 just plain dumb for Gabbard to do what she did when 鈥 how obvious is this? 鈥 right now she needs to appeal almost solely to Democrats.

But in this case it鈥檚 not all that surprising. Because of her downward communicative spiral, she has developed a tin ear and substitutes exaggerated, off-putting phrases for real engagement.

In its story about Gabbard鈥檚 attack on those senators, that 鈥渁 spokeswoman for Gabbard did not respond to a request for comment.鈥

How well do you think that kind of response is going to work in a presidential race?

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About the Author

  • Neal Milner
    Neal Milner is a former political science professor at the University of 贬补飞补颈驶颈 where he taught for 40 years. He is a political analyst for KITV and is a regular contributor to Hawaii Public Radio's His most recent book is Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.