WEST
BRANCH, Iowa (AP) — Hillary Clinton’s suggestion this past week that
Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard is being “groomed” by Russians to act as a
spoiler in the 2020 race may have had the opposite effect of what the
2016 Democratic presidential nominee intended: It’s elevated Gabbard’s
candidacy and may have inspired even more ardent interest in her
campaign among Clinton critics.
On Saturday,
Gabbard found fans among the many Clinton skeptics across Iowa, where
Clinton barely won the 2016 Democratic caucuses against Vermont Sen.
Bernie Sanders.
“What is this horrible thing that Hillary said about you?” one person asked Gabbard at a house party in West Branch.
Gabbard
responded that “it revealed the truth that I have been experiencing for
a long time now — which is that, because I have been trying to bring
about an end to our country’s long-held foreign policy of waging one
regime-change war after the next . I am labeled as a traitor.”
“This is a message that is being sent to every single American . who speaks out for peace,” she said.
Gabbard’s
longshot campaign came under scrutiny this past week after Clinton
appeared on a podcast where she did not mention the Hawaii congresswoman
by name, but said she believes the Russians have “got their eye on
somebody who’s currently in the Democratic primary and are grooming her
to be the third party candidate.” There was no mistaking whom she meant.
Although
Russian interest in Gabbard is apparent, Clinton produced no evidence
that Moscow is grooming or directly backing the congresswoman.
Gabbard’s
campaign has been promoted by Russian state-owned media and a number of
alt-right websites and defended on Twitter by the Russian Embassy.
She’s previously faced controversy and criticism from leaders in her
party for her unorthodox foreign policy positions, like her decision to
meet Syrian President Bashar Assad.
On
Friday and Saturday, Gabbard refused to disavow the support she’s seen
from Russian actors and alt-right sites. But she repeatedly said she
will not run as an independent or third-party candidate if she doesn’t
win the Democratic nomination.
And Gabbard
encountered supporters across eastern Iowa on Saturday. During a
campaign stop in Iowa City at a University of Iowa tailgate, a man came
up to give Gabbard a ushanka-style yellow Hawkeye hat.
“It’s a Russian hat!” Gabbard said with a laugh, before hugging the man and taking a picture with him.
And at the West Branch house party, Gabbard found many Clinton critics who were supportive of her campaign.
Clinton’s
comments were “divisive and despicable,” said Patricia McIntosh, 83, a
semi-retired university employee who liked Gabbard’s “anti-regime-change
message.” McIntosh said: “I have no respect for Hillary Clinton at
all.”
Robert
Rodriguez, a 35-year-old food delivery driver, drove from Minneapolis
to see Gabbard speak. He, too, appreciated Gabbard’s anti-war stance and
said Clinton had “sowed division in this primary” with her critique. He
also noted Gabbard’s support from some alt-right websites
He
asked: “You have people praising candidates for being able to reach
across the aisle and garner support from the so-called other side, but
Tulsi’s a problem because she has support from the other side? Isn’t
that what we want?”
Both Rodriguez and
McIntosh described themselves as longtime Gabbard fans and skeptics of
the Democratic establishment, and both said they weren’t sure if they’d
support the eventual nominee if neither Gabbard nor Vermont Sen. Bernie
Sanders, another anti-establishment candidate for president, didn’t win.
But
Gabbard also managed to win over some people who hadn’t been familiar
with her campaign, like Jennifer Rogers, a 38-year-old nurse from North
Liberty, Iowa, who liked that Gabbard was a military veteran.
“I
really like that she answers questions,” she said. “She doesn’t just
shout talking points and campaign slogans.” Rogers said she’s been on
the fence but “today I’m pretty convinced that I think she’s going to be
my candidate.”
Still, it’s unclear exactly
what Gabbard hopes to achieve with her unorthodox campaign, as she’s
struggled to raise money and hit the polling threshold to make it on the
debate stage. She has yet to qualify for next month’s debate.
Gabbard has just three staff members on the ground in Iowa.
Asked whether she plans to add staff in any of the early states, Gabbard demurred.
She
said she’s “continuing to use every platform possible to reach voters
directly” when asked about her path to the nomination, and wouldn’t
predict how she’d finish in Iowa. But she suggested that might not
matter — even if she doesn’t have enough delegates to win, “we’re taking
this all the way to the nomination.”
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