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Gerald Michael Gabbard (born January 15, 1948) is an American politician, serving as the Hawaii State Senator for District 21 from the Democratic party, since 2006. Gabbard rose to prominence for efforts to prevent same-sex marriage in Hawaii by passing a 1998 amendment to the Constitution of Hawaii to give the state legislature "the power to reserve marriage to opposite-sex couples" under the ...
Gabbard was born on April 12, 1981, in Leloaloa, Maʻopūtasi County, on American Samoa's main island of Tutuila. [2] [3] She was the fourth of five children born to Mike Gabbard and his wife Carol (née Porter). [4] In 1983, when Gabbard was two years old, her family moved back to Hawaii, where they had lived in the late 1970s.
Gabbard’s father, Mike Gabbard, was elected to the Hawaii state Senate in 2006 as a Republican; he rose to prominence campaigning against homosexuality and gay marriage.
Serving alongside her father, Hawaii state Sen. Mike Gabbard, she became part of the first father-daughter combination in a legislature in the country. As a Senate staffer, Gabbard remained in ...
Her father, Mike Gabbard, is a longtime state senator in Hawaii who switched parties himself, moving from the GOP to the Democratic side of the aisle, and rose to prominence for his opposition to ...
The date of this photo: "Senator Mike Gabbard and his wife, Carol, welcomed their daughter, former State Representative & First Lieutenant, Tulsi Gabbard Tamayo, and hundreds of other Hawai'i Army National Guard soldiers home at a ceremony at Barbers Point on August 18th" -- what year? Her campaign managers for the House election.
Her father, Mike Gabbard, is a state senator who was first elected as a Republican but who switched parties to become a Democrat. She ran for president — then left her party. Gabbard sought the Democratic nomination for president in 2020 on a progressive platform and her opposition to U.S. involvement in foreign military conflicts.
President Trump revealed picks for big jobs, including ambassadors to the Czech Republic, Poland, Costa Rica and Norway and his pick for director of the U.S. Marshals Service.