Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard shares her story from Democratic presidential candidate to Trump administration official on 'My View with Lara Trump.'
Former Hawaii U.S. Rep. Tulsi Gabbard was confirmed and sworn in as director of national intelligence Wednesday.
Vermont senator Peter Welch is arguing against Trump’s pick for National Intelligence Director. Tulsi Gabbard is President Trump’s pick to head the office overseeing the work of 18 intelligence agencies.
Ron Wyden and Andy Biggs wrote to the US Director of National Intelligence urging her to demand the UK retract a data access order for Apple.
Tulsi Gabbard is a former victim of the"politicization of the intelligence community" when she was put on the "Quiet Skies" domestic terrorist watchlist.
Following her confirmation by the Senate, Tulsi Gabbard was sworn in as director of national intelligence in the Oval Office Wednesday evening. She and her husband, Abraham Williams, were spotted hugging prior to her being sworn in.
The Senate is expected to vote Wednesday on Tulsi Gabbard's confirmation for director of national intelligence. Gabbard, a former Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii and lieutenant colonel in the National Guard,
Mitch McConnell ran the Senate GOP. Now he’s going it alone as he wages battles against some of President Donald Trump’s highest-profile nominees. The Kentucky Republican became the only member of the Senate GOP’s 53-seat conference to oppose more than one Trump pick with his votes this week — first opposing Tulsi Gabbard’s director of national intelligence nomination on Wednesday and then Robert F.
President Trump spent his day calling the Education Department a con job, telling America that Putin would be visiting sometime soon, and seeing his new DNI Tulsi Gabbard sworn in. Plus - big news for the Trump administration's plan to offer buyouts to 2 million federal employees.
Matt Gagnon discussed the approval of Tulsi Gabbard as the director of national intelligence and the closure of the federal government’s buyout program, which affected 75,000 workers. He highlighted ongoing budget battles in Congress, with conservatives pushing for deeper cuts. Gagnon also discussed the challenges in the Palestinian situation, emphasizing the deep-seated hatred towards Israel and the lack of functional institutions in Gaza. He compared the post-war reconstruction of Japan and Germany to the current situation in Gaza, arguing that without established institutions, rebuilding efforts are unlikely to succeed.
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