Rep. Tulsi Gabbard , an Iraq War veteran who has represented Hawaii’s 2nd Congressional District since 2012, is one of the most popular politicians in the state. Up for re-election, she is expected to cruise past her primary opponents and go on to victory in the general election. Despite that — or, some observers say, because of it — she has refused to debate her challengers.

The representative, who will be challenged by two Democrats in the August 11 primary, has not participated in a primary debate since her 2012 election. (She did not face a primary challenger in 2014.) Constituents and the local press have taken note of the issue, which has been widely publicized by Gabbard’s political opponents, who are also pointing to her controversial positions on human rights issues as a red flag. Gabbard’s campaign did not respond to The Intercept’s request for an interview.

Hawaii News Now has been trying, for over a month now, to arrange a debate between the candidates, but Gabbard has declined to participate. In early July, candidates running for governor, lieutenant governor, and Congress in the state’s 1st District all gathered for a “super debate.” The local news outlet also tried to organize a debate between Gabbard and Sherry Alu Campagna, Gabbard’s best-known challenger, but the incumbent declined to appear. Her campaign told Hawaii News Now in an email that “Tulsi will not be participating in a debate as she continues to communicate directly with voters across the district.”

Campagna, an environmental scientist and business owner, said that by evading debates, Gabbard is preventing constituents from holding her accountable for her “sketchy alliances” with foreign dictators. “Her voting record and her international policy would certainly crack her front-facing persona, and I know that she doesn’t want that to happen,” Campagna said.

If elected, Campagna would be the first Native Hawaiian woman in Congress. She is campaigning on issues like bettering the environment and alleviating homelessness, along with staples of the progressive movement like “Medicare for All” and campaign finance reform.

It’s not just Campagna who thinks Gabbard’s participation in a debate is key to the democratic process: 76 percent of likely primary voters said Gabbard has an obligation to debate her political rivals, according to a recent Honolulu Star Advertiser poll.

Gabbard herself has previously acknowledged the importance of political debate. In 2015, as vice chair of the Democratic National Committee, she called for additional Democratic presidential debates beyond the six that were scheduled. She later said she was disinvited from the first one as retaliation for her calls for debate.

“It’s very dangerous when we have people in positions of leadership who use their power to try to quiet those who disagree with them,” Gabbard said at the time. “When I signed up to be vice chair of the DNC, no one told me I would be relinquishing my freedom of speech and checking it at the door.”

That year, Gabbard made an early endorsement of Bernie Sanders, which led her to step down from her role at the DNC. That, combined with a consistently left voice on domestic issues like health care and the environment, has fostered her reputation as one of the more progressive House Democrats. Gabbard has been endorsed by Our Revolution, Our Revolution Hawaii, Sierra Club, Planned Parenthood Action Fund, and a number of labor unions.

“Our Revolution Hawai`i is enthusiastic to announce our endorsement for Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard after meeting with her to talk about our platform issues,” the group said in a statement. “Tulsi is a courageous representative who serves our country in uniform while also fighting for her constituents on many of the progressive issues that Our Revolution stands for, including the rejection of campaign contributions from political action committees and her work for criminal justice reform, affordable housing and healthcare, and so much more.”

Outside of cultivating her image as an anti-interventionist, however, Gabbard has urged a continuation of the so-called war on terror. She’s also won the approval of some conservatives and members of the far right. Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon reportedly arranged her November 2016 meeting with President Donald Trump, and former Ku Klux Klan grand wizard David Duke has praised some of her foreign policy positions.

Progressive activist Shay Chan Hodges, who ran against Gabbard in 2016, said she thinks the incumbent is avoiding debate because she simply can’t defend her positions on human rights issues. Gabbard was also evasive with Chan Hodges in 2016, refusing to debate despite several requests to do so. “She’s not responsive to the constituents, and she’s not transparent, and I don’t think she has the ability to defend her positions,” Chan Hodges said.

