New York: Tulsi Gabbard, the first Hindu elected to the US Congress, has announced she will not be running for re-election next year.
Gabbard, who is seeking the Democratic Party nomination to run for President next year, said that she was dropping her re-election bid because she is preparing 'to walk into the Oval Office'.
Her presidential campaign has failed to make much headway and her support in polls has not exceeded three percent.
Gabbard, who was first elected to the House of Representatives in 2012 from a constituency in Hawaii, is not of Indian descent, but a practising Hindu and took her oath of office on a Bhagavad Gita. Ethnically she is a Samoan, which is a Pacific Island group.
She came under attack last week from Hillary Clinton, who called her 'a favourite of the Russians' and alleged they were grooming her to be a third party candidate in next year's election.
Gabbard hit back, calling Clinton 'the queen of warmongers, embodiment of corruption, and personification of the rot that has sickened the Democratic Party for so long'.
Gabbard has been at odds with the party leadership and resigned as the Democratic National Committee's vice chair in 2016 alleging that the leaders were being partisan towards Clinton, who was defeated by President Donald Trump that year.
A serving major in the Army National Guard, which is similar to India's Territorial Army but with more active deployments, Gabbard is a veteran of the Iraq war and her combat experience has made her an opponent of US military action abroad.
This has brought criticism against her from her own party.
She has said that the US should stop engaging in 'regime change wars to topple foreign leaders it does not like'.
In the middle of her campaign, she was called up for active duty in August and deployed on a mission in Indonesia.