Frequently Asked Questions

Why are you running for Congress, and what makes your approach different?

Because the most dangerous failures of government don’t happen on cable news. They happen quietly—when ordinary people encounter power during moments of crisis. Most politicians debate policy in slogans. I focus on how power actually operates—in hospitals, policing, and administrative systems—where discretion, not rhetoric, determines outcomes.

What’s your governing philosophy in one sentence, and how does this help everyday people?

Authority should stabilize people, not destabilize them—especially when they’re vulnerable. Everyone eventually encounters government through healthcare, law enforcement, housing, or bureaucracy. My goal is to make those encounters fair, humane, and predictable.

What problem are you trying to solve, and why focus on process instead of ideology?

Low-visibility, high-impact injustice—the kind that doesn’t make headlines, but quietly ruins lives through delay, confusion, complexity, and unchecked discretion. And I focus on process because that is where power actually shows up. Most people experience government through decisions, timelines, explanations, and enforcement—not speeches.

How does your “First 100 Days” agenda reflect your political philosophy, and what’s the agenda?

Every bill applies the same rule: when the government exercises authority over people in crisis, the law must require restraint, proportionality, and care. My agenda includes: Veterans’ benefits, healthcare, policing, immigration enforcement, housing stability, consumer finance, and administrative agencies.

What’s your view on public safety, law enforcement, and immigration law enforcement?

Public safety depends on legitimacy. Restraint and accountability build trust—and trust makes communities safer. It’s about institutional discipline. Strong institutions know when not to escalate. Restraint is a form of strength.

What kind of member of Congress will you be, and if voters remember one thing, what should it be??

A serious one. Focused on oversight, legislation, and follow-through. Government should be strong enough to protect people—and disciplined enough not to overwhelm them. Members of Congress should be confident and competent to step into the fray early—before disruption becomes disaster.