I have spent my life in service to the United States—first in the U.S. military, then in the Secret Service, and later in the CIA. In every role, I learned that leadership is not about recognition or rhetoric. It is about responsibility, preparation, and doing what must be done.
I have worked in environments where the stakes were high and decisions carried real consequences. Those experiences taught me discipline, accountability, and the importance of steady leadership under pressure.
After my service in government, I continued leading in the private sector, managing complex operations and solving problems in high-pressure environments. Across every chapter of my life, one principle has remained constant: focus on the mission, solve the problem, and deliver results.
I am running for Congress because I believe public service should be about service—not politics. I am a Reagan-style conservative who believes in optimism, unity, and the strength of the American people.
There is far more that unites us than divides us. We all want safe communities, a strong economy, good jobs, and a better future for our children. The role of government should be to support those goals, not stand in the way of them.
My mission is simple: bring common sense back to Washington, focus on results instead of rhetoric, and restore trust that government can still work for the people it serves.
On day one, I will advance a clear legislative agenda focused on national security, economic strength, small business growth, and workforce opportunity.
I am not running to be a politician. I am running to be a public servant.
Better days are still ahead—but only if we choose leaders willing to do the work.


America’s Greatest Days Are Still Ahead Of Us