I’m asking: Will you join me?
I’ve seen what happens when our hospitals close, when our schools are underfunded, and when decisions get made in Washington that don’t reflect the lives we’re actually living here in Kansas. I’m stepping up because I believe we deserve better—and because I believe we can do something about it.
But I can’t do it alone. No campaign is won by one person. It’s going to take all of us—working together—to rebuild a shared future.
That means knocking doors and having real conversations with our neighbors. It means making phone calls to folks who’ve stopped believing their vote matters. It means writing postcards, showing up, and staying engaged—not for the sake of a party, but for the sake of our future.
This campaign isn’t about identity politics. It’s not about labels or national talking points. It’s about Kansas. It’s about making sure working families, rural towns, and overlooked communities finally have someone in their corner who understands what it means to work hard and not give up.
Whether you’ve got an hour or a few weekends, your time and energy will make a difference. I’ll be out there every day—on the porch, at the table, on the road—and I hope you’ll stand right beside me.
Let’s prove what Kansans can do when we get to work—for each other.
Why you should get involved.
I’m not running for this seat to climb a political ladder—I’m running because I’m a fifth-generation Kansan who’s tired of watching our communities be ignored by people who don’t know us and don’t care to.
