I grew up in Tallulah, Louisiana, where poverty was part of daily life and opportunity felt far away. Those early years shaped how I see every family fighting to stay ahead. My campaign is built on that memory, because I understand what it means when bills pile up and doors stay closed. I am running for the Senate to open more doors, create more jobs, and make sure Louisiana finally rises.
Serving in the United States Navy taught me discipline, duty, and respect for every American who wears a uniform. That service continues to guide how I make decisions, because I know lives and livelihoods depend on responsible leadership. As a senator, I will carry that same mindset into every vote, always asking how each choice affects Louisiana workers, veterans, and families who expect honesty, clarity, and results from their government.
After graduating from Delgado College and later Sanford University, I worked my way into business leadership. That path taught me how jobs are created, how payroll gets met, and how bad decisions in Washington can stall local growth. My campaign focuses on real economic opportunity, not slogans, because I have seen what works. I want every Louisiana community to share in growth, not just those with the loudest voices or strongest connections.
I came of age in impoverished Tallulah, and that hardship keeps me focused on families still waiting for fairness.
My childhood in Tallulah taught me resilience, faith, and respect for every person working to survive.
Years in the Navy strengthened my character and anchored my belief in service before personal ambition.
Degrees from Delgado College and Sanford University opened doors that hard work and sacrifice first unlocked.
My business career showed how policy shapes paychecks, so every vote I cast will protect Louisiana jobs.