Where I Stand

Constitutional Government

The Constitution limits the government—not the people.

Why It Matters

The Constitution was not written to control the American people. It was written to limit the power of the federal government and protect the liberty of the people.

When Washington expands beyond its constitutional limits, government becomes less accountable, less transparent, and farther removed from the people it serves.

Where I Stand

I believe every bill should begin with one question: does the Constitution authorize the federal government to do this?

If the answer is no, my vote is no.

Congress must respect the separation of powers, protect the Bill of Rights, review the scope of federal agencies, and return appropriate authority closer to the people and the states.

My Commitments

Begin with the Constitution

Every vote I take will begin with whether the Constitution authorizes the federal government to act.

Defend the Bill of Rights

The rights of the people are not privileges granted by Washington.

Respect Separation of Powers

No branch of government should be allowed to exceed its constitutional role.

Limit Federal Overreach

Federal agencies should not exercise powers never granted by the Constitution.

Return Power to the People

Government should remain closest to the people whenever possible.

Choose Principle Over Politics

My oath is to the Constitution, not to party leaders or political pressure.

Bottom Line

The Constitution does not limit freedom. It protects freedom by limiting government.

My responsibility is to the Constitution and to the people of Florida's 14th Congressional District. If political pressure ever conflicts with either, I will choose principle over politics.