Where I Stand

Healthcare Should Be About Patients, Not Politics.

Patient Choice • Medical Freedom • Price Transparency • Medical Freedom

Why It Matters

Every American deserves access to quality healthcare, but access does not improve when Washington makes more decisions for patients and doctors.

Over decades, healthcare has become increasingly expensive, unnecessarily complicated, and buried under layers of bureaucracy that drive up costs while reducing patient choice.

Real reform starts by putting patients back in control, encouraging competition, and making prices transparent so Americans can make informed decisions about their own care.

Healthcare decisions should be made in the exam room between a patient and their physician—not by politicians or federal agencies.

Where I Stand

I support expanding patient choice through free-market competition, greater price transparency, and fewer unnecessary federal mandates.

Patients deserve to know what medical services cost before receiving treatment, just as they would with nearly every other purchase they make.

I support protecting the doctor-patient relationship from unnecessary political interference while encouraging innovation that improves care and lowers costs.

As a disabled Navy veteran, I also believe our nation has a solemn obligation to provide the care promised to those who served. Keeping that promise should never become a political bargaining chip.

My Commitments

Put Patients First

Healthcare decisions belong to patients and their doctors—not Washington bureaucrats.

Increase Price Transparency

Americans deserve to know the cost of care before receiving treatment.

Expand Competition

Greater competition leads to lower costs, better service, and more innovation.

Protect Medical Freedom

I will oppose unnecessary federal interference in personal medical decisions.

Reduce Bureaucracy

Healthcare should be simpler, more responsive, and less burdened by unnecessary federal rules.

Honor Our Commitment to Veterans

Veterans earned their healthcare through service, and our government must keep that promise.

Bottom Line

Healthcare should serve patients—not politicians, insurance companies, or bureaucracies. When individuals have more choices, more transparency, and greater control over their own care, everyone benefits.

My goal is simple: make healthcare more affordable, more accessible, and more accountable by trusting Americans to make their own healthcare decisions.