Help Us Fix the System
PUTTING DISTRICT 4 FIRST
In Maryland’s 4th Congressional District, families deserve more than promises. They deserve systems that work, investments that deliver, and a government that is accountable for results. Too often, residents feel the impact when public systems struggle to move from planning to execution. Rising costs, aging infrastructure, uneven access to healthcare, and under-resourced schools all erode trust in institutions meant to serve the public.
I have spent my career working inside those systems, where I have seen how decisions on paper translate into real outcomes on the ground. When funding, oversight, and implementation are misaligned, communities pay the price. That experience is why I am running. Not to assign blame, but to strengthen what is not working as it should and make sure public dollars are spent effectively and transparently.
This campaign is built on a simple belief: fairness should be the standard, not the exception. When investments are well-planned, well-managed, and accountable, families gain stability and communities grow stronger.
I am running to redesign how government delivers, so opportunity in District 4 is not dependent on zip code, political access, or empty promises. Trust is rebuilt through follow-through, and that is the work I am committed to doing.
My Journey, Our Fight
I moved to Hyattsville, MD, right across the street from Prince George’s Plaza Mall 10 years ago, and I’ve never felt more at home. Just as important, I know what it’s like to fight through systemic barriers. My 17-year journey to graduation was not shaped by a lack of aptitude, but by systems that failed too many of us.
That experience drives my work in public institutions today, to ensure our government empowers people instead of standing in their way.
That’s why I am running to represent the people who helped me find my home feel heard, seen, and represented.
Building Fair Systems
These are the clearest examples of where our systems are failing families in Maryland’s 4th District. Too many of our neighbors struggle to put food on the table, immigrants are denied dignity, healthcare remains out of reach, and working families can’t count on fair wages. These aren’t abstract policy debates; they’re lived realities.
I start here because fixing these challenges requires more than good intentions. It requires aligning resources, accountability, and execution so programs actually reach the people they are meant to serve. When we design systems with follow-through built in, fairness stops being a promise and becomes the standard.