Why Me—Not My Opponent
I will honor my word
I’m not going to Washington to cash in, play the game, or make excuses. I’ll keep my word, steer clear of backroom perks, and call out corruption—even when it’s politically inconvenient. I won’t support fake-fiscal bills that drive up debt, bankrupt earned benefits, and leave our kids with the tab. My word is a pledge—with or without the paperwork. No insider perks. No bankrupting our future. No broken promises.
Gary Palmer has spent over a decade in Congress quietly coasting under the radar and avoiding the fights that matter most. While he’s played it safe in Congress, Alabama families have been hit hard—by rising costs, lacking healthcare options, and a retirement system on the ropes. He backed budgets that added trillions to the debt while promising spending cuts that never came—plans that undermined the very programs our seniors and working families rely on.
He pledged to serve just five terms—now he’s asking for a seventh. When pressed, his team rewrote the promise, claiming his support for term limits only applied to his first term—a classic Washington bait-and-switch. Along the way, he’s traded more stocks than Nancy Pelosi, propped himself up with PACs and big donors, and talked tough on spending while saddling our children with a debt load they may never escape. That’s not conservative leadership—that’s a politician who pledged change, then chose comfort.


I will serve Alabama
While my opponent made himself comfortable in D.C., I was in the homes and hospital rooms of real Alabamians—helping families navigate a healthcare system collapsing under red tape and political neglect. I’ve seen the hospital closures. I’ve seen the need for more healthcare freedom. And I’ve watched politicians talk about “cutting waste” while doing nothing to stop the real waste: fraud, corruption, and insider privilege in Congress. As patients, doctors, and veterans across the country are demanding more freedom in care, my opponent voted against efforts to reschedule marijuana, blocking treatments backed by modern science and the medical community. In the past, instead of listening to those that would benefit from this care, he mocked them, saying, “they’re still listening to the Grateful Dead and watching Cheech and Chong”—and told them, “they need to vote for somebody else.” That’s not just tasteless, it’s flat-out reckless.
I will fight for you
