Biographical Information
Education
B.A., Psychology Honors, University of Texas at Austin MSSW, Administration and Policy Practice, University of Texas at Austin
Work experience
Tennessee Justice Center (2017); Indivisible (2018-2021); RuralOrganizing (2022-2024)
Twitter
If elected, how will you stay in touch with constituents?
If elected, I will practice participatory democracy by making sure constituents have a real voice in shaping my work. That means holding regular town halls in all counties, keeping local offices open and accessible, and staffing those offices with people rooted in the community. I will also launch ongoing community needs assessments so residents themselves identify priorities—roads, healthcare, schools, jobs—and those needs drive my agenda in Washington.
I’ll keep doing what I do now: answering calls directly, meeting folks where they are, and using social media for transparency and accountability. Representation shouldn’t mean disappearing to D.C.—it should mean bringing people into the process and ensuring government works with them,
What are the 3 most important issues facing District 7, at this time?
The top issues in District 7 are feeding kids, fixing roads, and funding hospitals. Families are being crushed by rising food costs and corporate price gouging, and no child in Tennessee should go hungry—we need federal action to lower costs and expand school meals. Tennessee also faces a $73 billion backlog in infrastructure needs, with crumbling roads and bridges that demand major federal investment built by union labor. And rural hospitals across the district have closed, forcing families to drive hours for care. We must expand funding to keep hospitals open, staffed, and affordable. These are the kitchen-table issues I’ll fight for in Congress.
How has your experience prepared you to serve as a member of Congress?
I’m a social worker and lifelong organizer who has spent the past eight years working in rural and small-town communities across Tennessee and the country—fighting hospital closures, expanding broadband, and building grassroots power. As one of Indivisible’s first national organizers, I learned how to mobilize voters in tough terrain, and I carried that work home to Tennessee. In the State House, I’ve introduced bold legislation to end the grocery tax, fund infrastructure through my “Pot for Potholes” bill, and defend working families against a GOP supermajority. This blend of rural organizing, social work, and legislative experience has prepared me to represent TN-07 and deliver real results.
If elected, what would you like to accomplish during your term in office?
If elected, I will fight to protect and strengthen Medicare and Social Security—programs that working people have paid into and earned, but that Republicans in Congress continue to target for cuts. Tennesseans deserve the promise of a secure retirement and affordable healthcare, not more uncertainty. I will also work to ensure people who are unfairly cut off from public benefits like food assistance or Medicaid can get reenrolled quickly, because no senior or family should be left behind by bureaucratic red tape. And I’ll fight for major federal investment in our municipalities, especially rural communities, so they have the resources to fix roads, keep hospitals open, and create good union jobs.