Your City. Your Government.

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Primary Election is May 19th! Make plans to vote!

Primary Election is May 19th! Make plans to vote! —

WHY AM I RUNNING FOR MAYOR?

I’m running for Mayor because Louisville deserves a city government that works for the people who live here—not the insiders who’ve grown comfortable exploiting our resources and making decisions behind closed doors.

As a lifelong Louisville resident and community advocate, I’ve spent years standing up for transparency, accountability, and the right of residents to have a real voice in local government. Too often, people are shut out of decisions that directly affect our neighborhoods, our homes, our parks, our environment, and our quality of life. That isn’t leadership—that’s neglect.

In 2023, I founded the Louisville Metro Watchdog Alliance to give residents the tools, information, and confidence to engage with Metro Government. What started as a grassroots effort has grown into a powerful network of citizens showing up, asking questions, and demanding better. Together, we’ve exposed poor conditions in affordable housing, pushed for stronger public notice on developments, brought important public matters to light, and fought for growth that respects existing neighborhoods instead of sacrificing them.

Louisville is at a crossroads. We can continue down a path of backroom deals and broken trust—or we can choose a new direction built on openness, participation, and responsible development that benefits our entire community and looks to future growth and impact.

I’m running for Mayor to restore trust in City Hall, to listen to the people who call Louisville home, to uphold public integrity, and to lead with the bold, citizen-focused leadership this city deserves. A place where every voice is heard and everyone has a seat at the table. Building a stronger community by uniting every corner of Louisville around a shared future. One city—for all the people.

ONE CITY — FOR ALL THE PEOPLE

❇️

ONE CITY — FOR ALL THE PEOPLE ❇️

✅ Responsible and Community-Driven Development

✅ Transparency and Accountability in Government

✅ Quality Affordable Housing with Strong Oversight

✅ Empowering Residents and Building Stronger Neighborhoods

✅ Fighting for needed infrastructure improvements

✅ Safer Streets — Connected communities

✅ Growing Civic engagement for Better governance

✅ Cleaning up the culture of city government

WHY DO WE NEED CHANGE? The Writing is on the Wall.

These headlines tell a story Louisville residents know all too well—lawsuits instead of solutions, secrecy instead of transparency, insiders protected while accountability is ignored. When government spends millions settling cases, fights open records, tolerates ethical lapses, and prioritizes backroom deals over public integrity, the system is broken. This is not isolated misconduct; it is a pattern—and patterns demand change. Louisville deserves leadership that values honesty over damage control, accountability over excuses, and people over politics. These headlines are exactly why the status quo cannot continue—and why real reform is no longer optional. We can’t accept four more years of this. It’s time for real change.

Serving, Listening, Leading, and Fighting for a Government People Can Trust

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THE PRIMARY IS MAY 19, 2025!

Mark your calendar and make plans to vote. ONLY the TOP TWO vote getters will move on to the general election in November.

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YOUR CITY. YOUR GOVERNMENT.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTION - Republican or Democrat?

Republican or Democrat?

REPUBLICAN: but please read because this is important information…

For those who may not know, the 2026 Louisville mayoral race will be officially non-partisan—meaning candidates’ political party labels (like Democrat or Republican) will not appear on the ballot because of a change in Kentucky state law enacted by the Kentucky General Assembly.

Here’s why:

1. State Law Changed the Election Rules

In 2024, the Kentucky General Assembly passed House Bill 388, which includes a provision that removes party affiliations from the ballot for Louisville’s mayoral and Metro Council elections. Under this new law, local races in Louisville will no longer be labeled as Democratic or Republican on ballots starting with elections held after Jan. 1, 2025 — including the 2026 mayoral race.

2. Part of Broader Legislative Changes

House Bill 388 did more than just make elections non-partisan—it also changed other aspects of Louisville’s governance. As part of those changes, the formal party labels that once appeared next to candidates’ names will not be used in local races. There will NOT be Republican or Democratic indicators on the ballot. NO “R” or “D” beside the names. YOU MUST KNOW AND SELECT YOUR CANDIDATE BY NAME. Straight party votes will not include NONPARTISAN races.

3. What Non-Partisan Means in Practice

Although candidates may personally belong to or be supported by political parties, their party will not be listed on the ballot. Instead:

All mayoral candidates run together in a single primary.

The TOP TWO vote-getters advance to the general election, regardless of party.

So we could very well have two candidates with the same party affiliation move on to the general election. That’s what makes this year’s primary very important.

This system is similar to non-partisan elections used in other cities like Lexington, and may change how campaigns are run and how candidates appeal to voters across different parts of Jefferson County—encouraging voters to look at the individual candidate rather than just the political party.

https://www.lpm.org/.../kentucky-legislature-reshapes...

In summary—I'm a registered Republican. As a candidate, l'm running non-partisan in Louisville's mayoral race backed by an amazing committee that brings together people from across party lines to focus on results for all the people of Louisville.