Policy Papers

This campaign is grounded in the recognition of political urgency as well as in thought, structure, and public seriousness. These papers provide deeper explanation for supporters, journalists, researchers, and voters who want to go beyond summary language and read the fuller governing logic behind the campaign.

The official platform white paper presents the district-first doctrine behind the candidacy, and the agenda papers develop that doctrine across the major areas of district repair: housing, economy and labor, youth and public health, and cultural and civic renewal.

Paper Library

Browse the campaign’s core papers by topic. Each one develops part of the larger district-first governing program.

FEATURED PAPER

Official Platform White Paper


This is the central campaign document. It argues that the district has been represented in language more than it has been repaired in reality, and lays out a district-first doctrine for how Congress should be used: appropriations, oversight, agency pressure, constituent casework, public reporting, federal access, housing repair, economic dignity, youth formation, public health defense, and cultural renewal. The document also frames the office as something that should be used for visible district usefulness, not political theater.


Read this first if you want the clearest overview of the campaign’s governing philosophy and how the agenda papers fit together.

GROUP 1 — DISTRICT REPAIR

Title: Official Platform White Paper
Description: The core governing document of the campaign. It argues that Congress should be used for district repair through appropriations, oversight, agency pressure, federal access, public reporting, housing repair, economic dignity, youth formation, public health defense, and cultural renewal.

Title: Using Congress for District Repair
Description: The foundational district-first framework explaining why representation should be measured by repair, not performance, and why the office should function as a District Repair Office.

GROUP 2 — HOUSING AND NEIGHBORHOOD INVESTMENT

Title: Housing Repair Agenda
Description: Establishes the housing framework of the campaign, treating housing as a condition of health, safety, family stability, neighborhood confidence, and federal accountability — not just a market issue.

Title: Healthy Homes and Lead Action Program
Description: Focuses on unhealthy housing, lead, mold, moisture, and referral systems, and outlines how oversight and federal navigation can support remediation and public health.

Title: Repair Access and Block Stabilization Strategy
Description: Lays out repair priority zones, repair-pipeline coordination, local-federal alignment, and block-level stabilization as a structured district strategy. Also best treated as a section or excerpt unless separated later.

GROUP 3 — ECONOMY AND LABOR

Title: Local Economic Dignity Agenda
Description: Sets out the economic program of the campaign, arguing that the real test of economic life is whether ordinary people can work, build, remain, and live with dignity.

Title: Skilled Trades and Apprenticeship Pathways Program
Description: Develops the campaign’s approach to trades, apprenticeship, technical work, and visible pathways into stable adult life.

Title: Corridor Vitality and Small Business Strategy
Description: Connects local hiring, small business support, corridor stabilization, and district participation to economic dignity and neighborhood confidence.

GROUP 4 — HEALTHCARE AND RIGHTS

Title: Public Safety, Youth, and Public Health Agenda
Description: Presents an integrated framework for neighborhood peace, youth formation, trauma response, mental health, family well-being, and public health access.

Title: Trauma, Mental Health, and Family Stability Infrastructure
Description: Focuses on trauma, behavioral health, family stress, provider shortages, and the need for public-facing navigation and early-care support. Best linked as a section of the Human Stability paper unless later separated.

Title: Reproductive Freedom and Healthcare Access
Description: Explains the campaign’s broader healthcare and dignity posture: personal medical decisions must be respected while maternal health, family support, and access to care are strengthened.

GROUP 5 — DEMOCRACY AND GOVERNANCE

Title: District Repair Office Framework
Description: Explains the congressional office as an instrument of district repair through casework, public reporting, oversight, coordination, and federal access.

Title: Government Transparency and Accountability
Description: Lays out the campaign’s view that government should be visible, understandable, and publicly accountable, with oversight used to expose failure and clarify action.

Title: Voting as a Structured Act
Description: Explains how legislative decisions should be judged: whether they protect dignity, address real conditions, and return value to the district.

GROUP 6 — FOREIGN POLICY AND ACCOUNTABILITY

Title: International Conflict and Human Dignity
Description: Outlines a foreign-policy posture centered on human dignity, humanitarian protections, scrutiny of military aid, and accountability for civilian harm.

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Title: Moral Accountability in U.S. Power
Description: Connects national power to ethical responsibility and explains how oversight, conditionality, and public reasoning should shape foreign-policy decisions.

  • Read Note

  • Contact for Media

FORTHCOMING 05/26/26 10:00am

GROUP 7 — CIVIC RENEWAL

Title: Cultural and Creative Economy Agenda
Description: Argues that culture is not ornamental, but structural to neighborhood life, youth formation, local commerce, public gathering, and civic identity.

Title: Youth Arts and Creative Formation Pathways & Operation Young Culture
Description: Builds out the campaign’s view that youth arts are tied to confidence, discipline, belonging, mentorship, and visible pathways into adult life.

Title: Libraries, Memory, and Cultural Infrastructure
Description: Treats libraries, archives, venues, neighborhood storytelling, and cultural institutions as real and vital forms of civic infrastructure.