Meet Aaron
Aaron was born in Fort Worth, Texas to a middle-class family. His father was an IT consultant for corporations while his mother was a private school teacher. Aaron’s early childhood was spent in Keller, where life was uneventful, stable, and all his interests were supported.
Everything changed in 2015 when his father, working long hours, constantly stressed, and feeling like he alone was responsible for keeping their lives stable, died of a heart attack at the age of 53. In the span of one day Aaron lost the stability that had defined his life. Without his father, he and his mother relied on donations from friends, family, and even acquaintances to keep them afloat through several moves across the Keller suburbs.
It was during this time that Aaron was diagnosed with depression, autism, and ADHD. Like most neurodivergent people, he was prescribed expensive medication essential to continue learning alongside his peers. Health insurance was non-negotiable, which meant Aaron was forced to watch his mother struggling year after year as she desperately tried to provide for her son.
Aaron’s 4th through 12th grade education was spent at a private school where his now unaffordable tuition was waived. It was an incredibly supportive environment despite his mental health struggles, with many teachers playing large parts in shaping Aaron’s interest in history, social studies, and economics.
After graduating, Aaron’s first job was as a janitor at his old school, and a year later a crew member at McDonald’s. The experience from these jobs taught him how to manage workflow on a time crunch, de-escalation tactics, working in high-stress environments, and a firsthand understanding of living under systems designed by out-of-touch politicians.
Around this time, his mother’s stress and tears would finally mean something when they became eligible for coverage under the Affordable Care Act. The ACA helped as a stopgap from totally losing coverage, but it didn’t prevent further abuses. One example was refusing coverage for essential meds, forcing Aaron to use generic, less effective alternatives. To make matters worse, he realized college was literally not an option. The debt from tuition, even with assistance and grants, would be absolutely crippling. With college off the table, he dedicated himself to becoming an autodidact, studying government and economics during his time off.
Aaron felt called to action after the 2024 election. Witnessing the re-election of politicians who refused to replace the abhorrent healthcare system, kept living costs high, and reserved debt-free college mostly to the 1% finally made his patience snap. No one was offering to end the near-endless abuses his and countless other families in Keller and beyond felt. If politicians would rather maintain the status quo and scream about their culture wars, then the responsibility fell to him.
In 2025, he began attending political events hosted by like-minded grassroots political organizers, and soon after he decided to run for office, because no one was fighting to fix the issues that plagued families like his – the issues that make most families, even those making six-figure salaries, one or two disasters away from losing everything.
Aaron is fighting to give Texans what they deserve: healthcare that guarantees coverage for everyone, lowering costs so homeowners and tenants have houses they can afford, and creating the best education system possible by fully funding K-12 schools, paying teachers a living wage, and making public college tuition free.
If you’d like to help, you can donate to our campaign or volunteer in our fight to give Texans what we deserve.
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