
Candidate for U.S. House of Representatives - Kentucky 6th Congressional District in 2026 Kentucky Primary Election.
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Get StartedAs your representative, I will propose a bill that restructures federal business incentives so that companies that pay higher wages and provide better benefits receive greater financial advantages. Learn more
The Rewarding Work and Wages Act flips the incentive structure on wages. Instead of mandating pay floors that can hurt small businesses, it rewards employers who choose to pay a living wage with meaningful tax credits, with the most generous benefits going to small businesses. Small businesses also get a three-year phase-in, free technical assistance, and simplified reporting. Companies that underpay and push costs onto taxpayers get nothing. Learn more
Pricing agreements tied to public funding would be publicly reported. Learn more
Prescription drugs account for a significant share of health insurance spending. By lowering drug prices through negotiated agreements, this policy would reduce overall healthcare costs and require insurers to pass those savings on to consumers. Learn more
David has drafted proposed legislation to put these principles into law. The TRIP Act requires that any pharmaceutical product developed with federal research funding be subject to fair market price negotiation. It bypasses PBM middlemen for taxpayer-funded drugs, caps prices at 200% of production cost when taxpayers funded more than half the R&D, and requires insurers to pass at least 80% of savings directly to consumers through lower premiums. Learn more
When pharmaceutical companies receive federal research grants or benefit from publicly supported development, the government should negotiate fair prices at the time funding is awarded — not years later after prices are already sky-high. Learn more
As your representative, I will propose a bill that restructures federal tax incentives so that private developers who build affordable and workforce housing receive greater financial advantages. By using targeted tax reforms, we can unleash market forces to expand supply, lower housing costs, and help families secure stable, affordable homes. Learn more
David has drafted proposed legislation to put these principles into law. The BHBC Act uses the tax code to steer private capital toward the housing Americans need. Developers who build affordable and workforce housing get reduced capital gains rates — as low as 5% for deeply affordable, long-commitment projects. It reforms 1031 exchanges to favor community-serving investments, increases LIHTC allocations, creates a 250 million revolving loan fund for small developers, and lets communities define what housing they need. Learn more
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