Meet Fayth.
Rooted in faith, family, and the everyday rhythms of Georgia's 13th District. A neighbor running to represent the place she calls home.

From classrooms to community organizing.
Fayth coaching / volunteering
Leadership has always been part of how I move through the world — from leading peers in school, to studying abroad and seeing how other governments serve (and fail) their people, to organizing locally for social justice in my own community.
I've worked voting polls, sat with neighbors at kitchen tables, and listened to families talk about what's working and what isn't. The throughline is the same everywhere: people want to be heard, and they want representation that actually does something.
That's the desire that brought me here — to take what I've learned and use it for something bigger than myself.
The values I lead with.
My faith shapes how I show up — with humility, with honesty, and with the belief that every person I meet deserves to be treated with dignity. It's not a talking point. It's the foundation.
My family is my anchor. My husband, my son, and the wider family that raised me are the reason I care so deeply about what kind of district my neighbors get to live in. Every policy I think about, I think about with my son in mind.
Growth, for me, has always meant earning credentials and applying them — a bachelor's in business, a master's in positive psychology, and certification as a coach through the International Coaching Federation. But growth also means staying teachable. I plan to do that in office, too.

At a community event
Speaking with residents
A generation that's done waiting.
I'm not running because I'm young. I'm running because my generation is being asked to inherit problems we didn't create — and we're being told to be patient while they get worse.
The cost of housing, the cost of childcare, the cost of healthcare, the cost of just trying to live a normal life — these aren't abstract issues to us. They're the conditions we're raising our families in, right now.
Representation that reflects this moment isn't a nice-to-have. It's overdue. And it's how we get policy that actually meets the moment we're in.