Former SEAL Who Fights to Protect Children Announces His Run for Senate

Let’s be honest—if Washington D.C. had a spine, we wouldn’t be in half the mess we’re in right now. Instead, what we’ve got are a bunch of polished speech-makers who know how to play the game, raise your taxes, and then act confused when people are fed up. Somewhere along the way, serving the people turned into serving their own careers.

That’s why when someone like Jared Hudson steps up, people pay attention.

Hudson isn’t your average candidate. He’s not part of the political machine, doesn’t owe favors to the usual donors, and isn’t trying to climb some invisible ladder to power. This is a guy who’s worn the uniform, stared down evil, and then came home to fight a different kind of war—protecting kids from sex trafficking with his nonprofit, Covenant Rescue Group. You know, actual public service.

Now he’s running for Senate in Alabama, and the swamp might want to brace itself.

Hudson’s platform is unapologetically conservative: secure the border, crush the woke agenda, and defend Christian values. Not exactly the talking points you’ll find over at MSNBC, but exactly what many Americans are desperate to hear. He’s not afraid to say it like it is—and more importantly, to do something about it.

His nonprofit trains law enforcement and works to arrest predators looking to buy or sell children. And unlike most politicians who talk a big game about “protecting the vulnerable,” Hudson’s been out there in the trenches, doing the work. His decision to run? It came after prayer, not polling.

“I’m not a career politician,” Hudson told the Daily Caller. “This is about service, not status.”

That kind of mindset is rare these days, especially in the Senate. But it’s exactly what Alabama—and the rest of America—needs more of. Rep. Eli Crane, another Navy SEAL-turned-congressman, summed it up best: “He is a very good man, who loves the Lord and his family.”

And Hudson isn’t shy about where he stands politically. He’s a proud “America First” candidate who believes President Trump needs reinforcements in Washington—not more dealmakers looking for a book deal.

When it comes to the economy, Hudson gets it. He knows what it means to tighten the belt when times get tough. “If we don’t have enough money for groceries, daddy doesn’t eat,” he said. Compare that to the D.C. approach of just printing more money and raising your taxes.

He supports making Trump’s tax cuts permanent and cutting government down to size. As he put it, “We should remove as much government out of people’s lives as possible.” Now there’s a slogan we could use on a few more bumper stickers.

Whether it’s defending the border, standing up for veterans, or refusing to send Americans into unnecessary foreign conflicts, Hudson’s message is clear: real leadership, not more lip service.

Alabama may have just found its next senator—and Washington just found its next problem.

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