Safe Communities, Second Chances, and Accountable Service
Elizabeth believes public safety requires accountability, common sense, support for victims, respect for law enforcement, and practical second chances.
Every Missouri family deserves to live in a safe community. Parents should feel safe raising children. Seniors should feel safe in their homes. Small business owners should feel safe opening their doors. Law enforcement and first responders should know their work is respected, and citizens should know justice is fair, accountable, and focused on results.
Elizabeth believes public safety requires both accountability and common sense. Violent crime must be taken seriously. Victims deserve support. Law enforcement deserves the tools and respect needed to do the job. At the same time, Missouri also needs honest conversations about prison reform, reentry, mental health, addiction, job training, and how to reduce the revolving door that hurts families and communities.
Safe communities also depend on accessible representation. Elizabeth is running a campaign centered on listening, town halls, public forums, debates, interviews, and respectful conversation because she believes accountability begins before Election Day.