Oxford "Ox" Nordberg

Independent Candidate

U.S. House of Representatives

Texas' District 30

Accountability you can track. Work you can measure.

Congress is a full-time responsibility. If elected, I will treat it that way. My focus will be TX-30: pursuing federal resources, coordinating with local leaders, publishing public progress updates, and showing up regularly so residents can question me directly.

Oxford isn't not running from the Politician title, he is looking to restore honesty, dignity, and integrity to it. Hire him in November and he will stand before you face to face and answer to you.
He is running to help Texas District 30 pursue federal resources, strengthen household stability, improve public safety, expand opportunity, and report progress in public.
Along with helping District 30, There are three things that needs URGENT attention.
1) Social Security & Medicare (Part A)

2) Fiscal Stabilization and
3) Government Systems Modernization
Kicking these three items down the road isn't going to work anymore. Our grandchildren will be put into a situation they didn't ask for.
It is time District 30 has a congressman that is demanding to be held accountable, willing be called out when results are not shared and or explained, and when he isn't being transparent.

Social Security and Medicare are warning signs America cannot afford to ignore.
Medicare’s Hospital Insurance trust fund is projected to be depleted in 2033.
The combined Social Security trust funds are projected to be depleted in 2034.

The Congressional Budget Office projects a federal deficit in 2026 with major growth by 2036.
The projected deficit by end of 2026 Fiscal year will be $1.9 trillion. They are projecting the gross national deficit will balloon to $3.2 trillion by 2036 (Just 10 years away) That means Washington is not just facing a budget problem. It is facing a responsibility problem. We cannot keep borrowing, overspending, delaying hard decisions, and pretending the bill will never come due. That has to stop.

Many federal computer systems are outdated, expensive to maintain, and vulnerable
Federal computer systems are not just outdated; they are expensive to maintain, difficult to modernize, and increasingly vulnerable. GAO reports that the federal government spends more than $100 billion a year on IT and cyber-related investments, with agencies typically spending about 80% of that on operating and maintaining existing systems. GAO has also warned that unresolved legacy systems can increase costs, create cybersecurity vulnerabilities, cause performance problems, and delay essential public services.

District 30 deserves better
You deserve accurate public information by ZIP code — including crime trends, education outcomes, food access, medical needs, infrastructure gaps, and federal funding opportunities.

November 3, 2026 - Don't allow Washington to take your vote for granted.
You have the power to send someone to Congress who will demand accountability, modernize government systems, protect earned benefits, and give District 30 the data it needs to fight for real results.

SOCIAL SECURITY & MEDICARE

1

Protect current retirees, strengthen long-term solvency, and force Congress to stop waiting until the crisis becomes an emergency

2

TX-30 ZIP CODE FOCUS

Review all District 30 Zip codes, identify the hardest-hit areas, and begin working to bring federal resources where the need is the greatest first.

3

FEDERAL BUDGET DISCIPLINE

Push for clearer public reporting, stronger oversight, and honest conversations about spending, debt, waste and measurable results.

4

MODERN FEDERAL SYSTEMS

Modernize outdated federal computer systems that slow down services, increase errors, waste taxpayer money, and create security risks.

This campaign is built around issues that affect seniors, working families, taxpayers, and every resident who depends on a government that should work better than it does.

MY ACCOUNTABILITY PROMISE

If elected, I will publish regular updates showing what my office worked on, what federal resources we pursued, what agencies we contacted, what problems residents reported, what progress was made, what filed, and what comes next.

  • Federal grants pursued

  • Votes cast

  • District needs identified by ZIP code

  • Agency contacts and follow-ups

  • Progress made and missed goals explained

District 30: Data first. Needs First. All results tracked & shared with all.

Texas' 30th congressional district includes 44 unique zip codes. Each community faces different challenges. My office will use public data to review poverty, housing pressure, food access, public safety, infrastructure, health access, education, and economic opportunity.

I know you have heard promises before.
I cannot fix what politicians did in the past, but I can be accountable for what I do now and what I do going forward.
I am asking for the opportunity to serve you — and I intend to prove, through transparency, work, and results, that I am truly different.

HELP BUILD A BETTER DISTRICT 30.

If elected, I will publish regular updates showing what my office worked on, what federal resources we pursued, what agencies we contacted, what problems residents reported, what progress was made, what filed, and what comes next.

Contact

Email: support@oxforcongress.com

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