William Andrew Ogles IV ( ; born June 18, 1971) is an American politician and businessman who has served as the U.S. representative for Tennessee's 5th congressional district since 2023. A member of the Republican Party, he served as the mayor of Maury County, Tennessee, from 2018 to 2022.
Ogles had previously worked as a conservative activist, serving as the executive director of the Laffer Center, a conservative think tank and the Tennessee chapter of conservative advocacy group Americans for Prosperity.
Ogles has taken strongly conservative positions and been described by media as being on the far-right of the political spectrum. He has called for Christian nationalism in the United States, and he opposes abortion and same-sex marriage. He was one of the original 19 members of Congress to vote against Kevin McCarthy for Speaker of the House. He is known for his staunch support for Donald Trump, and for sending Christmas cards featuring a photo of his family holding rifles.
During the attempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election, Ogles falsely claimed that it was stolen. He has proposed a constitutional amendment to enable Trump to serve a third presidential term and filed articles of impeachment against judges who rule against the Trump administration.
Ogles has been criticized for lying about his education and career backgrounds, having falsely claimed to be both an economist and law-enforcement officer.
Ogles later studied at Middle Tennessee State University (MTSU), where he failed every course taken in the fall of 1995 and the fall of 1998; he returned to the university in 2007 and graduated with a 2.4 grade point average, with a Bachelor of Science in liberal studies. Ogles said in late February 2023 that his failed university courses were due to "an interfamilial matter" that led him to abandon his studies "to financially support my family during a difficult time" and that he eventually completed his studies with online courses.
On February 26, Ogles said that he was "mistaken" in claiming to have an MTSU degree in international relations, and claimed that he requested his college transcript the week before, and only learned then that his degree was actually in liberal studies. WTVF called Ogles's statement "apparently preemptive" because Ogles "ignored our requests for comment" after the media outlet obtained his MTSU transcript from an old job application. On February 27, NewsChannel 5 published Ogles's transcript, which showed that Ogles took only one economics course at a community college, scoring a C pass, while he passed nine (and failed several other) political science courses at MTSU. By February 28, Ogles's congressional biography was edited to simply state: "Andy obtained his degree from MTSU." NewsChannel 5 also investigated Ogles' claims of having done graduate work in marketing at Vanderbilt University's Owen School of Management and Dartmouth College's Tuck School of Business, and learned that Ogles took online non-credit courses in certificate programs rather than graduate courses.
Ogles made two unsuccessful bids for elected office, a run for the state's 4th congressional district in 2002 and the Tennessee Senate in 2006, losing in the Republican primary both times.
In September 2017, Ogles announced he would challenge incumbent U.S. senator Bob Corker, who he believed was insufficiently conservative, in the following year's primary. Upon announcing his bid, Ogles was financially supported by Lee Beaman, a Tennessee businessman who owns a large auto dealership chain and who planned to raise $4 million for Ogles. Two months later, Corker announced that he would retire instead of seeking the 2018 nomination. That led incumbent U.S. representative Marsha Blackburn, the eventual winner, and former representative Stephen Fincher to announce they would seek the seat. As their respective campaigns were likely to be well funded, Ogles announced shortly afterward that he would withdraw.
At a political debate, Ogles called himself "a former member of law enforcement, worked in international sex crimes, specifically child trafficking", while at a separate forum, he said: "I went into law enforcement. I worked in human trafficking." NewsChannel 5 reported that Ogles was a volunteer reserve deputy with the Williamson County Sheriff's Office from 2009 to 2011, with his position revoked for failing to meet minimum standards, failing to progress in field training, and failing to attend required meetings. The Williamson County Sheriff's Office said that records do not show Ogles trained or worked against international sex trafficking as a reserve deputy. In 2011, Ogles worked as a chief operating officer for Abolition International, a non-profit organisation which described its work as giving grants to "holistic ministries". Ogles indicated that since his stint at Abolition International overlapped his stint as a reserve deputy, "Maybe I created some of the confusion or maybe it was someone looking to write a story". While Ogles claimed he was "heavily involved in the fight against human trafficking", NewsChannel 5 reported that Abolition International's tax records showed that Ogles worked in a part-time position that paid him $4,000 in total. Ogles' congressional website originally claimed that Ogles was "overseeing operations and investments in 12 countries" for Abolition International; but NewsChannel 5 disputed that number as too large; the website later amended its claim to overseeing operations and investments in "several countries."
During his mayoralty, Ogles criticized Tennessee governor Bill Lee for not restricting local school boards' ability to implement mask mandates in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, calling for the state legislature to pass legislation to support his position in a special session. He supported a sales tax increase that passed in 2020.
Ogles initially filed to run for a second term as county mayor but withdrew to enter the race for the redrawn U.S. House of Representatives seat in Tennessee's 5th congressional district in 2022. After he had announced his candidacy for Congress, he vetoed the county and school budget increases over a 31-cent property tax increase. In a letter he sent to the county commission chairman, he claimed that the "County Library went full woke
Among the many rival candidates, two stood out as serious challengers: former state House speaker Beth Harwell, and retired U.S. Army brigadier general Kurt Winstead. Ads by the Tennessee Conservatives Political Action Committee (TCPAC) called Ogles a "D.C. insider" and lobbyist who had failed to pay his property taxes nine times while supporting the sales tax hike and a marriage tax, as well as failing to vigorously oppose Maury County's recent property tax hike. Records showed that Ogles had indeed been from a few days to almost a year late paying taxes on his Franklin home between 2005 and 2015, leading to interest charges. He filed a defamation suit against TCPAC. Ogles, in turn, was supported by that ran ads attacking Harwell and Winstead as "too liberal for Tennessee."
On August 4, Ogles won the primary.
During the campaign, Ogles avoided the major local media in favor of conservative local talk radio and posted very little on social media. Early in the campaign, he made some appearances with a flamethrower, saying he would use it on President Joe Biden's work when he got to Washington. A late October appearance with Texas U.S. senator Ted Cruz in Franklin was announced in his first campaign-related Twitter post since he won the Republican primary. He declined several invitations to debate.
Ogles was slightly outraised and outspent by Campbell. He raised almost $1 million for his campaign, including what he falsely represented at the time as a $320,000 personal loan, and spent $573,000. In contrast, Campbell raised over $1 million, without the use of personal loans, and spent $679,000 largely on television ads.
Ogles won the general election in November with 56% of the vote to Campbell's 42%, becoming the first Republican to represent the state's 5th district since the 19th century. As a result, Nashville was not represented by a single Democrat in Congress for the first time in modern history.
Shortly after being sworn in, Ogles was appointed to the House Financial Services Committee.
The first bill Ogles introduced, the Inflation Reduction Act of 2023, would repeal the previous year's Inflation Reduction Act. In president Joe Biden's State of the Union speech, he mentioned the bill without mentioning Ogles's name, which Ogles took credit for in a subsequent tweet.
Ogles is part of the Freedom Caucus.
In February 2024, during an argument with a pro-Palestinian activist questioning him about Palestinian child casualties in the Gaza war, Ogles told the activist "So, I think we should kill 'em all if that makes you feel better— everybody in Hamas. Hamas and the Palestinians have been attacking Israel for 20 years. It's time to pay the piper... Death to Hamas!" The American Muslim Advisory Council criticized Ogles' comments, claiming that he was endorsing the "extermination of the Palestinian people." A spokeswoman for Ogles stated that Ogles "was not referring to Palestinians, he was clearly referring to the Hamas terrorist group." Ogles would further state that he supported the right of Israel "to punish Hamas on a scale of Biblical proportions, including their accomplices and the facilitators of the aforementioned atrocities. I stand by what I said: Death to Hamas."
In May 2024, Ogles introduced a pair of bills in the House in response to the 2024 pro-Palestinian protests on university campuses. The first bill, entitled the Antisemitism Community Service Act ( HR 8321), would send anyone who has committed a crime on a college campus since October 7, 2023, the date of the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel, to the Gaza Strip to perform six months of community service, though the text of the bill appears to apply regardless of whether the crime in question was related to a pro-Palestinian protest. The second bill, entitled the Study Abroad Act ( HR 8322), would cancel for those who have been arrested "for rioting or unlawful protest" or for "establishing, participating, or promoting an encampment" on college campuses since October 7, 2023.
On January 23, 2025, three days into Trump's second administration, he filed a resolution which would change the 22nd Amendment to allow Trump to serve a third term, by allowing presidents who serve two non-consecutive terms to run for a third term.
On February 24, 2025, after Judge John D. Bates ruled against the Trump administration in a lawsuit involving the removal of "gender ideology" content from federal health websites, Ogles introduced an article of impeachment, alleging that Bates' lack of "intellectual honesty and basic integrity" constituted a high crime and misdemeanor. A month later, he filed an article of impeachment against Judge Theodore Chuang, claiming that Chuang had "marginalized the President's Article II authority" when he ruled against the administration in a case involving the dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development. Ogles also attempted to prevent dozens of Democratic representatives from continuing to serve on House committees.
Ogles also called for Illinois representative Delia Ramirez to be denaturalized and deported.
On January 1, 2026, Ogles called for a fight to make the USA "a Christian nation", posting to Facebook, "We must stand and reaffirm that this is a Christian Nation here This is a battle of good vs evil", accompanying his text with an AI-generated video of himself dressed as a knight with a cross on his chest raising a sword and calling an army to battle.
Ogles opposes abortion and same-sex marriage. In a 2022 interview, he downplayed the need for exceptions in an abortion bill, calling them "red herrings". In June 2022, after the repeal of Roe v. Wade, Ogles said, "The next thing we have to do is go after gay marriage."
Ogles has called for the impeachment of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, and for treason charges to be brought against Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas. He has called for the United States Department of Education to be defunded.
Ogles denies the legitimacy of the 2020 United States presidential election.
Ogles supports school choice, deregulating health care, and lower taxes. He opposes earmarks.
In July 2022, Ogles signed a pledge for an amendment to term limit representatives.
In November 2023, Ogles voiced climate change denial during a House debate, saying "I just went trick or treating with my kids and it was like, you know, the low that evening was 29 degrees, so temperatures change, alright? Temperatures have been changing for the millennia."
In January 2025, Ogles proposed to amend the Twenty-second Amendment to the United States Constitution to allow American presidents who have two non-consecutive presidency terms to seek a third term as president. This would allow Donald Trump to seek a third term, but not presidents with consecutive presidency terms such as Barack Obama, George W. Bush, and Bill Clinton. Ogles' rationale was that Trump "has proven himself to be the only figure in modern history capable of reversing our nation's decay", so it was "imperative that we provide President Trump with every resource necessary … we, as legislators and as states, must do everything in our power to support him."
His cousin Brandon Ogles is a former member of the Tennessee House of Representatives.
Ogles faced criticism when nearly $25,000 in donations received via GoFundMe to finance a child burial garden in his stillborn child's memory appeared to have gone unspent.
|-
Business and early political career
Disputed career claims
County mayoralty
U.S. House of Representatives
Election
2022
Primary
General
Tenure
Campaign finance issues
Other controversies
Political positions
Personal life
Electoral history
External links
|
|