Congressional Profile
Representative Tony Gonzales
Tony Gonzales served as Representative for Texas, District 23 (2021-2026).
Profile Timeline
- Born.
- Entered office.
- Left office.
Historical Profile
This is an archival record. Live vote, finance, and scorecard panels are not shown for former or non-congressional officeholders. Final voting record is available on Congress.gov.
Tony Gonzales served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 2021 until April 14, 2026, representing Texas’s 23rd District.
Gonzales resigned from Congress on April 14, 2026, as he faced an expulsion resolution and public scrutiny over sexual misconduct allegations involving former staff members. Gonzales had previously acknowledged a sexual relationship with a former staffer while announcing he would not seek reelection.
Tony Gonzales brought twenty years of military experience to Congress. Abandoned by his father at the age of two months, Tony knew he had to work hard to get ahead in life. At the age of 18, he left high school to join the military and provide a path to success for himself and his family.
As a career cryptologist in the United States Navy, he rose to the highest enlisted rank of Master Chief Petty Officer for his support of combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. With multiple deployments to the Middle East and Asia, Tony has firsthand experience about the security challenges that face our country and the international community at large.
Harnessing his military background, Tony also served on Capitol Hill as a Department of Defense Legislative Fellow for U.S. Senator Marco Rubio. In his time there, he contributed to the defense, foreign policy, and intelligence portfolios. In 2018, Tony was selected as a National Security Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD).
At home in San Antonio, Tony is an active member of his community and has helped to create educational and economic opportunities in impoverished areas. In his role as Community Representative for the City of San Antonio’s Head Start Policy Council, he oversaw a budget of $32.5 million devoted to early childhood development. He also created the Tony Gonzales Foundation, a non-profit focused on uniting local businesses, schools, and families to promote economic development and upward mobility.
Tony worked hard to get ahead in life. He has described education as a path to opportunity. Although he had to postpone high school when he joined the Navy, he later earned his high school diploma and continued to pursue higher education. He holds a Master’s degree in International Relations from American Public University and is a Ph.D. candidate in International Development at the University of Southern Mississippi. He also holds a graduate certificate in Legislative Studies from Georgetown University, and has served as an Assistant Professor at the University of Maryland system, where he teaches political science with an emphasis on counterterrorism.
Gonzales is married to his wife Angel and they have six children.
Congressional priorities
During his time in Congress, Gonzales emphasized anti-abortion policy, Second Amendment rights, property rights, parental involvement in education, school safety, mental health services, veterans’ care, border security, and support for Texas military installations and energy jobs. He backed the PACT Act, introduced the UNITED Act on mental health services, and sponsored border-security measures related to Border Patrol staffing, technology, local law-enforcement reimbursement, and fentanyl trafficking.
