Republican gatekeepers used to decide who got the nomination. The AK Guy just proved they no longer do. When Tony Gonzales dropped his reelection bid in March 2026 after scandal and pressure from House leadership, the beneficiary was not a party-anointed successor but Brandon Herrera—a YouTuber with 4 million subscribers, a firearms business, and a history of edgy online humour that made moderate Republicans wince. As Politico reported, Gonzales’s exit cleared the field for Herrera to become the GOP nominee in Texas’s 23rd District. The elevation from YouTube to congressional candidate shows that Republican gatekeepers have lost control of who gets the party’s nomination.
Grassroots beat the establishment—twice
In 2024, Herrera came within roughly 400 votes of unseating Gonzales in the GOP primary runoff despite being outspent more than three to one, as the Texas Tribune and AmmoLand reported. He raised over $800,000 from grassroots donors and leveraged his YouTube platform; Gonzales had $4.5 million and the backing of Gov. Greg Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, and later Donald Trump. The Texas GOP had censured Gonzales in 2023 for his vote on the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act after Uvalde—only the second such censure in party history. Herrera positioned himself as an uncompromising Second Amendment advocate and labelled Gonzales a turncoat. He lost by a whisker. In August 2025 he launched a second bid; by March 2026, with Gonzales engulfed in scandal (an affair with a staffer who later died by suicide), the incumbent quit. Herrera is now the Republican nominee facing Democrat Katy Padilla Stout in November, as RedState and Waco Tribune confirmed.
Politico has framed the trend broadly: content creators and political influencers are testing the pipeline from online audience to Congress. Anna Paulina Luna became the first social media influencer to parlay a following into a House seat; others are running in Arizona and elsewhere. Herrera’s near-miss in 2024 and his 2026 nomination show that the GOP’s traditional gatekeepers—big donors, state leadership, the incumbent—can no longer guarantee the outcome. The party “can’t control” him, as Gonzales’s campaign warned; his nomination is a win for the base and a headache for strategists who fear the district could flip if his persona dominates the general.
What This Actually Means
The GOP’s content creator problem is not that Herrera is unqualified—it is that the party no longer chooses. When gatekeepers lose control, the nominee is whoever mobilises the primary electorate. Herrera did that with YouTube and Second Amendment activism; the establishment’s preferred candidate withdrew. The trade-off is real: Rolling Stone and others have documented his controversial clips (goose-stepping to a Nazi marching song, a Mein Kampf reference defended as historical context), and a border sheriff condemned an insensitive veteran suicide joke. Trump’s lawyer sent a cease-and-desist over campaign use of Trump’s image. If Herrera wins in November, the GOP gets a vote and a headline risk. If he loses to Padilla Stout, the party will blame the YouTuber. Either way, the lesson is the same: the people who decide the nominee are the people who show up to vote—and the people they watch online.
Background
Who is Brandon Herrera? He is an American YouTuber, firearms manufacturer, and political candidate known as The AK Guy, with a channel focused on guns and Second Amendment advocacy. Who is Tony Gonzales? He was the Republican incumbent in Texas’s 23rd Congressional District until March 2026, when he announced he would not seek reelection following scandal. The district stretches from San Antonio to El Paso and includes Uvalde.
Sources
Politico, Texas Tribune, RedState, San Antonio Report, Rolling Stone, Waco Tribune, AmmoLand