Rep. Anna Paulina Luna doesn’t know the meaning of ‘stand down.’
So when an old video surfaced recently of her wearing a form-fitting “Make America Great Again” swimsuit, causing social media’s moral police to go into a pearl-clutching frenzy, her response was characteristically unapologetic:
“I’m confirming that I have indeed worn swimsuits, and you can tell I am biologically a woman. #MAGA,” she said on X.
The stance was quintessential Luna—bold, unyielding, and not afraid to own it. The Republican congresswoman from Florida is the same firecracker we met when she posed as a Maxim model in 2014. Back then, Luna was a student in Fort Walton Beach, driving a cherry-red Chevy Nova SS and boasting of spending her free time at the shooting range. She went on to become a semi-finalist in a Maxim modeling competition.
To many of her critics, her tough-talking bravado may seem like political theater. But they don’t really know Anna Paulina Luna. To truly understand the congresswoman’s grit, you must look at her life story, which embodies the American Dream in all its rough-and-tumble glory.
Born in 1989 to a single mom in Southern California, Luna’s life was a far cry from the marble halls of privilege, according to her official bio. Her drug-addicted father was not in the picture. Her grandmother was a heroin addict who died from HIV-related complications. The family relied on welfare, moving frequently through low-income neighborhoods.
By the time she was nine years old, Luna had already survived an armed robbery. Her teen years weren’t any easier. She witnessed a fatal gang shooting at her high school and mourned the murder of her young cousin.
Luna barely graduated high school due to all the turmoil, but one night, at a party, she overheard a conversation that would change the trajectory of her life. Two guys were talking about their college education. Intrigued, Luna asked how they managed to pay for it. Their answer – the U.S. military. The next day, she joined the U.S. Air Force.
During her service, Luna met her husband, Andrew Gamberzky, a Bronze Star and Purple Heart recipient. After her honorable discharge, Luna pursued a biology degree with dreams of going to med school. But her life was thrown off course again when news arrived that Gamberzky was badly injured by enemy fire in Afghanistan. He returned home with PTSD, and Luna had to take up work as a cocktail waitress and swimsuit model to pay the medical bills.
“She dropped everything to help me. We have seen so much together, and it only makes us stronger,” Gamberzky told Time magazine.
Around this time, Luna also became passionate about border security and human trafficking, joining the nonprofit Operation Underground Railroad. Using her smarts and sex appeal, she leveraged social media to get the word out. Conservative activists such as Candace Owens and Charlie Kirk recognized her star power right away. Kirk eventually hired her as Turning Point USA’s Hispanic outreach director. This role catapulted her into the national spotlight, honing her skills as a political influencer.
In 2020, Luna ran for Congress, losing her first bid but gaining valuable experience and attention from party leaders. She ran again in 2022, this time securing victory and becoming the first Mexican-American representative from Florida and the youngest House Republican.
Luna’s firebrand style of politics has been embraced by the Right and criticized by the Left, making her a bit of a cultural lightning rod. But the controversy has only fueled her popularity. The influencer-turned-legislator has nearly 1.5 million followers across Instagram, Facebook, and X.
All this explains why the recent “Swimsuitgate” scandal has raised such a ruckus online. Luna has responded by calling out how silly her critics are. “I have a confession to make,” she said, “I wear bikinis to the beach and mineral sunscreen.”
Appearing on FOX News, she said, “They’re attacking me for wearing a swimsuit while they try to erase motherhood and put men in women’s sports.” As the late British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher once said, “Like being a lady, if you have to say you are, you aren’t.”
Whether you agree with her politics or not, you can’t deny Luna’s comfort with herself embodies a new kind of American success story. She’s unafraid to be seen wielding a gavel or wearing a swimsuit, breaking down stereotypes about what a congresswoman should look like.
In a nation founded on the promise of opportunity for all, Luna stands as proof that the American Dream is thriving and evolving – and sometimes, it wants to sport a MAGA swimsuit.