Politics & Government
Betsy DeVos’s Family Boosts Gardner’s 2020 Campaign
Education secretary's in-laws donate $22,400

WASHINGTON — By Robin Bravender - Newsroom Washington Bureau Chief. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’s family members spent $22,400 so far this year to help fund Colorado Republican Sen. Cory Gardner’s re-election campaign, according to federal campaign finance data released this week.
DeVos’s in-laws — Michigan conservative donors and heirs to the Amway fortune — have plowed cash into the coffers of Republican Senate candidates across the country who are up for re-election in 2020, the records show.
DeVos’s husband, Dick, has three siblings — Doug, Daniel and Suzanne — each of whom contributed $5,600 to Gardner’s campaign in March. Doug’s wife, Maria DeVos, also contributed $5,600 to the campaign. That’s the maximum contribution allowed per election cycle under federal election law.
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As Trump’s education secretary, DeVos has been one of the administration’s most controversial cabinet officials.
She made waves during her January 2017 confirmation hearing when she cited grizzly bears as a reason that educators might need guns in schools. Since then, her policies on issues including school choice, campus sexual assault, civil rights and student debt have drawn ire from her critics.
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Earlier this year, DeVos faced a firestorm on Capitol Hill as lawmakers grilled her for the administration’s proposal to cut federal funding for the Special Olympics. President Trump later reversed course on the issue, saying that he supports federal funding for the program.
Gardner voted in 2017 to confirm DeVos, despite a campaign from constituents to convince him to oppose her nomination.
“When I had the opportunity to meet Betsy DeVos personally, she pledged to me that she would be an advocate for public schools, teachers and educational opportunity for all,” Gardner said in a statement after her confirmation.
“The debate around her nomination has been a healthy exercise of our democracy, made all the more important because it involves our most precious possession, our children,” he added.
“As someone who believes education decisions should be left to parents and their children with policy driven locally, Congress will hold her accountable and I will work to ensure she lives up to the commitment she made to me.”
Gardner’s office did not respond to a request for comment on this story.
Overall, Gardner raised about $2 million in the first quarter of this year for his 2020 campaign, and has about $3.4 million cash on hand, according to the reports.
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