Fox Business reports “Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., has played a role steering millions of dollars in federal funds to organizations linked to his wife Gayle Manchin over the past several years.”

NRSC Statement: “Washington is working well for the Manchin family, but West Virginia families have been saddled with higher prices, higher taxes, and an opioid crisis that keeps getting worse because of our open southern border. West Virginia voters are going to turn off the Manchin Money Machine in 2024.” – NRSC Spokeswoman Maggie Abboud

In case you missed it…

Joe Manchin has helped steer millions in federal funds to groups linked to his wife 

Fox Business

Thomas Catenacci 

January 20, 2023

https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/joe-manchin-helped-steer-millions-federal-funds-groups-linked-wife

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., has played a role steering millions of dollars in federal funds to organizations linked to his wife Gayle Manchin over the past several years, according to a FOX Business review of grants and loans.

The West Virginia lawmaker has helped ensure funding reached at least three organizations where his wife worked at the time, and another group that indirectly benefited a fourth organization linked to his wife. As a moderate, Manchin – a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee that oversees federal discretionary spending bills – has taken a leading role on key Democratic legislative priorities since President Biden took office.

In response to an inquiry, a spokesperson for Manchin said the senator was committed to using his role on the Appropriations Committee to “fight for” West Virginia causes and noted that other lawmakers were also involved in funding efforts benefiting his wife’s employers.

“Senator Manchin’s position on the Senate Appropriations Committee uniquely positions him to fight for causes important to West Virginia,” the spokesperson told FOX Business. “The loans and grants specially outlined in this article were all announced with bipartisan support from both state and federal legislators representing West Virginia.”

One of the larger examples of Manchin’s ability to boost funding for projects involving his wife is the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC), a federal-state partnership dedicated to boosting Appalachian region economies. The White House appointed Gayle Manchin in April 2021 to be the federal co-chair of ARC.

While the bipartisan commission has received annual funding of roughly $165 million to $200 million from Congress since 2019, it received a staggering $1 billion in late 2021 under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which Sen. Manchin had co-sponsored and championed. After the Senate passed the legislation, Manchin celebrated the billions of dollars that would be sent to West Virginia-based initiatives, but didn’t mention the ARC funding.

“As a result of the positive impact of ARC’s work in the region to support economic and community development, the Commission has received strong bipartisan support from Members of United States Senate and House of Representatives in recent years,” ARC spokesperson Janiene Bohannon told FOX Business.

In April 2018, the Department of Agriculture (USDA) awarded Bethany College, a West Virginia school where Gayle Manchin served as a trustee between 2012 and 2021, with $39.6 million in loans under its Rural Development program. In an announcement, Bethany College President Tamara Nichols Rodenberg said the funds, which were to be used to improve the college’s facilities, were a “game-changer for an institution of our size.”

Bethany College also specifically thanked Sen. Manchin and West Virginia Republicans such as Rep. David McKinley and Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, saying they assisted the school in the loan application process and “were instrumental in helping to secure the USDA funding.”

“As was announced via this April 2018 press release, Bethany College received a significant loan from the [USDA’s] rural development program because it met the criteria stipulated by the USDA,” Bethany College said in a statement to FOX Business. “The college worked tirelessly with USDA staff for several years to complete the rigorous application process and provide the department with all the information it required to evaluate the college’s eligibility.”

The college added that it was “customary” to keep state and federal policymakers informed about its efforts to secure the loan, which it said has proven instrumental in maintaining the college’s status as the oldest degree-granting college in the state and a “significant employer” in the region.

“Bethany’s Board of Trustees was – and remains – supportive of the effort to secure the USDA loan,” the college added.

Sen. Manchin, who has for years been an advocate for the USDA Rural Development program, helped author the Inflation Reduction Act in August that appropriated billions of dollars in funding for the program.

In addition, in 2019, USDA awarded Reconnecting McDowell – a rural community development project in West Virginia that Gayle Manchin has worked on in various leadership roles since 2011 – a $250,000 grant. USDA said the grant would be put toward the group’s mobile farmers market program serving 10-15 communities and would return $125,000 in sales to local growers and small producers over three years.

The grant was one of 49 grants USDA awarded under its Farmers Market Promotion Program on Dec. 6, 2019. The program had been reauthorized and expanded through the 2018 Agriculture Improvement Act, which Sen. Manchin voted for. After the legislation was passed, Manchin said it would “make a huge difference” in West Virginia.

“Reconnecting McDowell is a shining example of what can be done to reinvigorate a rural community ravaged by decades of economic devastation when a wide array of partners from the public, corporate, nonprofit and foundation worlds, plus the community itself, come together,” Leah Daughtry, the director of Reconnecting McDowell, told FOX Business.

“Reconnecting McDowell received two separate USDA grants unrelated to the apartment building,” Daughtry added, referring to its separate Renaissance Village project. “One was for the mobile farmers market program, and the other was for a farm-to-school initiative, both of which have received glowing reviews by the USDA.”

She said the group has not taken “one penny” in administrative fees from federal agencies.

“The only other federal grant that Reconnecting McDowell was awarded was a $65,000 grant for equipment for the restaurant on the first floor of Renaissance Village,” Daughtry said.

Sen. Manchin and his wife appeared at a Reconnecting McDowell event last June. During the event, the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), one of the largest U.S. teachers unions and the organization that started Reconnecting McDowell, announced it had submitted a proposal to the USDA to extend funding for its mobile farmers market program through 2025.

Over the past several years, Sen. Manchin has also announced he had helped direct National Endowment for the Arts grants to the West Virginia Symphony Orchestra (WVSO). The WVSO rents performance space from the Clay Center in Charleston, West Virginia, where Gayle Manchin has served as a director since mid-2018.

In May 2019, Sen. Manchin announced a $20,000 grant for the WVSO; in June 2021, Sen. Manchin announced the WVSO had received a $10,000 grant; and, in May 2022, he announced the WVSO received a $15,000 grant. Moore Capito had also championed the grants in separate releases.

In February 2022, Sen. Manchin announced the WVSO had received a separate $100,000 grant as a result of the American Rescue Plan. At the time, the WVSO said it would use the funds to “save jobs and to fund operations and facilities, health and safety supplies, and marketing and promotional efforts to encourage attendance and participation.”

“Gayle Manchin does not serve on the Board of the Symphony, and the Clay Center is a separate nonprofit,” Joe Tackett, the president of the WVSO, told FOX Business. “We rent the performance space from the Clay Center, as we do many spaces around the state.”

The Clay Center didn’t respond to multiple requests for comment.

Make America Stronger

Help us take back the Senate

    By providing your phone number and checking the box, you are consenting to receive texts, including autodialed and automated texts, to that number with campaign notifications from the NRSC (55404). NRSC is happy to help at (202) 675-6000. Reply HELP for help, STOP to end. Msg&DataRatesMayApply. Message frequency may vary. SMS opt-in will not be sold, rented, or shared.Terms and Conditions http://bit.ly/2Xax3XL. Privacy Policy https://www.nrsc.org/privacy-policy

By providing your phone number, you are joining a recurring text messaging program for the NRSC

/// Donate