From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American public official
Ashley Estes Kavanaugh
is an American public official and former political aide. She is the wife of Supreme Court Justice
Brett Kavanaugh
.
Early life and education
[
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]
Kavanaugh was born in
Abilene, Texas
.
[1]
She graduated from
Abilene Cooper High School
in 1993, where she was a member of the Student Council for three years and played golf for three years.
[2]
She attended the
University of Texas at Austin
,
[3]
[4]
beginning in 1993, and graduated in 1997 with a Bachelor of Journalism degree.
[5]
In 2004, she married fellow
West Wing
staff member
Brett Kavanaugh
. Both President Bush and
First Lady
Laura Bush
attended the wedding ceremony in
Georgetown
, Washington, D.C.
[6]
Career
[
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]
The Kavanaugh family with
President
Donald Trump
Kavanaugh served as an assistant to
George W. Bush
from 1996 through 1999, during his
tenure as Governor of Texas
and in the
George W. Bush 2000 presidential campaign
. When Bush became president in January 2001, Kavanaugh took the position of
Personal Secretary to the President
, serving in the position until 2004.
[7]
Kavanaugh was Director of Special Projects at the
George W. Bush Presidential Foundation
from 2005 to 2009, and then Media Relations Coordinator at the
George W. Bush Presidential Center
from 2009 to 2010.
[2]
Since 2016, Kavanaugh has served as
town manager
of the village of
Chevy Chase Section Five, Maryland
, taking over for acting town manager John Higgins.
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Resendiz, Eric (July 12, 2018).
"Who is Ashley Estes Kavanaugh?"
.
KXVA
. Retrieved
July 26,
2018
.
- ^
a
b
Jaklewicz, Greg; Chipp, Timothy (July 13, 2018).
"Abilenians fondly regard Ashley Estes, wife of Trump Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh"
.
Abilene Reporter-News
. Retrieved
2018-09-26
.
- ^
"Our attention on Supreme Court nominee's wife, an Abilene girl"
.
Abilene Reporter-News
. Retrieved
2018-07-13
.
- ^
"Who Is Brett Kavanaugh's Wife? New Details On Ashley Estes Kavanaugh"
.
YourTango
. 2018-07-10
. Retrieved
2018-07-13
.
- ^
"Degrees and Dates of Attendance"
.
University of Texas at Austin
. Retrieved
September 28,
2018
.
- ^
Glover, Mary Clare (February 19, 2008).
"Weddings of the Rich & Famous"
.
Washingtonian
. Washingtonian
. Retrieved
27 January
2012
.
- ^
McClellan, Scott (2008).
What happened: inside the Bush White House and Washington's culture of deception
.
United States
:
PublicAffairs
. pp.
234
?236.
ISBN
978-1-58648-556-6
.
- ^
"A Note From Council"
(PDF)
.
The Quarterly
.
48
(1): 1. March 2016.
- ^
Schwartzman, Paul; Boorstein, Michelle (July 11, 2018).
"The elite world of Brett Kavanaugh"
.
Washington Post
. Retrieved
September 26,
2018
.
- ^
Frey, David (March 17, 2016).
"Bethesda Magazine's 30 Great Neighborhoods to Live In"
.
Bethesda Magazine
. Retrieved
September 26,
2018
.
- ^
Karni, Annie.
"Kavanaugh's wife tests standing by your man in the #MeToo era"
.
POLITICO
. Retrieved
2020-02-03
.
External links
[
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]