Donors gave big to DeSantis’ marijuana campaign after getting $10M from Hope Florida
- Jason Beck
- Apr 14
- 5 min read
Lawrence Mower
04-11-2025

Weeks after the DeSantis administration steered $10 million from a legal Medicaid settlement to a charity spearheaded by the first lady, the Hope Florida Foundation gave $5 million apiece to two separate organizations that gave millions to a political committee waging an anti-marijuana campaign championed by the governor. The payments, laid out in campaign finance records and documents released to the Herald/Times by the foundation on Friday, raise questions about whether the DeSantis administration diverted Medicaid dollars through Casey DeSantis’ key initiative to a political campaign. The $10 million, deriving from a settlement with Centene, the state’s largest Medicaid contractor, was split evenly between Secure Florida’s Future, run by the Florida Chamber of Commerce, and Save Our Society from Drugs, a drug-prevention non-profit. The committees sent $8.5 million that October to Keep Florida Clean, a political committee controlled by Ron DeSantis’ then-chief of staff, James Uthmeier. The committee was created to defeat Amendment 3, the failed ballot initiative that tried to legalize recreational marijuana. The settlement with Centene — which some Florida Republicans have said may have been illegal — was signed on Sept. 27. The grant proposals from Secure Florida’s Future and Save Our Society from Drugs were submitted to the Hope Florida Foundation on Oct. 13 and Oct. 18, respectively. The $5 million payments from the foundation to those organizations were made that same month, according to an attorney representing the charity. Campaign finance records show that between October and December, Keep Florida Clean diverted $10.5 million to the Republican Party of Florida, which campaigned against Amendment 3. Another $1.1 million went from the committee to the Florida Freedom Fund, which is controlled by Ron DeSantis. Uthmeier is also chairperson of the Florida Freedom Fund. It’s not clear how much of the $10 million Centene paid to the Hope Florida Foundation ended up in bank accounts for either the Republican Party of Florida or the Florida Freedom Fund. It is difficult, if not impossible, to track how dollars are spent as they move between political committees. The flow of money from the charity to big-dollar contributors to the governor’s political causes is already stirring debate in Florida’s Capitol, where House Republicans are digging into how the DeSantis administration is spending public money. Republicans have said that the administration may have broken the law by steering millions of dollars to the Hope Florida Foundation from Centene, which entered into talks with the Agency for Health Care Administration after it was overpaid for Medicaid services. DeSantis on Thursday said the $67 million settlement, of which $10 million went to the charity, was “100% appropriate” and part of a “good deal” the state negotiated with Centene. State Rep. Alex Andrade, a Pensacola Republican who has been looking into the funding and operations of Hope Florida and its charity, said in a statement Friday that the use of the $10 million “looks like criminal fraud by some of those involved.” “The questions I now have are what did Governor DeSantis know, what did James Uthmeier know and who on earth thought this was legal, moral or ethical?” he said. Florida House Republicans on Friday sent letters to the DeSantis administration demanding text messages and other records about a variety of state programs, including Hope Florida and its foundation. Speaker Daniel Perez, a Miami Republican, said on former Republican U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz’s show Friday night that the “digging continues.” The foundation has not turned over records about its structure, ethics or oversight, documents that are required under state law. “I think people are interested in knowing where the money went, how it got there, why it got there and how it was used,” Perez said. Jeff Aaron, who became a lawyer for the Hope Florida Foundation this month, said the money paid to the foundation by Centene was not sent to political committees. “I remain confident nothing was illegal and it is not a political organization,” he said of Secure Florida’s Future, the organization overseen by the Florida Chamber of Commerce. A spokesperson for DeSantis referred comment to his political committee. A spokesperson for DeSantis’ Florida Freedom Fund said it was “absolutely false” that any of the $10 million ended up in the governor’s political committee or the effort to fight Amendment 3. A spokesperson for Centene said the company “had no part in or knowledge of any decision by the Hope Florida Foundation regarding the subsequent use of any Foundation funds.” The spokesperson said its donation to the foundation was directed by the Agency for Health Care Administration and approved by the Attorney General’s Office. A spokesperson for Uthemeier, whom DeSantis appointed attorney general this year, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Hope Florida is the first lady’s signature political initiative aiming to get Floridians off government assistance, including Medicaid, by connecting people receiving government benefits with churches and nonprofits. The Hope Florida Foundation is a charity created to financially help the Department of Children and Families carry out the program. The foundation sent the $5 million payments to the two dark-money 501(c)(4) organizations after they submitted grant proposals. The proposals, which were released by Aaron, do not detail how the money would be spent. “These funds would be instrumental in developing and implementing strategies that directly address the substance use crisis facing our communities,” Amy Ronshausen, executive director of Save Our Society From Drugs, wrote in the Oct. 18 grant proposal. Read the Save Our Society from Drugs proposal The organization board chairperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Mark Wilson, CEO of Florida Chamber of Commerce and its political committee, wrote in an Oct. 13 grant proposal that the money would “raise awareness of Hope Florida’s efforts within the private sector utilizing a data-centric approach and to recruit business community partners to advance this necessary cause.” Read the Secure Florida’s Future, Inc. proposal A spokesperson for the Chamber did not address whether the money received from the Hope Florida Foundation was sent to Keep Florida Clean. “The grant received from the Hope Florida Foundation is already making Florida better, safer, and more prosperous and will for years to come,” Wilson said in a statement. If the money did go to political causes, the contributions could jeopardize the Hope Florida Foundation’s nonprofit status. The prohibition of nonprofit political contributions gained wide attention nine years ago when Donald Trump paid a $2,500 penalty to the IRS and refunded his nonprofit foundation the $25,000 it gave to Pam Bondi’s reelection campaign for Florida attorney general. A charity such as the Hope Florida Foundation can make political contributions to fight a ballot initiative but it cannot be a “substantial part” of the charity’s “activity,” said Shanna Ports, senior legal counsel for the campaign finance watchdog, Campaign Legal Center. If the charity violates those rules, it “could lose” its tax-exempt status, Ports said.
Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/article304020886.html#storylink=cpy
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