[3] She later attended University of Maryland, College Park, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts degree[4] in government and politics and a certificate in women's studies in 1997.
[7] In December 2006, Maryland lieutenant governor-elect Anthony Brown named Flythe as his director of intergovernmental affairs.
[13] As first lady, Moore worked with her husband on issues involving military families, mental health, women's economic empowerment, and arts and culture.
During the 2024 legislative session, she testified for the Families Service Act, a bill allowing companies to give preferential hiring to military spouses.
[20] She controlled the disease with medication, which she stopped taking once she started having children, and now manages her condition with a strong physical fitness routine, which includes yoga and meditation.