Jeanette Dousdebes Rubio
Jeanette Dousdebes Rubio | |
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![]() Jeanette Dousdebes Rubio with her husband Marco Rubio after he's sworn in as U.S. Senator by Joe Biden, 2011
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Personal details | |
Born | Jeanette Christina Dousdebes December 5, 1973 |
Political party | Republican |
Spouse(s) | Marco Rubio (1998–present) |
Children | 4 |
Residence | West Miami |
Education | South Miami High School |
Alma mater | Miami Dade College |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Jeanette Christina Dousdebes Rubio (born December 5, 1973) is the wife of United States Senator and former 2016 Presidential candidate Marco Rubio.[1]
Contents
Early life
Jeanette was born in Florida, to parents who had emigrated from Colombia.[2] When she was six, her parents divorced.[3] Jeanette was raised Roman Catholic and attended South Miami High School. She met her future husband, Marco Rubio, at a neighborhood party when she was 17 and he was 19.[4][5][6][7] After graduating from high school, she attended Miami Dade College.[3]
Before her marriage, she worked as a bank teller.[4] In 1997, she became a member of the Miami Dolphins Cheerleaders.[4][3] Her sister, Adriana Dousdebes, was also a cheerleader for the Dolphins.[3] Jeanette was featured in the Miami Dolphins Cheerleaders' first swimsuit calendar.[8] It was during her time as a cheerleader that Jeanette Dousdebes and Marco Rubio, who were only slightly acquainted in high school, met again and began to date.[9]
When the Rubios were first married, she enrolled in a course of study in fashion design at International Fine Arts College, but did not complete her studies, devoting herself, instead, to being a full-time mother of four children.[2][3] Rubio has told the press that mothering four small children while married to a politician is very much "like being a single mom."[10]
During her husband's service in the Florida legislature, Rubio lived with the children near Miami, traveling to Tallahassee to be with her husband as often as she could.[11][7]
Political involvement
During the race for speaker, she was enlisted by her husband to manage the political action committees he used to support his travel and consultants, a decision he later described as a "disaster" as it resulted in confusion on financial transactions related to travel and expenses, due to "inexperience, sloppiness and a blur of paperwork" according to a report by the Tampa Bay Times.[2]
Unlike many spouses of Presidential candidates, Rubio did not make campaign speeches.[12][13]
Rubio's campaign spotlighted her career as a Dolphins cheerleader in a television ad broadcast shortly before the Iowa caucuses, the New Hampshire primary, and the NFL playoffs.[14]
The Washington Post reported that Rubio is a part-time employee of the Norman Braman Family 2011 Charitable Foundation, which is also a financial backer of her husband Marco Rubio, and likely to commit as much as US$10 million to pro-Rubio PACs.[15]
Charitable work
Rubio volunteers for an organization called Kristi's House, which serves youth in the Miami area who have been abused or involved in human trafficking.[16]
Personal life
![](/w/images/thumb/b/b2/Speaker_Rubio_being_sworn_in_as_family_stands_by_his_side.jpg/300px-Speaker_Rubio_being_sworn_in_as_family_stands_by_his_side.jpg)
The Rubios live in West Miami, Florida, close to Jeanette's three sisters.[16]
The Rubios had a Catholic wedding in 1998 at the Church of the Little Flower in Coral Gables, Florida and have four children: Daniella, Amanda, Dominick, and Anthony.[6][3][17]
Rubio and her family regularly attend both Roman Catholic Mass at Church of the Little Flower and Protestant worship services at Christ Fellowship,[18] an Evangelical megachurch aligned with the Southern Baptist Convention.[19] She hosts a weekly Bible study class in her home.[3] Her three younger children attend a private protestant Christian school while the eldest attends a Catholic high school.[2][20]
References
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External links
Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons
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- Pages with reference errors
- Use mdy dates from February 2016
- Living people
- American cheerleaders
- American female dancers
- American people of Colombian descent
- American Roman Catholics
- Florida Republicans
- Marco Rubio
- Miami Dade College alumni
- Miami Dolphins personnel
- National Football League cheerleaders
- Republicans (United States)
- Spouses of Florida politicians
- Spouses of United States Senators
- 1973 births