DuBose Porter’s 27-year legislative career has centered on two simple beliefs: speak for the people and create economic opportunity.
The people DuBose Porter is elected to serve have always known DuBose puts their interests first. That is why DuBose won 76% of the vote in his last contested race. A margin of victory, that large, shows that the people know DuBose works for them. DuBose Porter believes government should foster economic development and job creation. A safe, healthy, well-educated workforce, in a state where people and products can easily reach their destinations and natural resources are protected for generations to come, is a state where new industry will locate and existing industry can expand.Born in Dublin, Georgia, DuBose graduated from Dublin High School and received his undergraduate degree from Davidson College. DuBose interned with Senator Sam Nunn in Washington, D.C. Seeing Senator Nunn’s ability to help others convinced DuBose to devote his life to public service.
DuBose earned his law degree from Cumberland School of Law and returned to Dublin, where he practiced law. Later, DuBose went into the newspaper business in Dublin and became a small business owner with forty employees, creating a product six days a week.
At the age of 28, DuBose was elected to the Georgia State House of Representatives and went on to serve as Floor Leader for Governor Zell Miller.
DuBose was elected Speaker Pro Tempore of the House of Representatives in 2003 and Leader of the House Democratic Caucus in 2005. He has served as chair of both Education and Higher Education and now serves on Appropriations, Agriculture and Consumer Affairs, and Rules and Ethics.
DuBose works for Georgia’s families and believes a strong economy fosters strong families. DuBose has been married to his wife, Carol Dodd of Wrightsville, for 26 years. DuBose and Carol have four sons, Stephen, 24; Guyton, 21; and twins Asa and Inman, 20. All the boys, as well as DuBose, are Eagle Scouts.
DuBose and his family are avid outdoorsmen. DuBose, Carol, and the boys are active members of the First United Methodist Church in Dublin, where DuBose served on the Administrative Board and Carol teaches Sunday School.
DuBose, his wife Carol, and their four sons share Georgia’s values. DuBose Porter believes that strengthening Georgia’s economy strengthens Georgia’s families. DuBose Porter has a vision for Georgia with a strong and thriving economy, one where Georgia’s education system, transportation infrastructure, and natural resources attract industry and provide Georgians with jobs for years to come. Join DuBose Porter, and let’s rebuild Georgia’s economy.
Carol was born to William Asa Dodd, a country doctor and jazz pianist, and his wife Louise, a school teacher and cookbook author, on November 8, 1958. Carol and her brother, Bill, grew up in the small town of Wrightsville, Georgia. Because there was no county hospital and her father was the only doctor in the community, Carol spent a large part of her childhood going on house calls with her father. Playing with the children and visiting with family members, as her father attended patients, gave Carol an inside view of life across vastly different social and economic lines. These early experiences led Carol to believe that what separates Georgia most is neither demographics nor geography, but rather, differences in economic and educational opportunities. As the wife of the governor, Carol will focus her efforts on putting more of Georgia’s citizens into the workforce and strengthening the educational opportunities needed to achieve that goal.
Carol attended the University of Georgia, where she graduated with a degree in Psychology. After college, Carol decided to become a copywriter and obtained a job at the Courier Herald in Dublin working in advertising. While in Dublin she met DuBose, a young, single, newly-elected state representative who was practicing law, and they were married on Jan 25, 1984. DuBose and Carol later purchased fifty percent of the Courier Herald Publishing Company, and DuBose moved from practicing law to join Carol at the newspaper. After the birth of their four sons,Stephen, Guyton, Asa, and Inman, Carol took a twenty-year sabbatical to become a stay-at-home mom.
In addition to her duties as a mom, Carol volunteered as a Cub Scout Pack Leader for a group of underprivileged children. Seeing that there were more children than her troop could serve led Carol to establish a local chapter of the Boys and Girls Club. She was also a president of Dublin Girls Cotillion Club, a member of Erin Garden Club, in Dublin Service League, and a member of Moms in Touch Prayer Group. She was a member of the Leadership Georgia Class of 1985 and was president of the PTA at her sons’ school. Carol is an artist and raised funds with her work, establishing the non-profit Carol Dodd Porter Foundation for the Arts at the Dublin Campus of Middle Georgia College, which purchases local artists' work to be displayed in the College’s art collection. She served as president of the Georgia Citizens for the Arts. Carol is currently serving on the Dublin-Laurens Chamber of Commerce and the board of the UGA Parents and Families Association. Carol is the general manager of nine newspapers in Middle Georgia.
Carol’s faith holds an important role in her life. She and her family are active members of First United Methodist Church in Dublin, where she is currently serving on the Administrative Board, on the Worship Committee and as a Sunday School teacher for The Second Door Adult Bible Class.
Carol, and the four boys are active supporters of DuBose’s public service and look forward to the opportunity to help unite Georgia behind a strong economy.