Dotie Joseph

American politician from Florida
Dotie Joseph
Member of the Florida House of Representatives
from the 108th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
November 6, 2018
Preceded byRoy Hardemon
Personal details
Political partyDemocratic

Dotie Joseph is a Democratic member of the Florida Legislature representing the State's 108th House district. Joseph was born in Haiti and moved to Florida in 1982. She lives in North Miami.[1]

Education

Dotie Joseph attended Miami-Dade public schools—including Lakeview Elementary, fine arts magnet programs at and Charles Drew Elementary and Miami Norland Middle School, and Design and Architecture Senior High (DASH). Joseph went on to graduate from Yale University with a degree in Political Sciences, earned a Juris Doctor from Georgetown University Law Center. Joseph studied abroad in France with Columbia University in Paris, and with the Institute for International Mediation and Conflict Resolution in The Hague in the Netherlands. [2]

Career

Joseph has worked as a federal judicial law clerk, legal consultant, a government and civil rights lawyer in the public and private sector.[3] She is currently an attorney with Ottinot Law, an all-black law firm which specializes in complex government and business matters.[4]

Joseph won the election for Florida's House of Representatives on November 6, 2018, from the platform of Democratic Party. She secured 92% of the vote while her closest rival, Riquet Caballero, an LPF candidate, secured eight percent.[5]

See also

  • Marie Woodson

References

  1. ^ "Dotie Joseph".
  2. ^ "Dotie Joseph Campaign". dotiejoseph.com. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
  3. ^ "Representative Dotie Joseph | NAAHP". 9 October 2018. Retrieved 2020-08-26.
  4. ^ "Representatives | Miami, FL".
  5. ^ "Florida Election Results - Election Results 2018 - The New York Times". The New York Times. 6 November 2018. Retrieved 18 November 2018.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Current members of the Florida House of Representatives
Speaker
Paul Renner (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Chuck Clemons (R)
Majority Leader
Michael J. Grant (R)
Minority Leader
Fentrice Driskell (D)
  1. Michelle Salzman (R)
  2. Alex Andrade (R)
  3. Joel Rudman (R)
  4. Patt Maney (R)
  5. Shane Abbott (R)
  6. Philip Griffitts (R)
  7. Jason Shoaf (R)
  8. Gallop Franklin (D)
  9. Allison Tant (D)
  10. Chuck Brannan (R)
  11. Sam Garrison (R)
  12. Wyman Duggan (R)
  13. Angie Nixon (D)
  14. Kimberly Daniels (D)
  15. Dean Black (R)
  16. Kiyan Michael (R)
  17. Jessica Baker (R)
  18. Cyndi Stevenson (R)
  19. Paul Renner (R)
  20. Bobby Payne (R)
  21. Yvonne Hayes Hinson (D)
  22. Chuck Clemons (R)
  23. Ralph Massullo (R)
  24. Ryan Chamberlin (R)
  25. Taylor Yarkosky (R)
  26. Keith Truenow (R)
  27. Stan McClain (R)
  28. Tom Leek (R)
  29. Webster Barnaby (R)
  30. Chase Tramont (R)
  31. Tyler Sirois (R)
  32. Thad Altman (R)
  33. Randy Fine (R)
  34. Robbie Brackett (R)
  35. Tom Keen (D)
  36. Rachel Plakon (R)
  37. Susan Plasencia (R)
  38. David Smith (R)
  39. Doug Bankson (R)
  40. LaVon Bracy (D)
  41. Bruce Antone (D)
  42. Anna Eskamani (D)
  43. Johanna López (D)
  44. Rita Harris (D)
  45. Carolina Amesty (R)
  46. Kristen Arrington (D)
  47. Paula Stark (R)
  48. Sam Killebrew (R)
  49. Melony Bell (R)
  50. Jennifer Canady (R)
  51. Josie Tomkow (R)
  52. John Temple (R)
  53. Jeff Holcomb (R)
  54. Randy Maggard (R)
  55. Kevin Steele (R)
  56. Brad Yeager (R)
  57. Adam Anderson (R)
  58. Kim Berfield (R)
  59. Berny Jacques (R)
  60. Lindsay Cross (D)
  61. Linda Chaney (R)
  62. Michele Rayner (D)
  63. Dianne Hart (D)
  64. Susan Valdes (D)
  65. Karen Gonzalez Pittman (R)
  66. Traci Koster (R)
  67. Fentrice Driskell (D)
  68. Lawrence McClure (R)
  69. Danny Alvarez (R)
  70. Mike Beltran (R)
  71. Will Robinson (R)
  72. Tommy Gregory (R)
  73. Fiona McFarland (R)
  74. James Buchanan (R)
  75. Michael J. Grant (R)
  76. Spencer Roach (R)
  77. Tiffany Esposito (R)
  78. Jenna Persons (R)
  79. Mike Giallombardo (R)
  80. Adam Botana (R)
  81. Bob Rommel (R)
  82. Lauren Melo (R)
  83. Kaylee Tuck (R)
  84. Dana Trabulsy (R)
  85. Toby Overdorf (R)
  86. John Snyder (R)
  87. Mike Caruso (R)
  88. Jervonte Edmonds (D)
  89. David Silvers (D)
  90. Joseph Casello (D)
  91. Peggy Gossett-Seidman (R)
  92. Kelly Skidmore (D)
  93. Katherine Waldron (D)
  94. Rick Roth (R)
  95. Christine Hunschofsky (D)
  96. Dan Daley (D)
  97. Lisa Dunkley (D)
  98. Patricia Hawkins-Williams (D)
  99. Daryl Campbell (D)
  100. Chip LaMarca (R)
  101. Hillary Cassel (D)
  102. Michael Gottlieb (D)
  103. Robin Bartleman (D)
  104. Felicia Robinson (D)
  105. Marie Woodson (D)
  106. Fabián Basabe (R)
  107. Christopher Benjamin (D)
  108. Dotie Joseph (D)
  109. Ashley Gantt (D)
  110. Tom Fabricio (R)
  111. David Borrero (R)
  112. Alex Rizo (R)
  113. Vicki Lopez (R)
  114. Demi Busatta Cabrera (R)
  115. Alina Garcia (R)
  116. Daniel Perez (R)
  117. Kevin Chambliss (D)
  118. Mike Redondo (R)
  119. Juan Carlos Porras (R)
  120. Jim Mooney (R)


Flag of FloridaPolitician icon

This article about a Florida politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e