Marianne Dubie greets President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence at the White House on Monday as Brian Dubie (left) and Mark Dubie (right) look on. Credit: Courtesy Brian Dubie

Mark and Marianne Dubie were on vacation in Arizona when the invitation came last Wednesday to display their Dubie Family Maple products at a 50-state Made in America showcase at the White House.

“We really didn’t believe it at first,” Mark Dubie said by phone Monday afternoon.

Despite logistical challenges, the husband-and-wife team accepted the invite and scurried off to Staples in Phoenix to create poster boards championing Vermont’s sweet stuff.

They were met Monday in Washington, D.C., by Dubie’s brother, Brian, who flew in with two suitcases carrying 70 pounds of maple syrup and maple candies.

Later in the day, the three Dubies welcomed President Donald Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and several hundred other visitors to their exhibit in the White House Blue Room.

“It was really cool,” Mark told Seven Days after leaving the White House. “The president spent five minutes with us.”

Trump told the crowd in a speech afterward, according to comments provided by the White House, “My administration is removing the burdens and regulations on your companies so that you can compete, thrive and grow.”

Mark Dubie, Marianne Dubie and Brian Dubie (left to right) at the White House on Monday Credit: Official White House Photo by ​Michael Lyon

The brothers Dubie, who live next door to each other in Fairfield, said they didn’t know how they were chosen to represent Vermont. They were told that White House staff googled Vermont maple syrup and found the business that Mark and Marianne co-own.

Brian said there was no indication that his political background — the Republican served as Vermont’s lieutenant governor from 2003 to 2011 and as the party’s 2010 candidate for governor — was a factor.

But the Trump administration did manage to land Vermont exhibitors disinclined to give the controversial president a hard time. That’s no small feat in a state that overwhelmingly voted for Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, has hosted numerous protests of Trump’s presidency and sends Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) to Washington.

Brian carefully answered a reporter’s questions about his support for Trump. He praised the president’s focus on the economy and trade, and said he was honored to represent the family business. Otherwise, Brian quipped, “I’m just the guy who carries the syrup.”

Mark was less guarded in his support for the commander-in-chief. “He’s very popular with me,” he said. “I think he’s making great changes.”

Mark is hoping, for example, that Trump will make it easier for Vermont maple syrup producers to sell their product in Canada. “If some tax changes could level the playing field, it would give Vermont sugarers the opportunity to go north,” he said.

But he said he would have jumped at the chance to represent Vermont at the White House when Democrat Barack Obama was president, too. “He’s our president and the presidency is bigger than one man,” Mark Dubie said. “A lot of America needs to think that.”

Mark Dubie said he invited Trump to the Green Mountain State — and the president didn’t decline the offer.

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Terri Hallenbeck was a Seven Days staff writer covering politics, the Legislature and state issues from 2014 to 2017.

7 replies on “Dubies Bring Vermont Maple Syrup to Trump’s White House”

  1. I would think a healthy democracy requires much of America to think it’s wrong for a president to collude with a enemy state to win an election. And if a president does commit treasonous crimes, it would be wrong and destructive to pretend everything is okay. History sadly shows ignoring crimes committed by a leader of a country while everyone around him flatters while he preens leads to devastating results.

  2. The Dubies just HAPPEN to be Republican. They will be forever associated with the worst president in the history of the United States.

  3. How can it be wrong to promote American made products and companies that employ Americans. If a Democrat was hosting the event it would be the greatest thing ever. Oh that’s right democrats don’t support American workers or American companies they would rather see all the jobs shipped overseas and have all Americans sucking off the government tit.

  4. 3 cheers for the Dubies..they have always represented Vermont.. They just showed what true Vermonters are like.. Mark Dubie stated what he felt.. As for the comment from one of the posters on here “to think it’s wrong for a president to collude with a enemy state to win an election. And if a president does commit treasonous crimes, it would be wrong and destructive to pretend everything is okay.” First off it’s not treasonous if we aren’t at war..and there’s no proof that he collude with the enemy. unlike clinton who took money from the enemy..Even if the Dubies were democrats , they are Americans who had respect for the President, unlike a lot of people. a healthy democracy requires America to act like Americans not like crybabies because their candidate didn’t win..
    Remember the Dubies represented Vermont.. they showed Vt’s great product that is made here, Vermont is the largest producer of Maple Syrup in the United States. They weren’t there to be bashing our President Trump or to be political..They were that as TRUE Vermonters….

  5. The average person gets grief for carrying over 3.5 oz of liquids like cologne, breast milk, water, etc. onto a plane. How does a Dubie get 70 lbs of liquid onto a plane?

  6. Tiki — since it is described in the story as two suitcases of maple syrup and maple candy weighing 70 lbs, we can safely assume it went as checked baggage, not as carry-on.

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