Recent Press Releases

Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell issued the following statement Friday after the Senate confirmed the nomination of Derek Mitchell as ambassador to Burma:

“I congratulate Derek Mitchell on his confirmation as our ambassador to Burma. He has done an excellent job in his current role as Special Representative and Policy Coordinator for Burma; his experience will serve us well in the region as he builds on the strong foundation established by Michael Thurston and our embassy team in Rangoon."

Background: Senator McConnell traveled to Burma from January 15-17 of this year. During the visit, he met with Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, Burmese government officials, recently released political prisoners and U.S. Embassy personnel. The Senator discussed political reform, bilateral relations and regional security issues with Suu Kyi and the Burmese leaders. For nearly 20 years, Sen. McConnell has been a strong advocate for political reform, reconciliation and democracy in Burma. Every year since 2003, Senator McConnell, along with Sen. Dianne Feinstein, has introduced and helped enact legislation placing sanctions on the Burmese government. He also consistently called for the release of Suu Kyi and other political prisoners.

‘Students can’t wait for the President to get off the campaign trail and actually work with Congress to prevent student loan interest rates from rising this year. So while the President continues to ignore the bipartisan proposals sent more than three weeks ago, Senate Democrats dropped their demand for job-killing tax hikes and worked with Republicans to find solutions.’
‘But yesterday morning we got powerful confirmation of what may have been the biggest deception of all. For years, the President and his Democrat allies in Congress have sworn up and down that failing to comply with the individual mandate did not result in a tax on individuals or families. And the reason was obvious: if Americans knew that failure to comply resulted in a tax hike, it never would have passed. And the President wouldn’t be able to claim his health care bill didn’t raise taxes on the middle class, as he did, again, and again, and again. Well, yesterday the court blew the President’s cover.’