Recent Press Releases



Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell released the following statement Friday on the President’s announcement of additional sanctions against Burma:



“This afternoon, the President demonstrated his leadership in promoting democratic change in Burma. By increasing sanctions against the State Peace and Development Council, the President put the military junta on notice that the United States stands squarely with the Burmese people and at the forefront of the international effort to effect change in the troubled country.”



BACKGROUND:

Earlier this year, the Senate passed and the President signed into law legislation authored by Senators McConnell and Dianne Feinstein to renew sanctions against the Burmese government. “The Burmese Freedom and Democracy Act” includes an import ban on Burmese goods entering the U.S. and authorizes visa restrictions on officials from the regime -- the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC).



The McConnell/Feinstein legislation maintains sanctions on the regime until changes are taken by the SPDC – changes that include taking concrete steps toward reconciliation and democratization, such as the full, unfettered participation of the National League for Democracy and ethnic minorities in the political affairs of the country, and the immediate, unconditional release of all prisoners of conscience, including Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi.



This is the fifth consecutive year that Senators McConnell and Feinstein have worked together to extend the annual ban on imports from Burma.



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Sen. Mel Martinez

October 19, 2007

‘An effective voice for our party’



Washington, D.C. –U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement Friday regarding RNC General Chairman, Senator Mel Martinez:



“Mel has served as an effective voice for our party, and we appreciate his success in communicating the Republican agenda of strong national and economic security. He is a respected member of our conference and will continue to play an important role in the Senate and through his continued service to the people of Florida.”



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‘For the sake of our economy, for the sake of our competitiveness, and for the sake of consumers who don’t want to see new taxes on their bills – we need to ban taxes on internet access permanently’



Washington, D.C. –U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell delivered the following remarks on the Senate floor Thursday prior to asking for unanimous consent to allow a vote on the Sununu bill which would create a permanent ban on taxation of access to the internet:



“Mr. President, in just 13 days the internet tax moratorium will expire.



“If Congress hasn’t acted by then, state and local governments will be free to impose new taxes on Internet access – and trust me, they will.



“We need to be straight with the American people about what’s happening here — that the Senate Majority wants to preserve the possibility of taxing access to the Internet.



“The internet has transformed this country. It’s cleared new pathways to learning for rich and poor. It’s brought a level of efficiency and innovation to the shop floor, the home, and the corner office that were unimaginable just a decade ago. Just think of the millions of middle class Americans who’ve lifted their fortunes through online auction sites or made their first stock purchases over online trading sites.



“The internet’s been at the heart of America’s economic growth over the past decade—all because government hasn’t gotten in the way. But those days are over if we let our Democratic colleagues open the Internet to new taxes.



“We can’t let it happen. For the sake of our economy, for the sake of our competitiveness, and for the sake of consumers who don’t want to see new taxes on their bills – we need to ban taxes on internet access permanently.



“The House of Representatives has sent us a bill that would extend the moratorium for four years. Frankly, I don’t think that is long enough.



“If we all agree that taxing Internet access hurts consumers, hurts innovation, hurts broadband deployment, why stop at four years?



“Why not keep I.T. tax-free forever?



“So Mr. President, I say to my friends on the other side – the clock is ticking.



“If you object to considering the Sununu bill to make the moratorium permanent – let’s take up the House-passed bill with a couple of relevant amendments in order. One would make the moratorium permanent, and failing that, one would extend it for substantially longer than four years.



“We can debate these amendments quickly and vote – to see where the Senate stands on this very important question of keeping the Internet free of onerous taxes.



“We can do it this week, Mr. President, or next week – but the Senate must act before the moratorium expires in 13 days. And it is my intention to have a vote on the question of whether the moratorium should be extended permanently, or merely for another four years.”



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