[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 110 (Tuesday, June 27, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3796-S3797]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO ANNE ANDERSON
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I would like to recognize Ireland's
Ambassador
[[Page S3797]]
to the United States, Anne Anderson, on the occasion of her retirement.
Since 2013, Anne has served as Ireland's 17th Ambassador to the United
States, the first woman to serve in this role. She has done much to
further the close relationship long shared between the United States
and Ireland. My great-grandparents were Irish immigrants, settling in
Vermont, where I was born and raised. I have long been aware of the
contributions Irish immigrants make to our Nation.
Ambassador Anderson first represented her Ireland's interests in the
United States in 1983, when she became the Embassy of Ireland's
economic attache and then press attache. After moving back to Ireland
in 1987, she served as counsellor in the Anglo-Irish division of the
Department of Foreign Affairs and then became Assistant Secretary
General in Corporate Services. In this role, Ambassador Anderson
greatly influenced the fight for equal treatment of women in the
workplace and worked to pass fair employment legislation in the North
of Ireland.
Ambassador Anderson assumed the role of diplomat again in 1995, when
she became Permanent Representative of Ireland to the United Nations in
Geneva. During her time in Geneva, she acted as chair of the United
Nations Commission of Human Rights and vice president of the United
Nations Conference on Trade and Development. She then moved to Brussels
to serve as the Permanent Representative of Ireland to the European
Union in 2001.
After some time as Ambassador to France, she returned to the United
States once more to become the Permanent Representative of Ireland to
the United Nations in New York until 2013, when she was named the
Ambassador of Ireland to the United States. Her focus in her time as
ambassador has been in advocating on behalf of immigration issues and
undocumented Irish immigrants in the United States, pursuing her
passion for inclusivity and equality in human rights and women's
rights, and fostering the cultural art connections between the two
nations.
The foundations of our relationship with Ireland are built upon and
solidified by the great work of diplomats and public servants such as
Ambassador Anderson, who seek to facilitate international relationships
that rise above any national differences. While she may be retiring
from her diplomatic roles, my friend Anne will forever be a diplomat in
the truest sense of the word. Marcelle and I congratulate her on her
retirement and thank her for her years of service and friendship and
her dedicated efforts to strengthen the U.S. relationship with Ireland.
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