U.S. Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) joined One Nation with Brian Kilmeade to discuss the issue of illegal immigrant crime and the extent of Communist China’s influence in the United States. See below for highlights and watch the full interview on YouTube and Rumble. On...
News
Latest News
Rubio on Proposed Biden-Harris De Minimis Rule: “It’s Just Bad Policy”
The Biden-Harris Administration announced a proposed new rule targeting the de minimis loophole, which is a duty and tax exemption for goods valued under $800. China is increasingly using this loophole to avoid our tariffs and continue to ship artificially cheap and...
Rubio, Colleagues Push Dod to Prioritize Defense Industrial Base Related Trade Jobs for Veterans
The welding, automotive, aviation maintenance, submarine, shipbuilding, and other defense-related trade industries are facing a workforce shortage. Many service members and veterans possess the skills to excel in trade jobs benefiting the defense industrial base...
Rubio, Scott, Florida Delegation Ask for Security Plan for 2026 FIFA World Cup
The United States will host the 2026 FIFA World Cup, along with Canada and Mexico. Miami was chosen as one of the host cities to hold matches, with additional Florida cities serving as base camps for the competing national teams. The increased tourism activity across...
Rubio to Biden: Planning Needed to Avoid Oropouche Outbreak
Oropouche virus is a disease spread to humans by mosquitoes and biting midges that can cause neurological effects and devastating effects on unborn babies. Recent surveillance data reports approximately 40 travel-associated cases of oropouche, in Florida, from...
Rubio, Cardin Applaud Senate Passage of USCIRF
The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), created by the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998, is a bipartisan commission that monitors and reports on international religious freedom. The commission’s authorization is currently...
Rubio, Wyden, Murphy Urge POTUS to Press Bahrain on Human Rights
Washington, D.C. — U.S. Senators Marco Rubio (R-FL), Ron Wyden (D-OR), and Chris Murphy (D-CT) last week wrote to President Donald Trump urging him to press Bahrain on serious human rights concerns. The president is scheduled to meet with Bahrain’s Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa today.
The senators specifically requested President Trump to press the Bahraini government to release prisoners of conscience, including Nabeel Rajab, a prominent human rights activist.
“Bahrain is a strategic ally in an important region and, critically, Bahrain hosts the United States Fifth Fleet. It is precisely for these reasons that we are so concerned by the government of Bahrain’s concerted efforts to silence peaceful opposition and quash free expression. Indeed, Bahrain’s leaders have increased their repression over the past few years, stripping peaceful dissenters of their citizenship, jailing human rights advocates, and shrinking the space for civil society,” the senators wrote.
The full text of the letter is below.
Mr. President:
We write to raise the issue of Bahrain’s worsening human rights record and the implications for U.S. security in the region in the lead up to your meeting with Bahrain’s Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa next week. We ask that you urge the Crown Prince to release prisoners of conscience and to resume the long-stalled national dialogue with the peaceful opposition.
Bahrain is a strategic ally in an important region and, critically, Bahrain hosts the United States Fifth Fleet. It is precisely for these reasons that we are so concerned by the government of Bahrain’s concerted efforts to silence peaceful opposition and quash free expression. Indeed, Bahrain’s leaders have increased their repression over the past few years, stripping peaceful dissenters of their citizenship, jailing human rights advocates, and shrinking the space for civil society. They were particularly active in the lead up to the November 2018 elections, banning the Wa’ad political society, dissolved the Al-Wefaq political society, and barring many citizens from seeking office. They sentenced Sheikh Ali Salman—Al-Wefaq’s long detained leader—to life in prison in a move that prompted public concern from U.S. State Department. Earlier this year, the government threatened to charge Bahrainis for following certain accounts or liking social media posts deemed critical of the government.
Domestic repression is not limited to the political arena. Bahrain’s government indefinitely suspended the last independent newspaper in 2017, effectively silencing the press. Authorities also continue to harass and detain human rights defenders on charges widely seen as politically motivated. Prominent human rights defender Nabeel Rajab was sentenced to five years in prison for “spreading false rumors in time of war,” “insulting public authorities,” and “insulting a foreign country.” Abdulhadi Al Khawaja and Dr. Abduljalil Al Singace remain in prison for peacefully protesting the government in 2011. These prisoners are merely representative of the thousands of others who remain locked away for exercising their right to free expression.
We value the United States’ longtime partnership with Bahrain, which is why we remain deeply concerned about the monarchy’s systematic elimination of avenues for peaceful dissent. We fear that continuing down this path will ultimately prove unsustainable and could lead to significant blowback to U.S. interests and Americans in Bahrain. Accordingly, we urge you in the strongest terms to press the Crown Prince to release prisoners of conscience and to reopen the state for a credible and productive national dialogue will all elements of Bahraini society.
Sincerely,