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Senator Mitch McConnell & Di Tran: Two Journeys of Focus, Service, and Kentucky Pride – September 2025

Louisville, KY – September 25, 2025. At the Rotary Club of Louisville, two very different Kentucky stories met in one room: the long arc of Senator Mitch McConnell’s rise to become the longest-serving Senate leader in U.S. history, and the quieter journey of Di Tran, a Vietnamese immigrant who has called Louisville home since 1995.

Mitch McConnell: From Manual High School to the U.S. Senate

Born in 1942, McConnell graduated from duPont Manual High School in Louisville, earned his bachelor’s degree at the University of Louisville (1964), and his law degree at the University of Kentucky College of Law (1967). When first elected to the U.S. Senate in 1984, he was not a household name. His office assignment was among the least desirable for freshmen senators.

Through more than two decades of persistence and what he often calls “focus,” McConnell gradually rose. By 2007, he became the Republican Leader of the Senate—a position he held until early 2025—making him the longest-serving Senate party leader in U.S. history.

Throughout his career, McConnell has emphasized one principle: “It’s not about what Kentucky and America can do for me, but what I can do for Kentucky and America.”

He often credits Louisville business leader David Jones Sr. (co-founder of Humana) for teaching him that “focus” is the most important word in the English language. That clarity shaped his work, from strengthening Kentucky’s global trade position—#1 in exports and #3 in imports—to engaging in national debates on foreign policy, economic growth, and the defense of free speech.

Di Tran: From Vietnam to Louisville

While McConnell was climbing the ladder in Washington, a young boy across the world was just beginning his own journey.

Di Tran was born in 1982 in Vietnam. In 1995—when McConnell was already serving his second term as Senator—Tran immigrated to the United States. He arrived in Louisville at age 13 with no English skills and few resources. For him, Louisville was both a challenge and a promise.

Over the years, Tran worked hard to learn, study, and build a life. He eventually became a software architect, one of the top three principal engineers at Humana—the company co-founded by the same David Jones Sr. who had influenced Senator McConnell. Later, Tran shifted his focus toward education and service, founding the Louisville Beauty Academy.

In less than a decade, the Academy has helped nearly 2,000 students become licensed professionals, contributing to Kentucky’s economy. Its model is built not only on training, but also on service: students provide free care for the elderly, the homeless, and local nonprofits while earning both volunteer hours and licensing credit.

September 2025: Recognition and Reflection

This September, Louisville Beauty Academy was honored nationally—an historic milestone as the first beauty school in the U.S. to receive two national recognitions in one year:

  • NSBA Advocate of the Year Finalist (link)
  • U.S. Chamber of Commerce CO—100 Honoree (link)

These honors lifted Louisville and Kentucky into the national spotlight for innovation in workforce development. For Tran, however, the true meaning lies not in recognition, but in service to community and state.

Earlier this year, he visited Washington, D.C., where he and his team met with Senator McConnell’s staff. To meet Senator McConnell again in Louisville, this time at the Rotary Club, was a humbling full-circle moment.

Two Journeys, One Foundation: Service and Kentucky Pride

Though born four decades apart and on opposite sides of the world, Mitch McConnell and Di Tran share a foundation: focus, perseverance, and service to Kentucky.

  • McConnell’s timeline: Rising from obscurity in the Senate to national leadership.
  • Tran’s timeline: Arriving in Louisville in 1995 with no English, slowly building a life of education and community service.

Both lives remind us that leadership is not about where one begins, but about how one serves.

Reflecting on the meeting, Tran shared:

“To sit and listen to Senator McConnell is a dream come true. His life shows that leadership is not about titles but about service, focus, and perseverance. I am proud to be an American, proud to be a Kentuckian, and proud to be a Louisvillian. Like him, I hope to always ask not what Kentucky and America can do for me, but what I can do for Kentucky and America.”

Louisville: A City of Leaders

Louisville has long produced leaders with national impact—Senator McConnell, business builder David Jones Sr., and many others. Today, standing in that same proud tradition, Di Tran represents the immigrant story: a life of humility, perseverance, and service.

At the Rotary Club of Louisville, the paths of two Kentuckians—one a Senate giant, the other an emerging servant-leader—crossed in a moment that captured the spirit of the city: focus, gratitude, and pride in Kentucky’s promise.

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Di Tran Brings Kentucky’s Voice to Washington: Louisville Beauty Academy Founder Named NSBA 2025 Advocate Finalist

Louisville, KY / Washington, D.C. — The New American Business Association (NABA) and Louisville Beauty Academy (LBA) announce that Di Tran, founder of both organizations, has been named a 2025 finalist for the National Small Business Association’s (NSBA) Lew Shattuck Small Business Advocate of the Year Award. As the Kentucky finalist, Tran joins a select group of national small-business leaders in Washington to advance practical, nonpartisan solutions for Main Street.

“This honor belongs to our students, graduates, and every small business that keeps America working,” Tran said. “We’re here to champion outcomes—training that leads to licenses, jobs, and new businesses—without unnecessary debt.”


Who is NSBA?

Founded in 1937, the National Small Business Association is the nation’s original, proudly nonpartisan small-business advocacy organization. NSBA represents 65,000+ members across all 50 states and speaks for the 70 million owners and employees who power the U.S. economy. NSBA is known for winning access-to-capital reforms, stopping unfair tax penalties, and rolling back harmful regulations—guided by respected Economic Reports and targeted member surveys.

Leadership (select): Todd McCracken (President & CEO), Molly Brogan Day (SVP, Public Affairs), Reed Westcott (Gov. Affairs & Federal Policy), Rachel Grey (Research & Regulatory Policy), Jack Furth (Gov. Affairs), Son Thach (Sr. Director, Operations), Ian Elsenbach (Director, Leadership Council).


About the Award

NSBA’s Lew Shattuck Small Business Advocate of the Year honors citizen-leaders who sustain credible, effective advocacy. Finalists are recognized at NSBA’s Washington Presentation—a two-day program including a White House policy briefing, Congressional Breakfast, issue briefings, and Capitol Hill meetings with Senators and Representatives. (NSBA does not publicly disclose the number of applicants.)


Di Tran & Louisville Beauty Academy: From Local Impact to National Voice

An immigrant entrepreneur, educator, and author of 120+ books, Di Tran founded Louisville Beauty Academy to create fast, affordable, ethical pathways into high-demand beauty careers. In five+ years, LBA has:

  • Helped ~2,000 students complete training and obtain state licenses
  • Seeded dozens of salons and micro-businesses, generating an estimated $20–50M in annual economic activity
  • Run lean, discount-first, debt-averse programs that keep students working and learning—without relying on Title IV
  • Embedded technology and AI-assisted workflows to streamline instruction, compliance, and student support

Tran’s policy focus—developed with education partner Anthony Bieda—is simple and powerful: pay for outcomes, not enrollment. Under this approach, federal support would reimburse after students graduate, earn a license, and secure employment. The model expands access to short, job-ready programs (often <600 hours), reduces taxpayer waste, and aligns schools, lenders, families, and students around one goal: results.


Why It Matters—For Kentucky and the Vietnamese-American Community

  • Workforce now: Short programs (e.g., nails, esthetics) place graduates into jobs quickly—meeting real salon demand.
  • Small-business growth: LBA alumni open shops, hire neighbors, and revitalize corridors—Main Street first.
  • Smart funding: Outcome-based aid protects taxpayers and rewards schools that deliver licenses + jobs.
  • Representation: A Kentucky and Vietnamese-American founder standing alongside national peers shows how immigrant entrepreneurship strengthens the U.S. economy.

Two Days in Washington: Advocacy in Action

At NSBA’s Washington Presentation, Tran and Bieda joined policy briefings at the White House (Eisenhower Executive Office Building), heard from Members of Congress during the Congressional Breakfast, and met with Senate and House offices on Capitol Hill to elevate outcome-based training, short-program recognition, and practical small-business reforms.


What’s Next

  • NABA will convene employers, schools, lenders, and policymakers to pilot pay-for-outcome pathways.
  • LBA will continue scaling debt-averse, license-first training that feeds Kentucky’s small-business pipeline.
  • Lawmakers are invited to review NABA/LBA’s model and meet graduates—new taxpayers and future employers.

Contact (Media & Policy):
NABA — di@naba4u.org | naba4u.org
Louisville Beauty Academy — study@louisvillebeautyacademy.net | louisvillebeautyacademy.net

“We’re not walking—we’re running to graduate more licensed professionals debt-free and to make federal policy reward real outcomes,” Tran said. “That’s good for students, small businesses, and America.”

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