November 21, 2024
EXCLUSIVE — A Missouri House Republican is pushing for the Small Business Administration to reach out to rural communities in the United States in legislation set to be unveiled Wednesday. Rep. Mark Alford (R-MO) will introduce the Rural Innovation and Small Business Support Act, shared first with the Washington Examiner, that seeks to enhance the […]

EXCLUSIVE — A Missouri House Republican is pushing for the Small Business Administration to reach out to rural communities in the United States in legislation set to be unveiled Wednesday.

Rep. Mark Alford (R-MO) will introduce the Rural Innovation and Small Business Support Act, shared first with the Washington Examiner, that seeks to enhance the outreach of federal agencies to rural communities for key initiatives such as the Small Business Innovation or Small Business Technology programs.

“Small businesses and entrepreneurship are the fabric of America,” Alford said. “Too often, the opportunities to contract with the federal government are limited to coastal cities. The Rural Innovation and Small Business Support Act will force the government to include rural Americans in key SBIR and STTR programs.”

This is the latest step House Republicans have taken to regulate or improve the SBA since taking the majority. The GOP has been hyper-focused on the agency’s voter participation partnerships with key swing states such as Michigan.

The inquiries have led Republicans to grill election officials over voter integrity and whether the SBA is working on behalf of the Biden-Harris administration to keep states such as Michigan under Democratic control, particularly when President Joe Biden was still the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

Republican leaders from both the House and Senate Small Business committees have threatened to subpoena key SBA officials over the agreement with Michigan, calling it “politically motivated.”

Biden trailed former President Donald Trump by 3 percentage points according to an Emerson College poll released on the same day Congressional Republicans threatened a subpoena and just three days before Biden dropped out. Now, Vice President Kamala Harris holds a slight lead over Trump, 48% to 45%, per a USA Today/Suffolk University poll released Tuesday.

 

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