United States Administrator of the Small Business Administration Kelly Loeffler said President Donald Trump’s economic agenda has reversed what she described as a prolonged “war on Main Street,” delivering measurable gains for small businesses, manufacturers, and working families across the country.
Speaking about her recent travels and meetings with business owners, Loeffler credited Trump’s tax cuts, tariffs, and deregulation for driving record confidence and expansion among small businesses and manufacturers, outcomes she said have gone largely ignored by national media coverage.
“But under your leadership, you’ve ended at least eight wars, okay, but the probably the most important and under reported war that this President ended was Joe Biden and the Democrats, war on Main Street and hard working families,” Loeffler said.
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Loeffler said she has visited 10 states in recent weeks, meeting with families, farmers, and small business owners who expressed gratitude for the administration’s policies.
She recalled similar feedback during appearances in Iowa and Ohio alongside Vice President J.D. Vance.
“I was out with our great Vice President last week in Toledo, Ohio. They are thanking this administration for getting Main Street back,” she said.
According to Loeffler, Trump’s tax policy has been a central driver of economic momentum, particularly for small and mid-sized employers.
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She cited provisions such as accelerated expensing for domestic manufacturing, pass-through tax relief, expanded child tax credits, and increased standard deductions as tangible benefits reaching working families.
“The Trump tax cuts, the tariffs, deregulation, it’s all rocket fuel for hard working families in main streets,” Loeffler said.
She pointed to record-setting indicators as evidence of the impact. Loeffler said small business confidence reached an all-time high following the Trump tax cuts, while total small business formation has climbed to 36 million nationwide.
She also highlighted a record $100 billion distributed through the Small Business Administration, which she attributed to renewed investor confidence.
“All Time. Small business confidence hit a record under this president last year after the Trump tax cuts,” she said.
“All Time. Small business formation now at 36 million small businesses and a record 100 billion dollars out from SBA.”
Loeffler also emphasized growth in domestic manufacturing, citing Prince Manufacturing in Macon, Georgia, which currently employs about 500 workers producing parts for defense, agriculture, automotive, and aerospace industries.
“They’re going to hire 500 more people this year because of tariffs, because of the Trump tax cuts, and because of SBA lending,” she said.
She noted that small businesses make up the backbone of American manufacturing, accounting for 98 percent of manufacturers nationwide.
Loeffler said workforce shortages remain the primary challenge, prompting coordination across the administration to expand skills training and labor pipelines.
“The number one problem is they need skilled workers,” Loeffler said.
“This is something I’m working on with Secretary Chavez de Riemer.”
Looking ahead, Loeffler predicted sustained economic expansion, forecasting growth levels not seen in decades. She said falling interest rates and continued deregulation would further reduce costs for employers.
“The $18 trillion you brought in is creating an economic boom like none we’ve ever seen before,” she said.
“We are going to have 7% GDP growth.”
Loeffler concluded by urging Americans to recognize which policies produced recent gains, particularly as tax refunds reach households.
“Thanks to President Trump, your leadership, we are seeing Main Street boom, hard working families have $1,000 already in their pockets,” she said, adding that Democrats opposed those tax benefits.
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