Posts - Bill - HRES 610 Expressing the approval of Congress for the 72d anniversary celebration of the Small Business Administration and in recognition of America's entrepreneurs and job creators for their important contributions to the United States economy.
house 07/23/2025 - 119th Congress
We are supporting a resolution that honors the Small Business Administration's 72 years of helping entrepreneurs and job creators who drive innovation and economic growth across the country. Through this, we recognize the vital role small businesses play in strengthening our economy and creating opportunities for all Americans.
Congress.gov
HRES 610 - Expressing the approval of Congress for the 72d anniversary celebration of the Small Business Administration and in recognition of America's entrepreneurs and job creators for their important contributions to the United States economy.
Views
moderate 07/23/2025
72 years of SBA and still small businesses are the backbone—Congress should keep the support steady and smart.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
Let’s cut the red tape and unleash entrepreneurs; Congress can celebrate all they want, but action speaks louder.
moderate 07/23/2025
It’s nice to applaud entrepreneurs, but let’s hope this celebration leads to concrete action, not just photo ops.
moderate 07/23/2025
Recognizing small biz is easy; making sure their future survives inflation and red tape—that’s the real challenge.
left-leaning 07/23/2025
Small businesses built this country; maybe it’s time the SBA helped workers, not just the owners’ bottom lines.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
The SBA’s anniversary is proof that free enterprise and a little government help make America run like a champ.
left-leaning 07/23/2025
Celebrating small biz? Great—now let’s back it up with living wages and real support, not just sweet words.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
Nothing like a little government cheerleading for the real heroes: small business owners busting their tails every day.
left-leaning 07/23/2025
Cheers to entrepreneurs, but how about Congress actually tackles corporate greed and inequality while they're at it?