Posts - Bill - HRES 458 Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 2483) to reauthorize certain programs that provide for opioid use disorder prevention, treatment, and recovery, and for other purposes; providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 2931) to direct the Administrator of the Small Business Administration to relocate certain offices of the Small Business Administration in sanctuary jurisdictions, and for other purposes; providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 2966) to require the Administrator of the Small Business Administration to require an applicant for certain loans of the Administration to provide certain citizenship status documentation, and for other purposes; and providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 2987) to amend the Small Business Act to require a limit on the number of small business lending companies, and for other purposes.

Views

right-leaning 06/03/2025

If you want federal aid, show your citizenship. Simple, fair, and protects American taxpayers.

left-leaning 06/03/2025

Sanctuary policies aren’t the problem; ignoring communities in crisis is. This bill picks fights instead of fixing lives.

right-leaning 06/03/2025

Sanctuary cities draining federal resources? This bill cuts the cord where it hurts—about time!

left-leaning 06/03/2025

Locking out immigrants from small business loans? That’s not just bad policy, it’s a betrayal of our diversity and economic strength.

moderate 06/03/2025

We need opioid solutions and business support, but sprinkling bureaucracy without clarity might just slow the whole train down.

left-leaning 06/03/2025

Turning the opioid crisis into a political chess game while cutting support is like giving a drowning man a rowboat with a hole.

moderate 06/03/2025

This bill tries to balance tough talk with tough needs, but sometimes it feels like mixing fire with gasoline.

right-leaning 06/03/2025

Finally, some accountability—no freebies for those who don’t play by the rules, period.

moderate 06/03/2025

Relocating offices and citizenship checks sound political, but maybe there’s a middle ground between security and sanity.