Senate Confirms Kelly Loeffler as Small Business Administration Chief in Party-Line Vote

Senate Confirms Kelly Loeffler as Small Business Administration Chief in Party-Line Vote

The U.S. Senate confirmed former Georgia Senator Kelly Loeffler as Administrator of the Small Business Administration (SBA) on February 19, 2025, cementing her return to Washington as a key ally in President Donald Trump’s second-term administration.

Confirmation Details

Loeffler secured confirmation in a 52-46 vote largely along party lines, with only one Democrat – Nevada Senator Jacky Rosen – joining Republicans to approve her nomination. Georgia Senators Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff both opposed the nomination, citing concerns about politicizing the agency.

Political Background

The 54-year-old business executive turned politician previously served 11 months in the Senate after being appointed in 2019 by Georgia Governor Brian Kemp. Her brief congressional tenure featured:

  • A “100% Trump voting record” during legislative sessions
  • Controversial opposition to certifying 2020 election results
  • High-profile clashes with WNBA players over social justice advocacy

SBA Leadership Agenda

At her confirmation hearing, Loeffler outlined three priorities for the $1.2 billion agency:

Priority Action Plan
Regulatory Reform Simplify loan applications & reduce compliance burdens
Disaster Response Accelerate Economic Injury Disaster Loan processing
Tech Modernization Implement AI-driven resource matching systems

Senate Small Business Committee Chair Joni Ernst (R-IA) praised Loeffler’s “real-world business experience,” referencing her previous role as CEO of financial platform Bakkt. Critics including Senator Ben Cardin (D-MD) expressed concerns about her partisan history influencing agency operations.

Georgia Political Implications

The confirmation maintains Georgia’s outsized influence in federal policymaking. Loeffler becomes the fourth Georgian currently serving in a cabinet-level position, joining Agriculture Secretary Austin Scott and EPA Administrator Rick Allen.

“This isn’t just a win for small businesses – it’s a victory for Georgia values,” said state GOP Chair Josh McKoon in a statement following the vote.

Loeffler is expected to be sworn in immediately and will oversee the SBA’s 3,000 employees managing $40 billion in active loan guarantees. Her appointment signals tighter alignment between the agency and White House priorities as Trump pushes tax cuts for small businesses.


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