Recent days have brought significant attention to the role and actions of the Administrator of the Small Business Administration. It is important to clarify for listeners that Linda McMahon is not currently serving as the Administrator of the Small Business Administration. As reported by Paul Hastings, Kelly Loeffler has held the position since February 2025. Linda McMahon transitioned to become the Secretary of Education in March 2025.
While listeners may remember Linda McMahon for her earlier tenure at the SBA, current headlines focus on actions undertaken by Kelly Loeffler as Administrator and key policy decisions impacting America's small businesses amid the historic federal government shutdown. The shutdown has resulted in major disruptions for small businesses according to The Daily Herald and AOL, with reports of decreased revenue, widespread layoffs, and difficulties accessing federal assistance programs. The SBA has worked to maintain support channels, announcing on November 6th that applications for disaster loans remain available online through the MySBA Loan Portal and disaster customer service phone lines, as highlighted in the Federal Register.
A major development involves the Treasury Department's announcement of a sweeping, department-wide review of preference-based contracting programs, including those administered under the SBA's 8(a) Business Development Program. Several multimillion-dollar task orders were terminated over allegations of misuse, leading Treasury to order audits totaling nine billion dollars in contract awards. This signals greater scrutiny over small-business set-aside awards and the relationships between small businesses and larger contractors, as noted by Sidley. Both large and small contractors are advised to review their compliance and subcontracting practices to avoid enforcement actions.
Changes brought by emergency government directives have also affected food assistance programs closely linked with SBA support for small grocers and suppliers. As the Trump administration asked the Supreme Court to block orders requiring full November payments for SNAP benefits, federal courts weighed the harm caused to millions of Americans—and many state officials have called the reversal of benefit issuances nearly impossible and potentially illegal. Stakeholders argue the shutdown’s effects highlight critical gaps in federal support systems relied upon by millions of workers, entrepreneurs, and families.
For listeners specifically interested in Linda McMahon, she has recently made headlines as Secretary of Education, declaring in November that the ongoing shutdown proves the Department of Education is unnecessary, sparking debate about agency consolidation and education priorities according to The Center Square and AOL.
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