Obama Broken Campaign Promise Celebrates Second Anniversary

Press Release

Obama Broken Campaign Promise Celebrates Second Anniversary

February 24, 2010

It has now been two years since President Barack Obama released the statement, "It is time to end the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants." To date, President Obama has refused to adopt any policy or support legislation to stem the flow of billions of dollars in federal small business funds to large businesses around the world. http://www.barackobama.com/2008/02/26/the_american_small_business_le.php

President Obama's February 26, 2008 campaign promise was made in response to a series of federal investigations, which found that every month billions of dollars in federal contracts that have been earmarked for small businesses have been diverted to Fortune 500 corporations and other large businesses. https://www.asbl.com/documentlibrary.html

Investigations by the Government Accountability Office (GAO), Small Business Administration (SBA) Office of Inspector General (IG), SBA Office of Advocacy, and Inspector General's from various agencies such as the Department of the Interior (DOI), have found that federal small business funds have been diverted to Fortune 500 firms in the United States and even some of the largest companies in Europe and Asia.

The American Small Business League (ASBL) projects that since President Obama took office approximately $10 billion a month in federal small business contracts have been diverted to large businesses.

The most recent data released by the Obama Administration found Textron Inc. as the largest recipient of federal small business contracts. Textron is a Fortune 500 firm with 43,000 employees and annual sales over $14 billion. Textron received approximately $775 million in federal small business contracts in a single year. https://www.asbl.com/documents/20090825TopSmallBusinessContractors2008.pdf

Other firms receiving federal small business contracts from the Obama Administration included Xerox, General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon, Northrop Grumman, British Aerospace (BAE), Ssangyong Corporation headquartered in Seoul, South Korea and Finmeccanica SpA, which is located in Italy with 73,000 employees. https://www.asbl.com/documents/20091202GeneralDynamics_Created_20091027.pdf https://www.asbl.com/documents/20091202Xerox_Created_20091002.pdf

In 2005, the SBA IG referred to the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants as, "One of the most important challenges facing the Small Business Administration and the entire Federal government today." For the last five consecutive years the SBA IG has reported these rampant abuses as the #1 management challenge facing the SBA. https://www.asbl.com/documents/05-15.pdf

The ASBL has written legislation designed to halt the flow of small business contracts to large corporations. H.R. 2568, the Fairness and Transparency in Contracting Act currently has bipartisan support from 20 co-sponsors. ASBL believes that H.R. 2568 would create more jobs and direct more federal infrastructure spending to the middle class than anything that has been proposed by the Obama Administration to date.

Obama's Exemption from Capital Gains Tax Will Benefit Investors More than Small Businesses

Press Release

Obama's Exemption from Capital Gains Tax Will Benefit Investors More than Small Businesses

February 12, 2010

President Barack Obama has stated he will back an exemption from capital gains tax for small businesses. He has also stated he will support an exemption from capital gains tax on investments in small business.

You can be sure any exemption from capital gains tax for small businesses or for investments in small businesses will be written to benefit the wealthy venture capitalists that backed his campaign, as opposed to struggling small businesses.

Currently, the average small business owner only needs to pay capital gains tax when they sell their business. That said, how is an exemption from capital gains tax going to create jobs? The answer is, it won't.

An exemption from capital gains tax on, "investments in small businesses," would be a huge benefit for the venture capitalists that have contributed millions of dollars to President Obama's campaign. That is why he has appointed several prominent venture capitalists, like Small Business Administration (SBA) Administrator Karen Mills, to key government positions.

The National Venture Capital Association (NVCA) and its members have been lobbying for an exemption from capital gains tax for years.

The NVCA and its members have contributed millions of dollars to President Obama and key leaders in Congress. They have consistently lobbied for a two-phase change in federal law that will allow them to participate, and conceivably dominate, the government's $150 billion a year small business contracting programs.

Phase one for venture capitalists is to push legislation that will change the 57-year-old definition of a small business in the Small Business Act as being "independently owned." Venture capitalists want the definition changed to include firms that are majority owned or controlled by investors. They have been successful in having bills introduced into to Congress, H.R. 3567 and H.R. 2965, with that goal in mind.

Phase two is the exemption from capital gains tax "ON INVESTMENTS IN SMALL BUSINESS." With the capital gains tax exemption in place, wealthy investors will be able to start or inexpensively acquire small businesses. Their well-financed pseudo-small businesses will be able to easily take on legitimate small businesses competing for federal small business contracts.

When the profits are withdrawn from a successful enterprise, it will be in the form of tax-free capital gains.

Billions of dollars a year in federal contracts earmarked for small businesses will be diverted to firms owned or controlled by some of the nation's wealthiest investors. Thousands of legitimate small business will be forced to close their doors and countless jobs will be lost.

I don't think President Obama gives a damn about small businesses. If you look at what he actually does about issues facing small businesses, he appears to be anti-small business. Small businesses create over 97 percent of all net new jobs in America, and yet the Obama Administration allocated only 2 percent of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funds to small businesses.

Need more proof that Obama is anti-small business?

Since 2003, twenty-five federal investigations have found billions of dollars a month in federal small business contracts are diverted to Fortune 500 firms. During his campaign, President Obama promised to end these rampant abuses. In February of 2008, he released the statement, "It is time to end the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants." (http://www.barackobama.com/2008/02/26/the_american_small_business_le.php)

To date, President Obama has failed to honor his promise. The most recent government contracting data shows the Obama Administration itself has diverted billions of dollars in federal small business contracts to Fortune 500 firms. I would imagine 100 percent of middle class Americans would agree that firms like Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Bechtel, Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics should not be receiving federal small business contracts.

If President Obama were sincerely interested in helping small businesses, he would back legislation or issue an executive order halting the diversion of over $100 billion a year in federal small business contracts to corporate giants.

Look at the facts.

President Obama has allocated only 2 percent of his administration's stimulus funds to small businesses. Every day of the Obama Administration hundreds of millions of dollars in federal small business contracts have been diverted to corporate giants. Does that sound like a pro-small business President to you?

My predictions.

President Obama will continue to read speeches about helping small businesses while continuing to divert over $400 million a day in federal small business funds to some of the largest companies in the world. He will back an exemption form capital gains tax on "investments" in small businesses, which will be written to benefit his billionaire venture capitalist buddies. The scariest prediction is that President Obama will bankrupt thousands of legitimate American small businesses by backing a change in the federal definition of a small business as being "independently owned" to include firms that are actually owned or controlled by some of the wealthiest investors in the country.

Finally, the most frightening thing about all of this is that President Obama will get away with everything because the mainstream media has refused to cover it.

Justice Department Pays Legal Fees To American Small Business League

Press Release

Justice Department Pays Legal Fees To American Small Business League

February 9, 2010

Petaluma, Calif. – The U.S. Department of Justice has been forced to pay the legal fees incurred by the American Small Business League (ASBL), after the ASBL substantially prevailed in a recent court case under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).  The ASBL sued the Small Business Administration (SBA) after the agency refused to release the names of Fortune 500 firms and other large businesses that had received billions of dollars in federal small business contracts. 

During the course of litigation, the SBA tried to claim that it had no information regarding the specific names of firms that had received federal small business contracts.

In the court's ruling, United States District Judge Marilyn H. Patel ruled in favor of the ASBL and stated, "The court finds it curious the SBA's argument that it does not 'control' the very information it needs to carry out its duties and functions." (www.asbl.com/documents/26-2.pdf)  

The information the ASBL obtained through the litigation supported its assertion that billions of dollars a month in federal contracts earmarked for small businesses had been diverted to Fortune 500 firms such as: General Dynamics, Xerox, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, British Aerospace (BAE), Dell Computer and French giant Thales Communications. (https://www.asbl.com/documents/20090825TopSmallBusinessContractors2008.pdf)   

Previously, the SBA claimed that it was a “myth” that large firms received federal small business contracts. (https://www.asbl.com/documents/sbamythvfact.pdf)  

This spring, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals will hear another case between the SBA and the ASBL in which the SBA is claiming that it does not have access to its own phone records.  The ASBL requested the information under FOIA after several journalists complained that the SBA was aggressively contacting the media in an attempt to erode the credibility of the ASBL and its president, Lloyd Chapman.

The ASBL is preparing to file up to 10 federal lawsuits against the Obama Administration within the next 60 days.  The Obama Administration is refusing to release a wide variety of data related to small business contracting issues such as: contracting officer information, phone records, the specific names of individuals within Fortune 500 firms that have claimed small business status, and the names of domestic and foreign owned companies that received federal small business contracts.

"I think it is time for someone in the media to ask President Obama why his administration is giving small business contracts to Fortune 500 firms and then refusing to release the data that proves it,” Chapman said.

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Please click here to watch a short message from ASBL President Lloyd Chapman regarding the ASBL's legal victory: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eAyBEddowdE   

Small business advocacy group prevails in lawsuit against SBA

News

Small business advocacy group prevails in lawsuit against SBA

By Doug Caldwell
Central Valley Business Times
February 9, 2010

•  SBA pays $14,282.90 to American Small Business League

•  ASBL had sued to get information released

The Small Business Administration has paid $14,282.90 to the American Small Business League of Petaluma to compensate it for its legal fees in a recent lawsuit where the business advocacy group prevailed.

The ASBL sued the SBA after the agency refused to release the names of Fortune 500 firms and other large businesses that had received “billions of dollars in federal small business contracts,” ASBL says.

The SBA argued that it had no information regarding the specific names of firms that had received federal small business contracts. But U.S. District Court Judge Marilyn Patel, ruling in favor of ASBL, said, “The court finds it curious the SBA's argument that it does not 'control' the very information it needs to carry out its duties and functions."

ASBL says the information it pried out of the SBA through the lawsuit shows that “billions of dollars a month” in federal contracts supposedly meant for small businesses “had been diverted to Fortune 500 firms such as General Dynamics, Xerox, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, British Aerospace (BAE), Dell Computer and French giant Thales Communications.”

“I think it is time for someone in the media to ask President Obama why his administration is giving small business contracts to Fortune 500 firms and then refusing to release the data that proves it,” says ASBL President Lloyd Chapman.

The ASBL is preparing to file up to 10 federal lawsuits against the Obama Administration within the next 60 days, says Mr. Chapman. He says the Obama Administration is refusing to release a wide variety of data related to small business contracting issues such as contracting officer information, phone records, the specific names of individuals within Fortune 500 firms that have claimed small business status, and the names of domestic and foreign owned companies that received federal small business contracts.

 Source:  http://www.centralvalleybusinesstimes.com/stories/001/?ID=14345