Linda McMahon Steps Down as Head of Small Business Administration, Joining Trump Campaign

Emel Akan
By Emel Akan
March 30, 2019Politics
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Linda McMahon Steps Down as Head of Small Business Administration, Joining Trump Campaign
Administrator of the Small Business Administration Linda McMahon speaks as President Donald Trump listens during the inaugural meeting of the Presidents National Council for the American Worker in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Wash., DC, on September 17, 2018. (Oliver Contreras-Pool/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON—President Donald Trump announced on Mar. 29 that Linda McMahon would step down as the head of the Small Business Administration (SBA) and join his re-election effort.

Speaking at a press conference with McMahon at Mar-a-Lago, Trump praised the administrator, saying, “I knew she was good, but I didn’t know she was that good. She has been one of our all-time favorites.”

“And she’ll be leaving. She’s going to go and help us with a very, very important year and a half that we have coming up. And—the reelection, as they call it. And we look forward to that.”

Trump also said that the new SBA head would be announced in the “very near future.”

“Somebody that’s really good. Somebody that we know very well, somebody that will fit in beautifully.”

McMahon and her husband, Vince McMahon, were close friends with Trump and backed his presidential run in 2016. According to a Wall Street Journal report, Linda McMahon was a top donor to Trump’s election campaign, donating $6 million to a super PAC. According to the same report, the White House advisers considered McMahon as a “secret weapon” for the election campaign who could help promote Trump’s pro-business policies around the country.

A few months ago, McMahon was discussed to be a leading contender to replace Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

“It has been an honor to serve the country in your Cabinet, and to serve the administration and the people of the United States and small businesses,” McMahon said during the press conference, calling the SBA workers “awesome.”

‘Walk the Walk, Talk the Talk’

During an interview with The Epoch Times in January 2018, McMahon said Trump had selected her as Administrator because he wanted someone “who’s actually built a business, who can walk the walk and talk the talk.”

When she came to the office, she said one of her first objectives, as the Administrator was to promote SBA’s offerings throughout the country.

“My goal for SBA, first and foremost, is to make sure that it is not the best-kept secret in the country,” McMahon said.

The SBA supports small businesses by providing guarantees for bank loans. It also provides counseling, training, and mentorship programs throughout the country, which are mostly free but are not very well known.

To better promote the agency both outside and within the government, she and her team rolled out a marketing campaign in 2017 called “SBA Reimagined,” with new marketing messages. She also toured the country, visited SBA’s 68 district offices, and met with more than 800 business owners.

During a hearing held by the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship in February this year, McMahon said that she improved the SBA’s loan processing times.

“By the end of 2018, through better procedures and electronic processing, we were able to reduce our loan processing times by half,” she said. With the help of the new system, the SBA can now process small loans within two to three days and regular loans within seven days.

Small businesses comprise 99 percent of businesses in the country, employing about half of  American workers. Nationwide, SBA loan programs provided more than $30 billion to U.S. small businesses in the 2018 fiscal year.

Response to Hurricanes

At the hearing, McMahon received praise from both Republicans and Democrats for the agency’s work, particularly in responding to natural disasters.

The ranking member of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) touted McMahon’s efforts after the recent tragedies in Maryland.

“Your people were on the ground literally when the waters were still flooding,” Cardin said. “You were there immediately and provided tremendous assistance.”

Trump also touted McMahon and SBA workers for their efforts in helping small businesses that are hit by disasters.

“I’ve watched Linda and her people, the great job they’ve done helping people that really needed help,” he said. “And you have just been outstanding. … We’re very, very thrilled at the great job you’ve done and at the job you’re going to be doing. We’re staying together.”

McMahon is co-founder and former CEO of World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). She, along with her husband founded the sports entertainment company in 1980 where she worked as the president and later CEO.

She stepped down as CEO of WWE in 2009 to run for Senate in Connecticut but lost to Democratic Party nominee Richard Blumenthal. She ran again for Connecticut’s other seat in the 2012 race but lost to Democratic Representative Chris Murphy.

During a speech at the National Press Club last year, McMahon said that she went through bankruptcy before founding WWE, which was a tough experience early in her career.

“Our house was auctioned off, my car was repossessed in the driveway. I was pregnant with our second child,” she said.

She and her husband came out of bankruptcy and turned their small business into a global company with a current market valuation of nearly $6.7 billion.

From The Epoch Times

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