US President-elect Donald Trump is appointing former Senator Kelly Loeffler to head the Small Business Administration

US President-elect Donald Trump is appointing former Senator Kelly Loeffler to head the Small Business Administration

US President-elect Donald Trump is appointing former Senator Kelly Loeffler to head the Small Business Administration

Elected US President Donald Trump voted for the former senator on Wednesday Kelly Loeffler who lead Small business management.
“I am pleased to appoint business leader and former U.S. Senator Kelly Loeffler of Georgia as Administrator of the Small Business Administration (SBA). Small businesses are the backbone of our great economy,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

Trump Social Truth post

“Kelly will bring her experience in business and Washington to cut red tape and empower our small businesses to grow, innovate and thrive. “She will focus on ensuring the SBA is accountable to taxpayers by cracking down on waste, fraud and regulatory overreach,” he added, also noting that she is the co-chair of his inauguration.
Trump praised Kelly, saying she worked tirelessly for four years to help restore election integrity, diverse outreach and voter registration in Georgia through her nonprofit Greater Georgia. In addition to SBA Administrator, she was named co-chair of the Presidential Inaugural Committee.

Kelly was also named co-chair of the Presidential Inauguration Committee

Loeffler, who represented Georgia in the Senate for a year, had been fundraising for Trump during the 2024 campaign and raised several million dollars for his campaign over the summer when she hosted a debate-watching party with Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley, CNN reported.

Who is Kelly Loeffler?

Loeffler was born on November 27, 1970 in Bloomington, Illinois and graduated from Olympia High School in Stanford, Illinois in 1988. She earned her BS from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1992, followed by an MBA from DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois in 1999.
She entered politics as a Republican as CEO of a financial company and owner of the Atlanta Dream women’s professional basketball team. She was appointed to the U.S. Senate to fill the vacancy left by the resignation of Johnny Isakson and served from January 6, 2020 to January 20, 2021, when her successor took office after winning the election.
She unsuccessfully sought election to complete the remaining term, which would have ended January 3, 2023.

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