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United States Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Standing committee of the United States Senate

Senate Small Business Committee
Standing committee
Active

United States Senate
119th Congress
History
FormedFebruary 20, 1950
Leadership
ChairJoni Ernst (R)
Since January 3, 2025
Ranking MemberEd Markey (D)
Since January 3, 2025
Structure
Seats19 members
Political partiesMajority (10)
Minority (9)
Jurisdiction
Oversight authoritySmall Business Administration
House counterpartHouse Committee on Small Business
Website
www.sbc.senate.gov

TheU.S. Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship is astanding committee of theUnited States Senate. It has jurisdiction over theSmall Business Administration and is also charged with researching and investigating all problems of Americansmall business enterprises.

History

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Special Committee to Study Problems of American Small Business

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On October 8, 1940, the Senate established theSpecial Committee to Study and Survey Problems of Small Business Enterprises (also known as theSpecial Committee to Study Problems of American Small Business).

The committee was chaired byJames E. Murray (Montana.[1]: i The other members of the special committee were:

Bertram Myron Gross was the Chief of Research and Hearings. With funding from theCarnegie Foundation of New York, he took responsibility for producingThe Fate of Small Business in Nazi Germany, written byA. R. L. Gurland,Otto Kirchheimer andFranz Neumann.[1]: iii 

On January 31, 1949, this special committee was terminated.

Select Committee on Small Business

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On February 20, 1950, theSelect Committee on Small Business was created with approval of Senate Resolution 58 during the81st Congress. That first committee had just nine members. It was the first select committee created by the Senate that still operates today.

The select committee was terminated on March 25, 1981, when it became theCommittee on Small Business, a standing committee. On June 29, 2001, Sen.John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) changed the name of the committee to the Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship.[2]

The committee's jurisdiction has been changed several times since it was first created, through additional powers or by changing the manner in which committee members are appointed. While first established as a select committee with limited responsibilities, it now possesses virtually all the characteristics of a standing committee, as outlined underSenate Rule 25.

During the96th Congress, the committee acted on legislation to reauthorize theSmall Business Administration that expanded the agency to include loan programs for employee ownership, Small Business Development Centers, and increased export development assistance for small businesses.

Since its creation, the committee has held hearings on paperwork reduction and elimination (which eventually led to thePaperwork Reduction Act), capital formation, tax and securities law reform for small business, steel plant shutdowns, and the impact of inflation on governmental actions on the housing industry.

The committee was changed from small business to Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship beginning in 1981.

Jurisdiction

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Initially, the Small Business Committee only had limited oversight over theSmall Business Administration. The committee was directed to report to the Senate from time to time with its recommendations regarding small business matters.

With the adoption of S. Res. 272 during the82nd Congress, the committee was granted subpoena power, and the ability to "sit and act at such times during the sessions, recesses, and adjourned periods of the Senate." These abilities are common to the other standing committees in the Senate. S. Res. 272 also provided for a more structured committee, with specific requirements on aquorum of members needed for the committee to conduct its business, and its own committee staff.

S. Res. 58 stipulated that beginning with the95th Congress, the Small Business Committee would be granted jurisdiction over all legislation relating to theSmall Business Administration. This ability was granted S. Res. 104, agreed to on April 29, 1976, provided for this new jurisdiction, granting not only authority over small business legislation but additional oversight over the agency as well. The committee has also been granted the right of re-referral of legislation from other standing committees, where appropriate.

Today, the jurisdiction of the committee is roughly the same as it was when it was first established, chiefly theSmall Business Administration and the Small Investment Act. However, by tradition, the committee reviews all matters that apply to small business that are not by themselves subject to the jurisdiction over another standing committee. The committee continues to study and survey by means of research and investigation all problems of American small business enterprises, with the intent to provide advice to Congress in enacting appropriate legislation. The committee also is responsible for reviewing nominations for positions within the Small Business Administration, including its Administrator, Chief Council for Advocacy, and Inspector General.

Members, 119th Congress

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Main article:119th United States Congress
Majority[3]Minority[4]

Chairs

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Select Committee on Small Business

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NamePartyStateStartEnd
John SparkmanDemocraticAlabama19501953
Edward ThyeRepublicanMinnesota19531955
John SparkmanDemocraticAlabama19551967
George SmathersDemocraticFlorida19671969
Alan BibleDemocraticNevada19691974
Gaylord NelsonDemocraticWisconsin19741981

Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship

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NamePartyStateStartEnd
Lowell WeickerRepublicanConnecticut19811987
Dale BumpersDemocraticArkansas19871995
Kit BondRepublicanMissouri19952001
John KerryDemocraticMassachusetts2001
Kit BondRepublicanMissouri2001
John KerryDemocraticMassachusetts20012003
Olympia SnoweRepublicanMaine20032007
John KerryDemocraticMassachusetts20072009
Mary LandrieuDemocraticLouisiana20092014
Maria CantwellDemocraticWashington20142015
David VitterRepublicanLouisiana20152017
Jim RischRepublicanIdaho20172019
Marco RubioRepublicanFlorida20192021
Ben CardinDemocraticMaryland20212023
Jeanne ShaheenDemocraticNew Hampshire20232025
Joni ErnstRepublicanIowa2025present

Ranking members

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This list isincomplete; you can help byadding missing items.(September 2025)
NamePartyStateStartEnd
John SparkmanDemocraticAlabama19531955
Edward ThyeRepublicanMinnesota19551959
Leverett SaltonstallRepublicanMassachusetts19591967
Jacob JavitsRepublicanNew York19671977
Lowell WeickerRepublicanConnecticut19771981
Sam NunnDemocraticGeorgia19811983
Dale BumpersDemocraticArkansas19831987
Lowell WeickerRepublicanConnecticut19871989
Rudy BoschwitzRepublicanMinnesota19891991
Bob KastenRepublicanWisconsin19911993
Larry PresslerRepublicanSouth Dakota19931995
Dale BumpersDemocraticArkansas19951997
John KerryDemocraticMassachusetts19972001
Kit BondRepublicanMissouri20012003
John KerryDemocraticMassachusetts20032007
Olympia SnoweRepublicanMaine20072013
Jim RischRepublicanIdaho20132015
Ben CardinDemocraticMaryland2015
Jeanne ShaheenDemocraticNew Hampshire20152018
Ben CardinDemocraticMaryland20182021
Rand PaulRepublicanKentucky20212023
Joni ErnstRepublicanIowa20232025
Ed MarkeyDemocraticMassachusetts2025present

Historical committee rosters

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118th Congress

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Majority[5]Minority[6]

117th Congress

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MajorityMinority

116th Congress

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MajorityMinority

115th Congress

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MajorityMinority

Source[7]

See also

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External links

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References

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  1. ^abGurland, A. R. L.; Neumann, Franz; Kirchheimer, Otto (1943).The Fate of Small Business in Nazi Germany. Washington: United States Senate Special Committee to Study Problems of American Small Business.
  2. ^"History - About - U.S. Senate Committee on Small Business & Entrepreneurship".www.sbc.senate.gov. RetrievedMay 8, 2017.
  3. ^S.Res. 16,S.Res. 26,S.Res. 38 (119th Congress)
  4. ^S.Res. 17 (119th Congress)
  5. ^S.Res. 30 (118th Congress)
  6. ^S.Res. 31 (118th Congress)
  7. ^"U.S. Senate: Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship".www.senate.gov. RetrievedJanuary 8, 2017.
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