Senate confirms Kelly Loeffler, former Georgia senator, to lead Small 
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		 [February 20, 2025]  By 
		MEG KINNARD 
						
		WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Senate on Wednesday confirmed Kelly Loeffler, 
		a Georgia businesswoman and former senator, to lead the Small Business 
		Administration, returning a stalwart supporter of President Donald Trump 
		to Washington. 
		 
		At SBA, Loeffler will oversee the entity that describes itself as the 
		only Cabinet-level federal agency "fully dedicated to small business” by 
		providing “counseling, capital, and contracting expertise as the 
		nation’s only go-to resource and voice for small businesses.” Typically, 
		the agency — which was founded in 1953 — offers Economic Injury Disaster 
		Loans to help meet working capital needs caused by a disaster, loans 
		that can be used to pay fixed debts, payroll, accounts payable and other 
		expenses that would have been met if not for the disaster. 
		 
		The Senate confirmed Loeffler on a 52-46 vote. 
		 
		Loeffler, who co-chaired Trump's second inaugural committee, served 
		briefly in the U.S. Senate in the final year of the president's first 
		term. Appointing her to the Senate to fill out the term of Johnny 
		Isakson, Georgia GOP Gov. Brian Kemp touted Loeffler as a successor in 
		the Republican's moderate mold. But facing an immediate reelection 
		campaign in 2020, Loeffler hewed closely to Trump to stave off 
		challengers from her right flank, characterizing herself as “more 
		conservative than Attila the Hun.” 
		 
		She and fellow Republican incumbent David Perdue, another Trump ally, 
		advanced to the January 2021 runoffs following a November election in 
		which Biden narrowly beat Trump in Georgia. Trump infamously pressured 
		Republican Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to “find” 
		enough votes to flip the results, then blasted Raffensperger and Kemp 
		for not helping overturn the election. 
		 
		
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              Loeffler called for Raffensperger’s 
			resignation after he certified Biden’s victory in the state. 
			 
			With Loeffler, Perdue and Trump casting doubts on Georgia’s election 
			system, and with Trump not on the January runoff ballot, GOP turnout 
			dipped, resulting in Loeffler’s defeat to Raphael Warnock and 
			Perdue’s loss to Jon Ossoff, one day before Trump supporters 
			ransacked the U.S. Capitol in the Jan. 6 riots. 
			 
			The Republican losses in Georgia gave Democrats control of the 
			Senate by the slimmest of margins. Trump won Georgia in last year's 
			election, and Loeffler's home state continues to be critical for the 
			fortunes of both the president and his party nationally. 
			 
			Since her loss to Warnock, Loeffler started a conservative voter 
			registration organization and dove into GOP fundraising, becoming 
			one of the top individual donors and bundlers to Trump’s 2024 
			comeback campaign. 
			 
			Loeffler's confirmation also adds another Cabinet member of 
			significant wealth to the billionaire president's second 
			administration. Loeffler — a former WNBA owner and executive who 
			during her brief stint on Capitol Hill was the Senate's wealthiest 
			member — is married to Jeffrey Sprecher, CEO of Intercontinental 
			Exchange, the publicly traded firm that owns the New York Stock 
			Exchange. 
			
			
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