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Jobs And The Economy
Spur job creation. Grow our economy.
More taxation, regulation, and litigation will not create more jobs. Government takeovers of the economy have failed while the size and the scope of the federal government has exploded. Washington has tied the hands of small business owners and job creators with onerous regulations and backward fiscal policies that have stalled the economy, slowed innovation and destroyed jobs. We need common sense, pro-growth policies to give small businesses and entrepreneurs renewed confidence in our economy and to remove Washington as the roadblock to job creation.
Nevada and America are at a crossroads and I am committed to taking every possible step to spur job creation and get our economy back on track so that Americans can do what they do best: create, innovate and lead. Our governing agenda is focused on job creation and economic growth. It will address our economic challenges, foster innovation and investment, and help job creators without raising taxes on working families and small business owners.
End job-killing policies
Nevadans don't want more of a political agenda. They want policies that bring real job creation.
The first step toward recovery is admitting that you have a problem. The administration needs to admit that its policies of record spending, uncontrolled debt, excessive regulations, and the threat of higher taxes are not the solution. They are the problem.
Our country now ranks 13th in the world for 'ease of starting a business' according to a World Bank report. In 2007, we ranked third. Stymieing entrepreneurship is not going to get people back to work.
So far this year, the House has passed numerous pieces of legislation to liberate job creators from the destructive polices of the administration, including a bill I co-sponsored, H.R. 26, the Regulations from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny (REINS) Act of 2017.
Background on H.R. 10, the Financial CHOICE Act of 2017:
Reins in the unchecked authority of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)
- Brings CFPB under the authority of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
- Subjects the CFPB to appropriations
- Allows the director to be removed at will for any reason by the President
Ends Taxpayer-funded bail outs
- Repeals the Dodd-Frank established authority for the Treasury to use tax payer dollars to bail out wall street and big banks.
- Replaces this with a new chapter of the Bankruptcy code which is structured to meet the needs of large financial institutions
Increases penalties for Wall Street bad actors and looks out for the average investor
- Allows the SEC to triple its fines in administrative and civil litigation
- Allows SEC to fine the ill-gained profits from fraud
- SEC will be allowed to return the penalties to the victims instead of only to the Treasury
- Allows SEC to charge fines commiserate with the size of consumer loss instead of one set fine for all
Increases access to capital
- Includes about 20 bills already passed through the House which make access to capital easier particularly for start-ups (H.R. 79, the Helping Angels Lead Our Start Ups Act is one of those bills).
Uplifts Community Banks and Credit Unions
- Allows small banks and CUs to appeal bank exam decisions to an independent 3rd party
- Carves small banks and CUs out of qualified mortgage rules