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Senate Votes To Move Ahead On Small Business Bill

Senate Small Business Bill

JIM ABRAMS   03/21/12 03:41 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON — Legislation making it easier for small businesses to raise money survived a test vote in the Senate on Wednesday, increasing the chances it could emerge as one of the few bipartisan bills to pass Congress during this election year.

The procedural vote was to cut off debate and move the measure toward passage. Only a day earlier, the legislation that had passed the House two weeks ago by an overwhelming margin appeared in danger of dying.

Senate Democrats met late Tuesday to discuss how to proceed after Republicans succeeded in blocking Democratic amendments that would have increased protections for those investing in small businesses and startups, and extended the life of the Export-Import Bank.

The 76-22 vote to move forward sets up a vote on final passage planned for Thursday after the Senate votes on two amendments addressing aspects of investor protection. Approval of those proposals would send the bill back to the House.

President Barack Obama has expressed his support for the legislation, which would ease some federal rules so small companies and innovators could more easily attract investors and go public. But the White House has said it supported Senate Democratic efforts for adequate safeguards for potential investors in light of any reduced government oversight over investment transactions.

Senate Republicans said the legislation was a bipartisan effort to eliminate federal red tape and create jobs, and they stuck together on the test vote.

"We need to show the American people that we can do this," said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. "This bill is exactly the kind of thing Americans have been asking for, greater freedom and greater flexibility."

Democrats were split; some said they could not back the legislation because of inadequate investment protections.

"This bill would allow companies to advertise virtually unregulated stock offerings on television or on billboards," said Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich. He said the House bill would let large companies with many shareholders avoid regulation by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The head of the SEC, Mary Schapiro, has written Congress listing concerns about how the bill could open up investments to possible fraud and abuse. The chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, Rep. Spencer Bachus, R-Ala., has said the bill contains strong investor protections and that Senate Democratic objections were part of a "cynical campaign strategy of running against a so-called do-nothing Congress."

The centerpiece of the bill is a measure to reduce the costs of companies seeking to go public by phasing in over five years SEC regulations that apply to what are categorized as "emerging growth companies." That status would be in effect for companies with annual gross revenue of less than $1 billion.

The measure would remove SEC regulations preventing small businesses from using advertisements to solicit investors, raise from 500 to 2,000 the number of shareholders a company or community bank can have before it must register with the SEC, and allow smaller companies to sell up to $50 million in shares, compared with $5 million now, without filing some SEC paperwork.

It also encourages the practice of "crowdfunding," where the Internet is used to raise capital from a large number of smaller investors. The measure limits individual contributions to $10,000 or 10 percent of the investor's annual income.

Senate Democrats who sought to amend the crowdfunding provision said that without changes the practice could lead to fly-by-night schemes to attract vulnerable investors to risky or deceptive ventures.

The rejection of the amendment to extend and expand the life of the Ex-Im Bank also angered Democrats, who said that without the bank U.S. companies would lose a crucial means of financing overseas sales. The bank's authority expires on May 31, and before that it will hit its lending limit of $100 billion. The Democratic proposal would have extended that authority for four years and raised the lending limit to $140 billion.

McConnell said Republicans were willing to take up the bank's fate in separate legislation. While supported by most major business groups, the bank is opposed by conservative groups such as the Club for Growth.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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WASHINGTON — Legislation making it easier for small businesses to raise money survived a test vote in the Senate on Wednesday, increasing the chances it could emerge as one of the few bipartisan...
WASHINGTON — Legislation making it easier for small businesses to raise money survived a test vote in the Senate on Wednesday, increasing the chances it could emerge as one of the few bipartisan...
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webwzrd
Reality is liberal indoctrination
11:59 PM on 03/21/2012
I read another report on Bloomberg about this bill. It has a HUGE potential for fraud and brings back memories of the boiler room junk stock operations in the 1980's.
03:47 PM on 03/21/2012
This bill is a disaster. They must be kidding when they call a business with $50 million in shares "small."
09:03 PM on 03/21/2012
Then why is Obama supporting this and calling for the bill to pass?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
emmanuel kalu
information is knowledge, knowledge in power
02:36 PM on 03/21/2012
of course republicans are always looking for ways to water down regulation and rule, while making it possible for wall street to rip people off with no punishment. This is not an immediate job bill, this is not something that would help the millions out of work right now. yes it is good if done well for the long term. but the country need immediate and effective job bill. job bill that helps hire our construction work force. infrastructure, school repairs, road and bridge repairs. how about we support and invest in building out the infrastructure for natural gas fueling. this would help the trucking companies, reduce our importation of oil and help create more jobs. how about we install charging station across our federal hwy? it would help promote electric cars, increase production at our auto industries and led to more jobs. this are thing that can be done right away that would create jobs and do things that are very necessary for this country. stop fooling around with crap and get to creating real necessary immediate jobs.
02:11 PM on 03/21/2012
This bill deserves to fail. If you don't believe me, look at what's in it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jd n sf
Liberal with strong San Francisco values
02:10 PM on 03/21/2012
"The head of the SEC, Mary Schapiro, has written Congress listing concerns about how the bill could open up investments to possible fraud and abuse. The chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, Rep. Spencer Bachus, R-Ala., has said the bill contains strong investor protections and that Senate Democratic objections were part of a "cynical campaign strategy of running against a so-called do-nothing Congress."

This should be fairly easy to fact check, no? Head of the SEC read the bill and is concerned over possible fraud if the bill becomes law. I'd like to have Rep Bachus lay out what the "strong" investor protections are since the head of the SEC couldn't seem to find them in the legislation. Also, how do the Democratic amendments stack up to the existing protections?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dennidus1680
01:07 PM on 03/21/2012
Help small businesses? Sounds like more deregulation for wall street to me. We know how that worked out the last time don't we?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
emmanuel kalu
information is knowledge, knowledge in power
02:38 PM on 03/21/2012
that is exactly what this bill does. it doesn't create one job, yes it might help small businesses in the long run, but it doens't help now. lets force our politician to focus on the real job creation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bboyy
03:05 PM on 03/21/2012
It says its for Small business.....when does a small business have revenue worth a billion dollars? Somethings not right.