US Senator John Thune’s Weekly Column: Small Business, Big Impact

Small Business, Big Impact
By Sen. John Thune

During the first week of May, we celebrate Small Business Week. This time of year, the impact that small businesses have in our communities is especially evident. We might notice the Little League team has the name of its local business sponsor on the back of its jerseys. High schoolers might be applying for summer jobs at a restaurant on Main Street. And a little outside of town, we can see planting season is underway on family farms across South Dakota.

Small businesses aren’t just a big part of our economy, they’re also pillars of our communities. Nearly half of private sector jobs in America are at small businesses, and most of our nation’s job growth comes from smaller enterprises. And one of my top priorities is strengthening our small businesses, farms, and ranches so they can continue to be engines of growth and opportunity in our country.

That’s exactly what Republicans did last year with the Working Families Tax Cuts. In addition to permanent tax relief for hardworking South Dakotans, this bill included permanent, pro-growth tax policy to help South Dakota small businesses, farms, and ranches. It made permanent the lower small business tax rates that Republicans enacted in 2017. It also made permanent full expensing for new equipment, which allows small businesses to deduct the full cost of a new piece of equipment the year they start using it, which makes it a lot easier for a farmer to buy a new tractor or a factory to get a new machine online.

This bill also made permanent the 199A small business deduction, which enables South Dakota small businesses to reduce their tax burden and free up money to invest in their operations and their employees. In fact, one agricultural cooperative in our state estimates the impact of this deduction at over $100 million since it was first enacted in 2017, and another South Dakota business credits it with allowing them to build a large addition and hire additional employees.

Here in South Dakota, a lot of our small businesses are also family businesses, and the Working Families Tax Cuts helps ensure more of these enterprises stay in the family for generations to come. I’m proud to have worked to increase the exemption threshold for the death tax in this bill, which protects a lot more family businesses, farms, and ranches from a possibly devastating tax bill when they pass the business on to the next generation, not to mention the costly estate planning expenses that many families incur because of this unfair tax.

As much as this bill helps their businesses, when I talk to small business owners in South Dakota, they are often most excited about what the Working Families Tax Cuts does for their employees and customers. This bill puts more money in their customers’ pockets, and policies like no tax on tips and no tax on overtime deliver significant tax savings for their employees.

Like a lot of South Dakotans, I got my start working at a small business when I was in high school, taking shifts at the Star Family Restaurant in Murdo. I know there’s nothing small about the impact these businesses have in their communities, and I’m proud to be working to strengthen our small businesses so they can continue to be engines for the American Dream.

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17 thoughts on “US Senator John Thune’s Weekly Column: Small Business, Big Impact”

  1. Dusty blackmailing Rhoden “Opie outs the strong arm on Rodent. Inbreeding coming home to roost

  2. Senator, the legislation was called the Big Beautiful Bill. Why do you keep giving it another name? I also haven’t heard your explanation for needing to make permanent the tax cuts for multi-millionaires and billionaires.

  3. Senator Thune how about talking about why republicans won’t be challenging the president’s interpretation of the War Powers Act. Sixty days have passed and a blockade is a war act. DO YOUR JOB FOR THE ANERICAN PEOPLE AND STAND UP TO THE president. Thank you for you attention to this matter

    1. And before anyone says anything I know I spelled American wrong but when I’m p****d off my fingers don’t type so well

  4. Small mind, dumb results. $4.00 per gallon gas, you spineless, feckless, toady. Thanks for allowing South Dakota to be crapped on. BTW cease fire does not mean the deadline in the war powers act gets pushed back.

    1. The way you keep complaining about the price of gas, one might get the idea you actually have a job to commute to.

  5. Main Street looooooves $4 gas and $10 hamburger.

    Where’s an the outrage from the MAGA crowd?

    1. Shhh don’t bother the MAGA they’re busy “owning the libs.” It’s all they have since the billionaires took their money and blamed the libs. Solve that pretzel logic and they might listen to you some day.

      Cognitive dissonance is really powerful magic and it has been used on the MAGA by the alpha users.

      1. I remember when gas was $1 per gallon. And cars got 10 mpg. Now cars can get 40 mpg so paying $4 per gallon means the cost of transportation is the same as it was 45 years ago.

        1. Umm hate to break it to you, but the real era of the gas guzzler was pre 1970, gas was 22.9 CENTS A GALLON and a gas station price war would occasionally drive it down to 18 cents. THAT is what careless consumption looked like. That was leaded gas too. Tell the whole story:

        2. That’s a lot of hypotheticals in your math bub. Please do some math involving semis and their fuel efficiencies over time.

          1. The math works when you average it across the fleets like CAFE does. $1 gas was @1980, average gas mileage was 21mpg that year.

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