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BREAKING: President Trump Delivers Major Victory for Small Business Owners

Posted on Monday, March 3, 2025
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by Shane Harris
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The Trump Treasury Department announced this week that it will not enforce any fines or penalties associated with reporting requirements under the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA), delivering a major victory for some 32 million small business owners nationwide.

The department wrote in an X thread on Sunday that “not only will it not enforce any penalties or fines associated with the beneficial ownership information reporting rule under the existing regulatory deadlines [of the CTA], but it will further not enforce any penalties or fines against U.S. citizens or domestic reporting companies or their beneficial owners after the forthcoming rule changes take effect either.”

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called the move “a victory for common sense” and said it was “part of President Trump’s bold agenda to unleash American prosperity by reining in burdensome regulations, in particular for small businesses that are the backbone of the American economy.”

In a post on Truth Social, President Trump called the CTA’s reporting requirements “outrageous and invasive” and “an economic menace,” adding that the Biden administration’s enforcement of the law “has been an absolute disaster for small businesses nationwide.”

Passed as part of the 2021 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), the CTA was enacted despite President Trump’s veto, which Congress overrode to install this sweeping federal mandate. Under the pretense of combating financial crimes, the CTA compels millions of small businesses to disclose sensitive personal information to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) or face steep fines and even jail time.

In theory, the CTA applies to all businesses that operate in the United States. But loopholes and special carve-outs allow large corporations to avoid disclosures – meaning that the regulatory burden falls disproportionately on everyday entrepreneurs. Large companies can still use foreign entities (like shell corporations) that are not subject to the same regulations as domestic businesses, allowing them to shield their ownership from both U.S. authorities and the CTA’s disclosure requirements.

Rather than focusing on real financial criminals, the CTA treats every small business owner like a suspect, stripping states of their long-held regulatory authority and consolidating even more power in Washington. Worse, the CTA creates a massive federal database of personal information – which can be accessed without a judicial warrant – raising serious privacy and cybersecurity concerns, as FinCEN has suffered repeated breaches in the past.

Moreover, many small businesses lack the resources for dedicated legal or accounting teams and must hire outside professionals to meet the CTA’s requirements. Beyond initial filing costs, businesses must also bear ongoing expenses for updating ownership information, creating a recurring burden. As one user posted on X in response to the news, “I spent $350 to comply with this crap. Where do I send my invoice to be compensated?”

The threat of steep fines and penalties for non-compliance further exacerbates the financial risk, potentially driving small businesses to close or scale back operations. Ultimately, the CTA’s complex requirements and financial penalties stifle entrepreneurship, imposing burdens on those least equipped to handle them.

Despite these concerns, the bill was enacted with overwhelming bipartisan support in both chambers of Congress. Although some Republicans, including Rep. Thomas Massie (KY) and Senators Rand Paul (KY) and Mike Lee (UT) voiced their opposition, the 2021 NDAA ultimately passed by a vote of 335 to 78 in the House and 84 to 13 in the Senate.

Since then, the CTA has faced significant legal challenges, particularly regarding its privacy implications and the scope of its requirements. While some lawsuits have contested the federal government’s authority to impose the CTA’s regulations, courts have largely upheld the law. In January, the Supreme Court issued a ruling overturning a lower court order temporarily blocking implementation of the CTA.

Now, however, the Trump administration has effectively neutralized the law by announcing that businesses won’t be punished for violating it.

The move is sure to elicit plenty of outrage from Democrats and a corporate media always eager to jump on any opportunity to portray the Trump administration as overly friendly to big business. Liberals will surely spin it as an effort to shield tax cheats and financial criminals from transparency and accountability.

But the reality of the CTA is that, much like gun control laws, it was only ever going to hurt legal, law-abiding business owners while doing little to punish criminals. If large corporations can get around the CTA’s disclosures simply to avoid the annoyance of filing them, then criminals can surely avoid them as well.

Notably, the Treasury Department also said that it will “further be issuing a proposed rulemaking that will narrow the scope of the rule to foreign reporting companies only.” It’s a policy that’s perfectly in line with Trump’s “America First” agenda – cut burdensome regulations for American citizens while still placing a high burden of entry on foreign entities that want access to the U.S. economy.

While the Trump administration’s move provides expedited relief for small businesses, however, that relief may only be temporary. The most permanent solution to the CTA would be repealing the law altogether. In January, Rep. Warren Davidson (R-OH) and Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) re-introduced the “Repealing Big Brother Overreach Act” to do just that.

Nonetheless, the Trump administration’s announcement is a step in the right direction. Small business owners can all breathe a sigh of relief.

Shane Harris is the Editor in Chief of AMAC Newsline. You can follow him on X @shaneharris513.

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Kaiju
Kaiju
2 hours ago

As a Small Business Owner, I thank you, Mr. President. But gotta ask “Why hasn’t our elected representatives in Congress done this?”

Nick
Nick
1 hour ago

The Democrats are already preparing the lawsuits. They hate anything that benefits small business owners or benefits the country. If it’s not part of the destruction of this nation they want no part of it. They have already come out squarely in favor of waste Fraud and Abuse, and with the help of George Soros already protesting government employees having to justify their jobs. If you cannot come up with five bullet points about what you did last week, obviously you did nothing. But according to the Democrats you should get paid for doing nothing.. don’t get me started Democrats make my butt itch so much I can’t scratch enough

kim Petro McCrum
kim Petro McCrum
1 hour ago

Great move. Hopefully we will see more of this. Next fewer regulations, NOT more

Philip Seth Hammersley
Philip Seth Hammersley
1 hour ago

Burdening small business owners with tons of paperwork raises our prices! Good job, President Trump, in trying to help out our businessmen and women!

Scott
Scott
1 hour ago

The damage is already done. Most people/entities have already complied – the data is already stored on fincen servers. And if the underlying law isn’t repealed, then compliance can easily be once again enforced. Our elected officials need to eliminate this requirement to make its demise permanent.
States should be solely responsible for this information for Domestic companies, as it was before the CTA.

Robert
Robert
1 hour ago

If this had been done back during Obama’s day I would still be working at my favorite job!

Susan
Susan
45 minutes ago

Congress MUST codify these changes or these four years will just hang in the balance pending a possible democratic party win in two years. Please tell congress to get off their butts and do something productive for America.

anna hubert
anna hubert
1 hour ago

Small business is if not a backbone then a very important component of this country, left is trying to break it, it knows that comfortable middle class is what separates the rich from “working class,that with perseverance it’s achievable to leave the status of poverty . left pretends to stand up for working man and make him equal, to whom they don’t say It sure as hell is not the democrat willing to share his money with deserving poor for whom he fights.I wish dems would leave the trampled upon alone , been using them as a prop to advance their own agenda for eons..

Paul Scott Desillier
Paul Scott Desillier
1 hour ago

They passed this bill a little too late to catch Biden and his LLC shell game. Now us small business owners have to pay. This was a total waste of my time. You could have done it online for free, but they asked the same question 15 times. It was annoying after a while. All of those question could have been answered by my LLC charter and annual tax filings.

Barrett T Smith
Barrett T Smith
14 minutes ago

The business of America is business. -Calvin Coolidge

Drug and medical costs - healthcare. Pills spilling out of a medicine cup onto hundred dollar bills, with a hundred dollar bill rolled up in a pill bottle, a concept showing the cost of healthcare.
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