- Strategic Advocacy
Strategic Advocacy
The Strategic Advocacy division is comprised of several major policy divisions within the Chamber including the Cyber, Space, and National Security Division; Economic Policy Division; Employment Policy Division; and Small Business Policy Division. Environmental Affairs and Sustainability, Health Policy, and Transportation and Infrastructure Policy are also under the umbrella of the Policy Group.
The division works closely with the Chamber's Congressional and Public Affairs and Political Affairs and Federation Relations divisions.
Explore more
- Center for Global Regulatory Cooperation
- Cyber, Space, and National Security
- Economic Policy
- Employment Policy
- Environmental Affairs and Sustainability
- Global Initiative on Health and the Economy
- Government Affairs
- Health Policy
- Small Business Policy
- Tax Policy
- Transportation and Infrastructure Policy
- Federal Acquisition Council
Latest Content
- The U.S. Chamber of Commerce urges the FCC to modernize and apply flexibility in satellite milestone enforcement when operators face launch delays beyond their control. Rather than halting deployments for missed interim milestones, the Chamber recommends scaled penalties (like reducing authorized satellites) to protect the public interest while still deterring spectrum warehousing.A guide to understanding eligibility, identifying IEEPA‑based tariffs, and navigating the evolving refund process.Today, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Iowa Association of Business and Industry hosted U.S. Representative Zach Nunn (R-IA-03) for a roundtable discussion in Des Moines, Iowa with local business leaders on pro-growth business tax provisions.The Miami Space Summit, co-hosted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the SmallSat Alliance, showed that U.S. space leadership now hinges on faster execution: aligning policy, acquisition, technology, and capital around commercial capability.Hosted at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce with NASA’s Earth Science Division, the NASA Earth Science Industry Day made one point clear: Earth observation data is now economic infrastructure. Leaders from NASA and major risk, agriculture, and real-estate users underscored that the next decade must focus on turning “data for discovery” into “data for decisions”—with trusted, usable, and continuous Earth data powering resilience and competitiveness.On March 11, 2026, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce submitted an ex parte filing in the FCC’s “Space Modernization for the 21st Century” NPRM (SB Docket No. 25-306). We support faster, more predictable space and earth-station licensing—while emphasizing that streamlining must preserve transparency, stakeholder participation, and incumbent spectrum users’ legally protected rights.Answering antitrust’s challenges one question at a time.This Hill letter was sent to the Members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in support of the nomination of Dr. Wes Brooks as Assistant Secretary for Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs at the U.S. State Department.Small business leaders visited Capitol Hill to highlight how the pro-growth tax reforms from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act are helping them invest, hire, and expand.






