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.
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- 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
- This Key Vote Alert! letter was sent to the Members of the U.S. House of Representatives, supporting H.R. 7024, the "Tax Relief for American Families and Workers Act of 2024."This Hill letter was sent to the Members of the U.S. House Committee on Education and the Workforce, on H.R. 6951, the "College Cost Reduction Act."With tax filing season starting today, it is imperative that Congress act now to avoid further negative impacts to American businesses.Owners TJ and Hadley Douglas were named America's Top Small Business in 2021 and sit on the Chamber's Small Business Council. The expansion builds on their mission to make the wine industry more accessible.The year ahead is shaping up to be eventful—complete with new faces, major court decisions, and lots of regulations—in the competition and consumer protection space.This Hill letter was sent to the members of the House Committee on Ways and Means in support of H.R. 7024, the “Tax Relief for American Families and Workers Act of 2024”.The San Martín mine case is the first to go before an RRM panel, and the outcomes could set a potentially damaging precedent for labor disputes moving forward, impacting the U.S. business community.Various factors are relevant to assessing whether companies that manufacture, distribute, sell, or supply (“Suppliers”) ought to be treated as trustworthy sources of supply for technologies that enable the development and operation of critical ICT networks. Suppliers are trustworthy when:A new DOL regulation replaces the previous regulation with uncertainty, creating bias against independent contractor status.



