vernon wrote:
You are full it, hillery was a senator and not a good one.She didn't do anything for anybody but her self never has and never will.You say she fought for small
that's ridiculous ,all she wanted to do was put them out of business by regulating them or taxing them out of business.
Vern, once more you have been swept up in the hate lies about Hillary.. she is the child of a small business owner.
She had a specific plan for them and yet the orange thing spread these lies about her.. and policy..
But now, I will point out how old and outdated, as well as pointless your comments are.
Let us get to what is going on in front of our eyes.. Nothing for the middle class except temporary, not to be renewed tax rules..
We should be talking about the orange drive to end health care, social programs, tariffs, losing our national parks, failure to curtail big Pharma as he promised, foolishness of his still lusted for wall,
trade deficit, separation of our nation, talking to Al Quida while excluding the govt of Afghanistan.
at least something current.. Jail time, fraud, buying his way out of trouble.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/robbmandelbaum/2016/08/23/hillary-clinton-has-a-plan-for-small-businesses-and-the-big-businesses-that-cheat-them/#6fce198553e0Early last month, Hillary Clinton stopped by Atlantic City to take a shot at the business practices of her Republican rival, which among many other things famously include shorting the small business contractors who've done work at his properties there, sometimes in bankruptcy and sometimes just because. With Donald Trump, the Democratic nominee said, "it's not about what he can build. It's about how much he can take."
But because she is Hilary Clinton, she also took the opportunity to put out a detailed policy statement. "I have a plan to make sure big businesses canât stiff suppliers and contractors like Donaldâs been doing for years," she told the audience gathered on the boardwalk in front of the now-closed Trump Plaza hotel.
In a position paper released the next day, Clinton fleshed out her agenda to combat stiffing. She proposed that the behavior where big companies "systematically breach their contracts with smaller contractorsâeither failing to pay in due course, or failing to pay in full for services rendered" â would be deemed a "deceptive trade practice" under federal law that the Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice could investigate and sanction.
She'd also make it easier for small businesses to sue big companies for such behavior. She hopes to convene her attorney general and small business advocates to outline specifics, which could include "a new private right of action under federal law, easier standards for class-action certification for aggrieved small suppliers, treble damages and attorneyâs fees for egregious and intentional patterns of abuse, or other measures."