NFIB Minnesota today announced the presentation of its Guardian of Small Business award to state Senator Justin Eichorn (R-Grand Rapids).
“Senator Eichorn is a real friend of small business, and we are happy to announce that he has earned the NFIB Guardian of Small Business Award,” said Mike Hickey, NFIB Minnesota state director.
“I am proud to be recognized by the National Federation of Independent Business for my record of protecting and encouraging small businesses in Minnesota,” said Senator Justin Eichorn. “As a small business owner, I know firsthand the struggles that we face and the importance that positive economic legislation plays in our survival. Small businesses represent a crucial backbone of our state’s economy and are pillars in our local communities, and I am proud to continue to support them.”
With 10,000 members statewide, NFIB is Minnesota’s largest small-business group in terms of entities. NFIB gives out its Guardian of Small Business award at both the federal and state level to recognize lawmakers who have been supportive of small business on critical issues. Eichorn’s award was based on votes he took during the 2017-2018 sessions of the Minnesota Legislature. He made many votes beneficial to small business including:
- Voted for a significant small-business property tax reduction that was signed into law which reduced taxes for the smallest businesses by 20 percent to 30 percent! The average business received a $700 to $900 reduction for taxes payable in 2018.
- Voted for a significant $1 million increase in the estate tax exemption that was also signed into law, which raised it from $2 million to $3 million per person.
- Supported a desperately needed 25 percent reduction in health insurance premiums in 2017 for those in the individual market that was also signed into law, and which made other critical insurance reforms to make the Minnesota market more competitive.
- Supported critical legislation that preempts local units of government from enacting minimum wages higher than the state’s, and from imposing other new mandates on local employers.