Featured

Mark Kelly Introduces Bill Boosting Domestic Manufacturing

Senator Mark Kelly (D-AZ) has introduced a bill with other Senate Democrats seeking to boost domestic manufacturing, arguing that President Donald Trump has not fulfilled his own promise to do so.

What the Bill Does

Specifically, Sen. Kelly's Make More in America Act expands the Export-Import Bank's (EXIM) Make More in America Initiative (MMIA), launched in 2022, to work with private-sector partners to grow critical industries such as semiconductors, artificial intelligence (AI), critical minerals and materials, biotech, and shipbuilding.

Additionally, the MMIA would be codified into law with a 30% EXIM portfolio goal across the supported industries and would provide financial support for domestic manufacturing projects.

Finally, the bill prohibits the use of funds for stock buybacks or debt repayment, and the President, Vice President, members of Congress, and their immediate families cannot receive these funds.

What Kelly is Saying

"Trump's 'golden age of American manufacturing' is just another broken promise. Instead, folks are faced with skyrocketing costs without being able to get good-paying jobs," said Sen. Kelly in a press release. "We cannot keep relying on foreign supply chains that leave us vulnerable. It's bad for our economy and our national security. This bill will help us continue to build more things here at home and create good-paying jobs while reducing our dependency on foreign adversaries."

Gallego's Similar Bill

Last week, Senator Ruben Gallego (D-AZ), introduced a very similar bill, the China Subsidy Response and Export Competitiveness Act.

Sen. Gallego's bill gives EXIM greater flexibility to address Chinese practices that undercut American competition, adds medical manufacturing to the list of transformational exports to reduce reliance on foreign-made drugs, and folds the production of printed circuit boards into the semiconductor transformational export area, further reducing reliance on Chinese-made tech.

Where the bills differ is that Kelly's Make More in America Act uses the MMIA program as the primary vehicle for carrying out its goals, while Gallego's bill works through the China and Transformational Exports Program (CTEP), and was introduced in a bipartisan manner with Senator Pete Ricketts (R-NE).

Grayson Bakich

Grayson Bakich is a Florida and Arizona legislative correspondent for The Floridian and Cactus Politics, specializing in national and state-level politics. With three years' experience covering federal Florida, and Arizona politics, they have been cited by NewsBreak, SGT Report, Lucianne.com, and Cause Action. Email: grayson@dnm.news

Recent Posts

DACA Turns 14 Amid Legal Uncertainty & Arizona Lawmakers Say It's Time for Congress to Act

On Monday evening, two Arizona congressmembers stood before a crowd in Central Phoenix to mark…

44 minutes ago

SNAKEBITE— 6.16.26— Hamadeh on UFC 250 Bout— Kolodin's Secure Elections Act Advances to Ballot— Stanton's Heat Bills, Much More...

Hamadeh on UFC 250 Bout While some in Washington were raising eyebrows at Sunday night's…

1 hour ago

'You Can't Even Describe It': Abe Hamadeh Praises The UFC 250

While some in Washington were raising eyebrows at Sunday night's UFC event on the White…

21 hours ago

Alexander Kolodin's Secure Elections Act Advances to Statewide Ballot

State Representative Alexander Kolodin's (R-3) Secure Elections Act is now eligible to be voted upon…

22 hours ago

Greg Stanton Introduces Three Bipartisan Bills Increasing Awareness of Extreme Heat Dangers

Representative Greg Stanton (D-AZ) has teamed up with Representative Mike Lawler (R-NY) to introduce three…

22 hours ago

Hildy Angius Looks to End Revolving Door for Mentally Ill Residents

For many Arizonans living with severe mental illness, the routine looks something like this: a…

24 hours ago