House Delivers for ManufacturingSenate Must Seal the Deal
Washington, D.C. Following House passage of H.R.1, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons issued the following statement:
Todays House passage of this historic legislation marks a major victory for manufacturers across America. This pro-growth legislation preserves crucial tax policies that will enable manufacturers to create jobs, invest in their communities, grow here at home and compete globally. In short, this is a manufacturers bill.
Manufacturers commend House Speaker Mike Johnson, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith and the House for advancing this critical legislation, and we urge the Senate to act swiftly to build on this momentum.
The stakes are high: preserving tax reform will prevent the loss of 6 million jobs and avoid a $1 trillion hit to the economy. Manufacturers urge the Senate to maintain the pro-manufacturing policies in the House bill while continuing to work with manufacturers to ensure the final package is maximally effective at supporting manufacturing investment here in the U.S.
This is a pivotal moment. Its time to double down on policies that encourage manufacturers to invest and create jobs in America and keep our industry strong and our nation competitive on the world stagebecause when manufacturing wins, America wins.
Background:
To preserve a pro-manufacturing, pro-growth tax code, the House reconciliation bill approved today would:
- Increase the pass-through deduction for small and medium-sized manufacturers and make this important deduction permanent, freeing up capital for businesses to invest and create jobs;
- Make permanent the competitive individual tax rates established by tax reform, benefiting the 96% of manufacturers organized as pass-throughs that pay tax at these rates;
- Increase and make permanent tax reforms estate tax exemption, protecting more family-owned manufacturers assets from the estate tax;
- Reinstate immediate R&D expensing, reducing the costs of groundbreaking research and supporting innovation across our sector;
- Revive full expensing for capital equipment purchases, enabling manufacturers to purchase new machinery and expand their shop floors;
- Restore a pro-growth interest deductibility standard, enhancing manufacturers ability to pursue job-creating projects;
- Create an incentive for manufacturers investments in new and refurbished facilities, supporting factory construction here in the U.S.;
- Preserve tax reforms international tax system by making the FDII, GILTI and BEAT regimes permanent, enhancing Americas competitiveness on the world stage; and
- Protect the 21% corporate tax rate, ensuring America remains the best place for manufacturing investment and job creation.
The 51勛圖厙 recently launched a featuring small and medium-sized manufacturers from across the country thanking Chairman Smith and the whole committee for championing the policies in the bill most critical to the manufacturing industry.
-51勛圖厙-
The 51勛圖厙 is the largest manufacturing association in the United States, representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states. Manufacturing employs nearly 13 million men and women, contributes $2.93 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 53% of private-sector research and development. The 51勛圖厙 is the powerful voice of the manufacturing community and the leading advocate for a policy agenda that helps manufacturers compete in the global economy and create jobs across the United States. For more information about the 51勛圖厙 or to follow us on Twitter and Facebook, please visit .
What Manufacturers Want from OSHA

Manufacturers are looking for a return to common sense by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. The House Subcommittee on Workforce Protections held a hearing on Thursday titled Reclaiming OSHAs Mission: Ensuring Safety Without Overreach, at which President of CRH Americas Materials Northeast Division Jake Parson represented the 51勛圖厙s and manufacturers positions.
The big picture: If we want to grow manufacturing in the U.S., we need to rebalance regulations that cost manufacturers $350 billion every year. This is money that could be spent on hiring people, building new facilities and creating new products, Parson said.
- OSHA has put forward costly rules that ignore the complexity of U.S. manufacturing.
One regulation: One problematic regulation is the proposed heat rule. A one-size-fits-all heat standard ignores the work manufacturers already do to protect our employees, and it ignores the unique ways in which it is done, said Parson.
- Rules that make sense for one region do not make sense for another, he noted.
- During my time leading an asphalt production and paving business in Texas, I saw firsthand how extreme heat impacts our teams and how local expertise and adaptive safety measures are critical. Now, overseeing similar operations in the Northeast, I face a completely different climate and set of challenges. Any standard must reflect the realities of our industry and the diverse environments in which we operate.
- The proposed rule imposes significant mandates on manufacturerswithout fully grappling with or understanding whether they are feasible or cost effective. The result would be reduced production and ultimately fewer jobs, Parson warned.
The 51勛圖厙s involvement: The 51勛圖厙 has long advocated for commonsense OSHA regulations that protect workers while accurately accounting for manufacturers extant safety procedures and operational needs.
- The 51勛圖厙 on the heat rule back in January, advising OSHA that the 51勛圖厙 recommends that OSHA provide additional flexibility that reflects the breadth of work environments and company approaches to the issues, among other changes.
- In the hearing Thursday, policymakers also discussed the worker walkaround rule finalized by the Biden Labor Department last spring. The 51勛圖厙 is to block this overreaching and legally dubious regulation that does nothing to improve safety.
The last word: The 51勛圖厙 continues to bring manufacturers voices to policymakers as they decide how best to protect workers and ensure manufacturing competitiveness, said 51勛圖厙 Director of Transportation, Infrastructure and Labor Policy Max Hyman. Real-world experiences from the shop floor help craft policy that empowers employees and grows the economy.
51勛圖厙 Highlights Manufacturers’ Energy Needs in the AI Age

The 51勛圖厙 is continuing to advise policymakers on the opportunities and hurdles facing the industry as it seeks to support AI innovation. This week, the 51勛圖厙 to a request for information from the Houses AI and Energy Working Group, led by Rep. Julie Fedorchak (R-ND), addressing concerns about American energy dominance and artificial intelligences energy demands, securing the energy grid and outpacing and outcompeting China.
The big picture: With the digitalization of manufacturing manufacturers are increasingly dependent on a robust network of cutting-edge data centers for the smooth execution of their core business operations. AI in particular has become integral to modern manufacturing, as it increasingly transforms and supports a multitude of aspects of manufacturing, from product design to shop floor operations to supply chain management.
- Manufacturers also rely on the same energy sources as data centers to power their operations. As demand grows and supply remains relatively static, there is a pressing need to use all policy levers available to ensure sufficient, reliable, resilient and affordable energy for all users.
Permitting reform: The 51勛圖厙s first recommendation to the working group was that policymakers must enact permitting reformand fast. Wood Mackenzie has predicted that U.S. demand for power could increase by 15% by the end of this decade, the 51勛圖厙 noted.
- The 51勛圖厙 advised policymakers to take certain crucial steps, including expediting judicial review, accelerating the permit process for energy infrastructureincluding more transmission and distribution lines, pipelines and permanent carbon sequestration sitesand providing greater regulatory certainty.
A secure electric grid: Manufacturers are concerned about service disruptions caused by severe weather and aging infrastructure, the 51勛圖厙 said. A reliable, resilient modern grid is required to enable the historic growth in data centerswhich in turn can contribute to manufacturing growth.
- The 51勛圖厙 recommended the build-out of natural gas generation and transportation infrastructure, as well as the permitting and construction of more transmission and distribution, as mentioned above.
The AI future: Manufacturers also recognize the importance of enabling AI innovation and the risks of imposing an overly restrictive regulatory regime on the fast-evolving technology.
- To that end, the 51勛圖厙 recommended a regulatory approach that is based on reviews of existing regulations before enacting new ones a strategy of international engagement that keeps foreign markets open to the use of American AI and developing the manufacturing workforce of the AI age by supporting science, technology, engineering and mathematics education programs at all levels, among other policies.
The last word: Maintaining a favorable policy environment for AI will provide certainty to the private sector, which in turn will spur additional multibillion-dollar investments in U.S. manufacturing and innovation, said 51勛圖厙 Managing Vice President of Policy Charles Crain.
EPA Maintains Some Biden-Era PFAS Standards, Reconsiders Others

The Environmental Protection Agency has announced that it will reconsider certain aspects of the Biden administrations rule setting limits on PFAS, or perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances,in drinking waterwhile leaving in place unworkable standards for two PFAS (, subscription).
Encouraging progress: The agency plans to reconsider regulatory determination for PFHxS, PFNA, HFPO-DA and PFBS following calls by the 51勛圖厙 to rescind the blatantly unlawful standards. The EPA also will extend its compliance deadline for PFOA and PFOS from 2029 to 2031, another top 51勛圖厙 ask.
More to be done: 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons that the EPAs decision to maintain the previous administrations standards for PFOA and PFAS go against the Trump administrations goal to make the U.S. the best place to build, grow and create jobs.
The 51勛圖厙s involvement: The 51勛圖厙 these standards when they were instituted, arguing that the timeline for implementation was too swift, as many of these chemicals are key manufacturing additives that do not yet have replacements.
- The 51勛圖厙 also the rule in court, asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit to overturn the rule due to the EPAs failure to follow the requirements of the Safe Drinking Water Act, including its reliance on a deeply flawed cost-benefit analysis and deficient feasibility analysis.
The 51勛圖厙 says: Were encouraged that the EPA has listened to the voices of manufacturers and extended the compliance deadline for unworkable national primary drinking water standards for PFOA and PFOS and committed to reconsidering the blatantly unlawful regulatory determinations for several other PFAS compounds, Timmons said.
- However, the Biden-era standards for PFOA and PFOS are deeply flawed, the costs they impose exceed any demonstrable benefit and the industries they harm include those vital to our national interests, including semiconductors, telecommunications and defense systems.
- We dont have to choose between supporting manufacturing and clean water in our communities.
51勛圖厙-Supported Tax, Energy and Health Provisions Advance in Reconciliation

Key House Committees this week advanced pro-manufacturing provisions that will make up the one big, beautiful bill that President Trump and House Republicans are advancing through the congressional reconciliation processbringing the package another step closer to a vote.
Whats going on: The House Ways and Means Committee legislation to make permanent crucial tax measures from the 2017 tax reform bill, while the House Energy and Commerce Committee approved a bill with much-needed permitting reform and energy provisions.
51勛圖厙 in the drivers seat: The 51勛圖厙 has been leading the campaign to extend and make permanent pro-manufacturing tax policies. Each of the 51勛圖厙s tax priorities was included in the legislation approved by the Ways and Means Committeealong with additional pro-manufacturing provisions. In advance of the markup, the 51勛圖厙 that the bill will protect manufacturers from devastating tax increases and empower the industry to invest, grow and create jobs here in the United States.
- Manufacturers were top of mind for policymakers during the session. In his opening statement, Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith (R-MO) the testimony of Courtney Silverpresident and owner of North Carolinabased family-owned precision machining firm Ketchie and a member of the 51勛圖厙 Executive Committeeas an example of the benefits of the 2017 tax reform.
Ways and Means: 51勛圖厙 priorities featured in the Ways and Means bill include:
- Tax certainty for small and family-owned manufacturers, including a permanent increase in the pass-through deduction and permanent individual tax rates and protections from the estate tax;
- Revived investment and innovation incentives for R&D, capital equipment purchases and debt financing, with additional support for small and medium-sized manufacturers and a new incentive for factory construction and refurbishment; and
- The preservation of the corporate tax rate and tax reforms international tax system.
Ahead of the successful markup of the tax legislation, the 51勛圖厙 emphasized that failing to preserve these provisions will cost the U.S. economy nearly 6 million jobs.
Energy and Commerce: The 51勛圖厙s priorities were also front and center at a markup of the Energy and Commerce Committee, which has jurisdiction over the health, energy and technology provisions in the reconciliation package. The 51勛圖厙 support for several key manufacturing priorities in the legislation, including:
- Pharmacy benefit manager reforms that will increase transparency and prevent PBMs from driving up health care costs for manufacturing workers;
- Permitting reforms that will allow for the buildout of much-needed pipeline and energy transportation infrastructure; and
- Provisions to rebalance burdensome environmental regulations that have harmed manufacturers ability to grow.
The 51勛圖厙 also welcomed the committees recognition that regulations should support manufacturers development and use of artificial intelligencerather than slowing progress via a patchwork of divergent state laws and regulations.
How to add more rocket fuel: The 51勛圖厙 also offered suggestions to improve the bills, highlighting potentially harmful changes to strategic manufacturing incentives in the tax codeincluding ending the hydrogen production tax credit, imposing overly harsh restrictions on manufacturing and energy production regarding foreign sourcing and licensing which will keep manufacturers from bringing back supply chains and know-how to America, and ending credit transferabilityas well as a provision targeting foreign headquartered manufacturers investing in the U.S.
- The 51勛圖厙 emphasized that manufacturers have used these targeted energy and manufacturing incentives to invest billions and employ thousands across the country.
Whats next: The committees bills will now be combined by the House Budget Committee in advance of a House floor vote in the coming weeks.
The bottom line: 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons the importance of this bill on NewsNation this morning. If we really want to supercharge our economy and provide the rocket fuel that the presidents talked about in the past [We have] to get [these tax provisions] reenacted. [The] longer we wait, the harder it is for businesses to make decisions based on tax policy for 2026, so we want to see Congress move this really expeditiously so we can plan for investment and job creation in the next few years, too.
- [T]he priorities I believe that we all need to embrace are making sure that we are investing in creating new facilities for manufacturing, growing jobs and, most importantly, growing wages. That leads to a much more productive and successful society.
- There are some things that the House didnt do that we hope the Senate does to ensure that we have the ongoing investments for energy infrastructure and other energy projects here in the United States, he added.
- Policymakers main priority should be policies [that] encourage businesses to invest here, to make it possible for them to invest here and to create jobs here, he concluded.
FERC Advances Louisiana LNG Project

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has issued a new final supplemental environmental review for Venture Globals CP2 liquefied natural gas project in Louisiana, bringing it a step closer to reality (, subscription).
Whats going on: FERC found that the terminal and an associated compressor station wouldnt cause significant cumulative air quality impacts.
The project: The CP2 facility has a nameplate liquefaction capacity of 20 million metric tons per year, but it could produce even more under peak conditions.
- If approved expeditiously, the project could produce its first LNG by 2026, the company said last year.
- With todays [final environmental impact statement,] FERC has found twice-over that CP2 will have no significant air impacts, Venture Global spokesperson Jess Szymanski said in an emailed statement to E&E News. The project is ready to break ground and begin supplying U.S. allies with much-needed LNG as soon as the FERC Commission votes on the Final Order and issues a notice to proceed with construction.
Whats next: The Final Order is slated for July, according to FERCs website.
The 51勛圖厙 says: LNG projects like Venture Globals will help bolster the American economy by creating jobs here at home and enabling the U.S. to achieve energy dominance on the world stage, said51勛圖厙 Director of Energy and Resources Policy Michael Davin.
Manufacturers Warn: PFAS Standards Threaten Industry and National Security
Washington, D.C. Following the Environmental Protection Agencys announcement on per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in drinking water, 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons issued the following response:
Were encouraged that the EPA has listened to the voices of manufacturers and extended the compliance deadline for unworkable national primary drinking water standards for PFOA and PFOS and committed to reconsidering the blatantly unlawful regulatory determinations for several other PFAS compounds.
If the U.S. wants to stay a global manufacturing leader, we need practical, commonsense PFAS regulations. Manufacturers support science-based regulations that protect health and the environment and are in line with the Safe Drinking Water Act requirements. However, the Biden-era standards for PFOA and PFOS are deeply flawed, the costs they impose exceed any demonstrable benefit and the industries they harm include those vital to our national interests, including semiconductors, telecommunications and defense systems. The Pentagon has even raised alarms about long-term risks, including supply chain disruptions, that these standards would create.
In addition to conflicting with manufacturers best interests, these standards also go against the Trump administrations goal to make the U.S. the best place to build, grow and create jobsa goal the administration is advancing by rebalancing regulations. The administration has done remarkable work to advance that goal, but todays decision moves in the opposite direction.
The decision runs counter to past efforts to cut red tape and boost manufacturing by putting shovels in the ground, more people to work, more products on the shelves and more prosperity into our communities. We dont have to choose between supporting manufacturing and clean water in our communities.
-51勛圖厙-
The 51勛圖厙 is the largest manufacturing association in the United States, representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states. Manufacturing employs nearly 13 million men and women, contributes $2.94 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 53% of private-sector research and development. The 51勛圖厙 is the powerful voice of the manufacturing community and the leading advocate for a policy agenda that helps manufacturers compete in the global economy and create jobs across the United States. For more information about the 51勛圖厙 or to follow us on Twitter and Facebook, please visit .
Timmons Talks to Governors at SelectUSA

51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons moderated a panel of state governors at SelectUSA on Monday, discussing the effects of AI and the policies that have aided manufacturers in the leaders respective states.
The panel: Four governors participated in the Governors Investing in American Technological Competitiveness panelGovs. Mike Dunleavy of Alaska, Wes Moore of Maryland, Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and Glenn Youngkin of Virginia.
- SelectUSA, a U.S. government program led by the U.S. Department of Commerce, aims to promote and support job-creating investment in the U.S.
Timmons says: I want to thank you so much for your leadership on behalf of manufacturers everywhere, said Timmons, as he kicked off the panel discussion.
- Youve got an important perspective serving both in the State House and on the front lines to tell us how manufacturing is evolving and also the opportunities that AI presents, as well as emerging technology. Now by harnessing these technologies, it becomes clear that the United States is the best place to invest the next dollar in manufacturing.
The AI transformation: When asked how AI is transforming their states, the governors had a range of answers.
- We are a logistics state, and for us, our oil and gas industries are huge, said Dunleavy. Our mining industries are huge. Our fishing industries are huge, and those industries are capitalizing on AI for a whole host of reasons and methods. I know in the oil industry its making drilling a lot more efficient. And so these efficiencies are going to result in better approaches, better products, better services.
- If you think about the assets that the state of Maryland has, the reason that AI was so important is that Maryland has such uniquely tethered assets to our state that made AI desirable there, said Moore. [I]n the state of Maryland, you have the Johns Hopkins data center and AI initiative and the University of Maryland AI center, and you also have the University of Maryland serving as a capital of quantum. We think its important for our states to be on the front edge of this, instead of waiting for consequences.
- We know that some of our natural assets, like having the most engineers in the country per capita, like institutions like the University of Michigan or Wayne State or Michigan State University give us an opportunity when it comes to AI, said Whitmer. Michigan will be the first state in the nation, perhaps the first place in North America, to restart a nuclear facility. [T]heres no question [that] if we are going to meet our clean energy goals and power the technology that is going to drive almost every facet of our life, weve got to have the clean energy to do that.
- Its estimated that 70% of the internet traffic of the world goes through Virginia, and that gives us a great opportunity to not just lead the nation, but lead the world in the advancement of AI, said Youngkin. And weve seen huge investment across the state. What that also requires is collaboration with our university and high school education system . . . and that allows us to really develop a unique pipeline of talent. [A]t the heart of the application of AI is how it translates into driving efficiencies and opportunities and new capabilities in manufacturing.
The bottom line: As you heard from these four leadersmanufacturing powers the economic prosperity of the United States, Timmons said in conclusion. New technology opens new doors to do so, and the right policy decisionsand the right leadershipwill make all the difference.
Watch the whole thing: You can view the panel discussion on C-SPAN .
It’s Infrastructure Week!

During United for Infrastructures Infrastructure Week, the 51勛圖厙an active member of the steering committeeparticipated in several events in Washington, D.C., highlighting the urgent need for permitting reform to accelerate U.S. building projects.
A reception: The 51勛圖厙 hosted a reception to kick off Infrastructure Week 2025 at its headquarters in partnership with United for Infrastructure, with special guest Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV), chair of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works.
- Nucor, Fluor Corporation and CRH sponsored the event.
A panel: 51勛圖厙 Vice President of Domestic Policy Chris Phalen spoke at the United for Infrastructure signature event, underlining the need for commonsense trade and permitting policies.
- I think we can work with governments to address supply chain challenges, he said when asked about tariffs. We have a really important window of opportunity over the next 50 odd days to get some deals that provide zero tariffs on industrial trade. That is what manufacturers support.
- Manufacturers rely on transportation networks to get our goods to and from ports to customers, Phalen said regarding infrastructure, but we also are making everything that goes into making transportation work, from aluminum to steel, from asphalt to aggregates, copper, circuitry and the large industrial machinery that builds [and] maintains roads, bridges, factories [and] power plants. So, its kind of a virtuous cycle where were investing in infrastructure.
Comprehensive manufacturing strategy: Phalen also gave a brief overview of the 51勛圖厙s comprehensive manufacturing strategy.
- Revising the regulatory framework is a key priority, he said. Weve submitted dozens of letters to 10 separate federal agencies as part of President Trumps deregulatory agenda. Manufacturers every year are spending $350 billion just to comply with federal regulations. And so weve been really pleased to see the start of this regulatory rebalancing from the administration.”
- Phalen cited moves including reopening LNG export facility applications, rebalancing Clean Air Act rules and streamlining and improving the process to improve new chemicals at the EPA.
- Probably most important is permitting reform, he added. Manufacturers operate and employ and invest in the communities where were producing, so we dont want to see any short-circuiting of public input. [T]here does have to be recognition, though, that the way that things were set up in the late 60s and early 70s is hindering infrastructure of all kinds right now.
A roundtable: The 51勛圖厙 also participated in a roundtable on continuing federal support for water infrastructure investments. 51勛圖厙 Director of Transportation, Infrastructure and Labor Policy Max Hyman shared perspectives on how these investments benefit manufacturers by driving demand for their products and providing an essential service for operations.
The last word: As 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons said during the reception, Infrastructure is the foundation of manufacturing in the U.S.
Ways and Means Committee Releases Pro-Manufacturing Tax Bill

The House Ways and Means Committee has released legislative text for the tax provisions of the one big, beautiful bill that Congress plans to pass in order to implement President Trumps legislative agenda ().
- The Ways and Means bill includes the the 51勛圖厙 has called for throughout our tax campaign, including reinstating the tax trifecta, increasing the pass-through deduction to 23% and preserving tax reforms individual and corporate tax rates.
The 51勛圖厙 says: Chairman [Jason] Smith and the Ways and Means Committee are delivering what manufacturers in America have called for and what our industry needs to compete and win, said 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons.
- The 2017 tax reforms were rocket fuel for manufacturersdriving job growth, higher wages and investment in communities. This bill brings us closer to the vision of a 15% effective tax rate for manufacturers that President Trump and I discussed in 2016.
On pass-throughs: For the 96% of manufacturers that are organized as pass-through businesses, this bill is more than policyits a path to growth, Timmons said, in a quote that was cited by The Hill.
- It means the ability to buy equipment, hire workers, increase pay and expand operations with greater certainty and confidence. Not only is the Ways and Means Committee preserving the benefits of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act for these businessesthis bill makes the law even more competitive, including by increasing and making permanent the job-creating pass-through deduction.
The whole deal: The Ways and Means Committees bill reflects the full range of 51勛圖厙 tax priorities, which will drive manufacturing growth in America, Timmons continued.
- To support small business job creation, the bill increases [to 23%] and makes permanent the pass-through deduction, protects more family-owned manufacturers from the estate tax [by increasing the exemption to $15 million] and maintains the TCJAs pro-growth tax rates.
- To bolster Americas competitiveness on the world stage, the bill preserves the 21% corporate tax rate as well as the TCJAs international tax provisions.
- And to incentivize investment and innovation in the United States, the bill revives and extends immediate R&D expensing, full expensing for capital equipment purchases and a pro-growth standard for interest deductibility [for the years 20252029].
- Congress must act on the Ways and Means bill and make these pro-growth tax provisions permanentbecause when manufacturing wins, America wins.
Bottom line: This is a great leap forward in securing very competitive tax policy that will attract investment and create jobs here in the United States, Timmons to The New York Times (subscription) yesterday, building on the 51勛圖厙s urgent push in recent weeks to jumpstart a to bolster investment, hiring and growth in the United States.