Page 93 - MetalForming Magazine October 2022 - FABTECH
P. 93

  Spotlight on
ADVOCACY
A Busy Season for U.S. Manufacturers
by Omar S. Nashashibi
Omar Nashashibi is a founding partner with The Franklin Partnership,
a bipartisan lobbying firm based
in Washington, D.C., and a key component of PMA’s One Voice advocacy efforts launched in
2008 in partnership with the
National Tooling & Machining Association.
Tuesday, November 8, 2022,
marks the first day of FABTECH,
being held this year in Atlanta,
GA. As readers know, that open-
ing day is filled with networking
and other opportunities to grow
your business. Whether you head
to FABTECH as an attendee or
an exhibitor, you should add
one more item on your pre-trip to-do list: Vote, as November 8th also is the day of the midterm elections. These elections will determine control of the U.S. House and Senate, and provide insight for man- ufacturers into how policies from Wash- ington, D.C., will affect their businesses.
As we approached this election prior to the summer, many saw a quiet runup with little legislative accomplishments, especially after failed efforts throughout 2021 for Democrats to agree among themselves. But the summer was anything but quiet, with the busiest July and August we have seen in years.
• The Precision Metalforming Associ- ation’s (PMA) president, David Klotz, tes- tified before the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) along with PMA mem- ber companies on the negative impact of the Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs.
• PMA succeeded in passing supply- chain resiliency legislation in the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022.
• PMA helped to defeat major tax increases on passthroughs and C-corpo- rations in the climate-change reconciliation law.
As a result of lobbying efforts by PMA and others, Congress now requires that the USITC investigate the Section 232 tariffs (of 25 percent on steel and 10 percent on aluminum) and report their
facturers with training, cybersecurity and supply-chain initiatives. The new law also provides $10 billion in new funding for regional technology hubs, $11 billion for R&D and workforce-development programs,
and calls for the establishment of new Manufacturing Institutes. PMA successfully lobbied to include in the new law provisions focusing on downstream man- ufacturing, specifically mention- ing the importance of supply- chain resiliency for forming, tooling, machining and metal refining. It is rare that lawmakers dive this deep into the tiers of manufacturing, but PMA’s efforts in Washington, D.C., over the years have pushed politicians to take notice and promote man-
ufacturing in America.
While the CHIPS act serves
as a rare example of bipartisan coopera- tion, the climate-change law was a one- party effort that originally called for sig- nificant tax increases on American manufacturers, including passthrough businesses. Instead, not only did lawmak- ers minimize the tax increases on manu- facturers compared to the previous pro- posal, but some manufacturers may benefit from the billions of dollars in tax incentives for renewable-energy investments.
This busy summer brings us back to FABTECH and our November elections. What would a divided Congress look like for manufacturers? Could Democrats hold both the House and Senate with President Biden running for reelection in 2024? Does a Republican House and Senate mean more regulations from the White House?
Regardless of the election outcome, PMA knows it must continue to work with Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill and in the White House. This November, attend FABTECH, learn about the industry and its future, but also know that the politicians elected on November 8th also have plans for the future of manufacturing in America.
            90 MetalForming/October 2022
www.metalformingmagazine.com
findings to lawmakers by March 15, 2023. The commission invited stakeholders, including PMA and its members, to file comments and then testify, and Klotz and several members did so.
Those that testified before the USITC demonstrated that the United States remains an island of high prices when compared to European counterparts and Chinese competitors, while continuing to face delays—as long as several months beyond pre-tariff norms. PMA remains one of the few groups in Washington, D.C., keeping the steel and aluminum tariffs in the headlines and top of mind for policymakers.
These policymakers now are focused on manufacturing in ways we have not seen in decades. A bipartisan superma- jority in the U.S. Senate passed major legislation to promote supply-chain resilien- cy here in the United States, while also incentivizing the domestic production of semiconductors.
President Biden signed the PMA-sup- ported CHIPS and Science Act of 2022 on August 9th, which triples funding for Manufacturing Extension Partnerships to support small and medium-sized manu-






























































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