Small-business owners may enjoy some benefits from a Donald Trump presidency, but not everyone is happy.

Business owners could keep more money in their pockets if Trump pushes ahead with his promise to cut consumer and business taxes, and from changes he has pledged to make to Obamacare. Still, the Main Street Alliance, a nonprofit organization of small-business owners, worries about his potential cabinet appointments who may not support pro-small business policies, as well as Trump’s anti-immigration statements.

Trump’s promise to cut taxes for businesses and consumers would be a boon for small-business owners, who typically have teams of under 50 people and tend to use their own money to invest in their business, said Caton Hanson, co-founder of Nav, a financing marketplace for small businesses.

Additionally, his plans for Obamacare --- on Friday, Trump told The Wall Street Journal that he might make changes to the act instead of fully dismantling it --- would reduce health care costs for employers, some of whom did not pay health insurance for their employees before the Affordable Care Act. Small businesses may also have continued or expanded access to alternative lending sources, as Trump has said he will not allow more regulation from the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau.

“I think overall small-business owners will see some consistency and relief,” Hanson said.

Small-business owners appear to have been largely supportive of Trump ahead of the election, with 58.7% saying they would vote for him as of October 5, according to CNBC. One reason for the support, Hanson said, is that the community is looking for a change and someone they view as having empathy for small business concerns.

“I think a lot of it has to do with bringing in an outsider and especially someone who has a business background,” he said.

At the same time, the Main Street Alliance, which is a nonpartisan group, says it is concerned about Trump’s comments about minority groups, and they call his policies on taxes and health care shortsighted.

“Trump’s hate-fueled rhetoric that we’ve seen on the campaign trail causes concern over the types of actions he’ll pursue against many in our communities, including immigrants, Muslims, women, and People of Color,” Amanda Ballantyne, the national director of Main Street Alliance, wrote in a press release.

Additionally, the group says it is concerned about his cabinet appointments who they say have “little experience working with or advocating on behalf of small-business owners.”

Of particular concern is the possible appointment of Myron Ebell, who has denied the existence of climate change, to head the Environmental Protection Agency, as well as the possible appointment of Milwaukee Sheriff David Clarke, who has taken an anti-immigrant stance, to head the Department of Homeland Security.

“Will Trump’s cabinet appointees think it’s “good business” to deport these economic drivers?,” the press release asks.