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Less than an hour after Geithner won Senate confirmation Monday, President Barack Obama came to the Treasury Department to participate in a swearing-in ceremony and to project a sense of urgency on the part of the new administration in combatting the country's deepening economic troubles. "We cannot lose a day, because every day the economic picture is darkening, here and across the globe," Obama told the audience assembled in Treasury's ornate Cash Room. The Senate voted 60-34 to put Geithner in charge of the administration's economic team. Those who opposed the nomination said they could not accept Geithner's explanation that his failure to pay $34,023 in self-employment taxes from 2001 to 2004 when he worked at the International Monetary Fund was an unintentional error. "Nominees for positions that do not oversee tax reporting and collection have been forced to withdraw their nomination for more minor offenses," said Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., noting that Geithner will oversee the Internal Revenue Service. "The fact that we're in a global economic crisis is not a reason to overlook these errors." However, Geithner's supporters said that he had now paid the back taxes plus interest and that Obama deserved to have someone of Geithner's skills in financial crisis management leading the new administration's efforts. Geithner, 47, served as undersecretary of the treasury for international affairs during the Clinton administration and was selected to be president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank six years ago. In that position, he has been a key player in the government's response to collapsing financial institutions and the housing and credit markets since last summer.
[Associated
Press;
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