Kathy Kraninger, a senior official in the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB), was approved on a 13-12 party-line vote to run
the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. She would replace Mick
Mulvaney the OMB chief who is also serving as acting director at
the agency since November.
Her nomination now advances to the full Senate, which has yet to
schedule a confirmation vote.
The Senate seems likely to confirm Kraninger, but Democrats are
continuing to press for details on the precise role she may have
played in implementing the immigration policy that separated
families.
In July, Kraninger told Congress that while she did attend
meetings relating to the administration's "zero tolerance"
immigration policy, she did not play a role in setting or
developing Trump's “zero tolerance” immigration policy that
separated more than 2,000 children from their parents.
Democratic Senators Sherrod Brown and Elizabeth Warren have said
Kraninger has not been sufficiently detailed in her answers. But
it was unclear if that will be enough to discourage Republicans
from supporting her.
"Kathy Kraninger was part of the Trump Administration’s effort
to traumatize kids and rip them away from their families. She
should be held accountable and fired — not promoted," Warren
told Reuters in an email on Wednesday.
Kraninger and the OMB did not respond to requests for comment.
Republicans said the agency, which is responsible for consumer
protection in the financial sector, has overstepped its
authority and hope Kraninger will continue to rein it in.
Democrats and consumer advocates want to keep it from being
further weakened.
The banking panel on Thursday also advanced the nomination of
Elad Roisman, currently the committee's chief counsel, to fill a
Republican seat on the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The committee also voted to advance Dino Falaschetti as the new
head of the Office of Financial Research. The administration has
targeted the agency, which gathers data on financial markets,
for drastic cuts and moved earlier this month to reduce staff by
one-quarter..
(Reporting by Katanga Johnson; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and
Jeffrey Benkoe)
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