"I have decided to withdraw my name from consideration to be a
member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve because
the likelihood of a prolonged process could have left me in
professional limbo for too long," Liang said in a statement.
President Donald Trump, who has criticized the central bank for
raising interest rates, nominated Liang in September.
Liang, who established the Fed's Division of Financial Stability
in 2010, left the central bank two years ago to join the
Brookings Institution think tank.
"We supported her nomination and believe she would have made a
good Governor," White House spokeswoman Lindsay Walters said in
a statement.
As head of the Fed's increasingly influential financial
stability office, she helped develop the policies put in place
after the 2008 financial crisis that many Republicans have hoped
to lighten.
At the time of the nomination, two White House officials told
Reuters that Liang had a strong background on financial and
monetary stability, including crisis response, and was
considered a good fit for the Fed board.
(Reporting by Eric Beech and Howard Schneider; Editing by Sandra
Maler)
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