Biden campaign's outside economic advisers include Larry Summers
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[April 24, 2020]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
(Reuters) - Former U.S. Treasury Secretary
Larry Summers, an academic and longtime economic aide to Democratic
presidents, is among the people now advising Joe Biden's presidential
campaign, according to two people familiar with the matter.
Summers is a renowned economist with long ties to presidential
administrations, including Barack Obama's. Biden, the presumptive
Democratic nominee, served as Obama's vice president. Summers is viewed
critically by some liberals, who view his policy prescriptions as too
centrist.
Dozens of economic and public health policy officials are briefing Biden
ahead of the Nov. 3 election, when Republican President Donald Trump
hopes to win a second term.
If he is elected, Biden would be faced with a U.S. economy scarred by a
pandemic that has brought large segments to a standstill, forced more
than 26 million people to seek unemployment benefits since March 21, and
raised the prospect of job losses not seen since the Great Depression of
the 1930s.
Before then, Biden has to bring together his own party behind his
candidacy, including liberals who once backed Senators Bernie Sanders
and Elizabeth Warren. The two senators have both endorsed Biden, but it
is not clear how many of their supporters will turn out to vote for
Biden.
A Biden adviser who asked not to be named said the campaign "is in touch
with a very large and well-rounded informal network of experts" on the
economy and public health.
"Joe Biden's will be the most progressive agenda of any president in
generations, and he looks forward to his continuing engagement with
progressive leaders to build on his existing policies and further the
bold goals driving his campaign," the adviser said.
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Summers did not respond to an email requesting comment on his advice
for Biden or his role.
Summers ran Obama's National Economic Council as the administration
navigated a brutal recession following the 2008 global financial
crisis. He was often on the other side of issues with Warren, who
was a consumer protection advocate before she became a senator.
Summers was dogged by controversies including his support for
banking deregulation in the 1990s when he ran the Treasury
Department in the Clinton administration - blamed by some for the
financial crisis - as well as for comments he made about women's
aptitude while president of Harvard. He ultimately withdrew his name
from consideration to run the Federal Reserve after congressional
Democrats including Warren pushed the White House to consider Janet
Yellen instead.
More recently, Summers, who is currently a professor at Harvard, has
been critical of proposals endorsed by Sanders and Warren, including
a tax on wealth.
The news on Summers was first reported by Bloomberg News.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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