Barr, Biden's pick for Fed regulation role, to be quizzed by Senate
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[May 19, 2022] By
Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Michael Barr, the
second person nominated by Democratic President Joe Biden to be the
Federal Reserve's Wall Street cop, will appear before the Senate on
Thursday to make the case for why he should take on the central bank's
sweeping regulatory portfolio.
Barr, a former Treasury Department senior official under President
Barack Obama, looks to be well-positioned to win Senate confirmation
after receiving early support from key moderates and progressive
Democrats in the evenly divided chamber. He will testify before the
Senate Banking Committee at 10 a.m. ET (1400 GMT).
In his prepared testimony, Barr said he would work to ensure the
financial system is resilient, operates fairly, and allows room for
innovation with "clear rules of the road."
He is in a stronger position than Sarah Bloom Raskin, Biden's first
nominee for Fed supervision vice chair, who withdrew her nomination
after Democrat Joe Manchin refused to back her.
Barr, currently a law professor, has already drawn support from moderate
Democrats, including Manchin, and progressives anxious to ramp up
scrutiny of Wall Street after what they say was regulatory easing under
Republicans. At Treasury, Barr was a central figure in the drafting of
the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform law, which established a range of
safeguards following the 2008 financial crisis.
"This is going to be a far easier, simpler and faster hearing than we
saw last time," said Isaac Boltansky, director of policy research for
brokerage BTIG, adding that Barr should be confirmed by August.
Barr would fill the remaining vacancy on the Fed board and take on a
broad agenda that is likely to include revisiting rules that were eased
under his predecessor, Randal Quarles, and taking steps to address
climate change risk, fintechs and cryptocurrencies.
Raskin withdrew her nomination after Manchin, who represents
coal-producing West Virginia, opposed her because she had called for
financial regulators to more aggressively police climate change risks.
The decision effectively ended her nomination.
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The Federal Reserve building is seen before the Federal Reserve
board is expected to signal plans to raise interest rates in March
as it focuses on fighting inflation in Washington, U.S., January 26,
2022. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
But Manchin announced Tuesday he would back Barr. In
the progressive wing, Elizabeth Warren, a prominent big-bank critic,
said in April that she supported Barr.
Progressives have changed their tune on Barr after
opposing him last year for comptroller of the currency, another top
regulatory post. They wanted a more liberal pick, saying his work in
the private sector, as well as his resistance to some stricter
Dodd-Frank proposals, were marks against him.
However, after progressives' preferred candidates, including Raskin
and Saule Omarova, a previous Biden pick for comptroller of the
currency, flopped amid resistance from moderate Democrats, they are
now eager to simply fill key posts.
The Fed's regulatory work, for example, has slowed with no fulltime
supervision chief.
"The Fed urgently needs a vice chair on board who can guard against
risks to financial stability," said Carter Dougherty, a spokesman
for advocacy group Americans for Financial Reform.
If confirmed, Barr will also join 18 other Fed policymakers in
setting the course of monetary policy as the central bank battles to
bring down 40-year-high inflation. Barr’s views on monetary policy
are not well known, but so far policymakers have been unanimous in
pivoting to a more aggressive stance as price pressures have
persisted. Barr noted in his prepared testimony that he would be
"strongly committed" to bringing down inflation if confirmed.
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder and Lindsay Dunsmuir; Editing by
Michelle Price and Leslie Adler)
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