White House could decide on FDIC chair as soon as next week, source says
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[May 25, 2024]
By Douglas Gillison, Andrea Shalal and Chris Prentice
(Reuters) -The White House could decide on a nominee to replace the
chair of the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as early
as next week, two people with knowledge of the matter said on Friday as
further evidence of agency lapses emerged.
FDIC Chair Martin Gruenberg this week said he would step down once a
successor is confirmed by the Senate, succumbing to pressure from
lawmakers who said the agency needed fresh leadership after an
independent investigation found widespread sexual harassment and other
misconduct at the agency.
On Friday, the FDIC's internal watchdog also said it was not promptly
informed of misconduct allegations involving senior FDIC officials, in a
development that could fuel Republican calls for Democratic President
Joe Biden to fire Gruenberg.
The White House is under pressure to quickly fill the role and preserve
Biden's financial regulation agenda, including major bank capital hikes,
just six months ahead of the U.S. presidential election.
The FDIC insures bank deposits and helps safeguard the stability of the
banking system.
A decision on a nominee is expected within weeks and could come as early
as next week, a senior administration official said on Friday. The White
House has already been in touch with Senator Sherrod Brown, who chairs
the Senate Banking Committee which oversees the FDIC, about scheduling a
swift confirmation hearing, another White House official said.
Brown's office did not respond to a request for comment.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told Reuters on Friday she believed
Gruenberg's successor needed to be free of any prior association with
the FDIC's workplace culture and to take decisive steps to change the
system.
"It needs somebody who's committed to cleaning up the problem," she
said. "It needs somebody who can come in from the outside, is credible
in terms of their own past actions and stance with regard to issues of
this type."
The White House is seeking someone outside the agency, Reuters reported
on Tuesday, and a candidate with the strong managerial credentials
needed to fix the agency's cultural problems, an administration official
said on Thursday.
Kristin Johnson, a Democratic member of the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (CFTC), is one of the candidates, according two people with
knowledge of the matter. Bloomberg first reported the news on Thursday.
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The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC) logo is seen at the FDIC
headquarters in Washington, February 23, 2011. REUTERS/Jason
Reed/File Photo
One of the sources also said an announcement could come next week.
The CFTC's other Democrat, Christy Goldsmith Romero, Nellie Liang, a
top Treasury official, Adrienne Harris, superintendent of New York's
Department of Financial Services, and Sandra Thompson, director of
the Federal Housing Finance Agency, are also favored among
Democrats, according to several other sources.
Representatives for the five declined or have not responded to
requests for comment.
Inspector General Jennifer Fain said in a memo addressed to
Gruenberg that was dated Thursday and published Friday that the
watchdog had "learned of several allegations of misconduct regarding
senior FDIC officials that were not reported ... in a timely
manner."
Her office is reviewing the allegations and investigating whether
anything else had not been reported, the memo said.
In response to a request for comment, the FDIC shared a message it
had sent to the OIG's office this week in which it said the agency
looked forward "to coordinating and developing a process for
notifying the OIG promptly" of alleged misconduct by senior FDIC
officials.
While the independent review did not find Gruenberg directly
responsible for the agency's broad cultural issues, he apologized
for misconduct under his leadership and for his own transgressions.
The Republican-led House Financial Services Committee on Thursday
announced it had asked Gruenberg and other top officials to testify
on June 12 about the independent review's findings.
Should Gruenberg step down before a replacement can be appointed,
the FDIC's board of directors would fall into a 2-2 partisan
deadlock, hamstringing the Biden administration's bank regulation
agenda.
(Additional reporting by David Lawder in Stresa, Italy; Editing by
Michelle Price, Franklin Paul, Matthew Lewis, Chizu Nomiyama and Rod
Nickel)
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