Top Federal Reserve bank regulator, under fire from GOP, to step down 
		next month
						
		 
		
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		 [January 07, 2025]  By 
		CHRISTOPHER RUGABER 
						
		WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve's top financial regulator said 
		Monday that he would resign next month, avoiding a potential 
		confrontation with the incoming Trump administration and Republicans in 
		the Senate. 
		 
		Fed governor Michael Barr said in a letter to President Joe Biden that 
		he would step down as vice chair for supervision Feb. 28, or earlier if 
		a successor was confirmed. Yet Barr said he would remain on the Fed's 
		board of governors. His term as governor lasts until 2032. 
		 
		Barr oversaw the proposal of tough new rules for the largest U.S. banks, 
		which would have required them to significantly increase their financial 
		reserves. The proposal sparked fierce opposition from the largest 
		financial firms, including JPMorgan Chase, and was sharply criticized by 
		Senate Republicans. 
		 
		During last year's presidential campaign, there were published reports 
		that former president Donald Trump would try to fire or demote Barr. But 
		at a press conference in November, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said a 
		president doesn't have the legal authority to do either one. 
						
		
		  
						
		Sen. Tim Scott, who is in line to chair the Senate Banking Committee, 
		which oversees the Fed, on Monday called Barr's proposed financial 
		regulations “disastrous." He has previously said that they would limit 
		lending by banks and weaken the economy. 
		 
		“Michael Barr has failed to meet the responsibilities of his position,” 
		Scott said in a statement. "I stand ready to work with President Trump 
		to ensure we have responsible financial regulators at the helm.” 
						
		By stepping down as vice chair, but not governor, Barr has limited the 
		Trump administration's options to replace him. All seven seats on the 
		Fed's board of governors are filled, and an opening won't occur until 
		Governor Adriana Kugler's term ends Jan. 31, 2026. 
		 
		
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             Federal Reserve Board of Governors Vice Chair for Supervision 
			Michael Barr testifies at a House Financial Services Committee 
			hearing on recent bank failures, on Capitol Hill, March 29, 2023, in 
			Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File) 
            
			  As a result, for now President-elect 
			Trump can only appoint another current governor to the top 
			regulatory position, or wait until next year to fill the vacancy on 
			the board with a new regulator. Governor Michelle Bowman, a 
			Republican appointee, has publicly supported less stringent 
			financial regulations and is a potential replacement. 
			 
			“The risk of a dispute over the position could be a distraction from 
			our mission,” Barr said in a statement from the Fed. "In the current 
			environment, I’ve determined that I would be more effective in 
			serving the American people from my role as governor.” 
			 
			Barr took office in June 2022 and was later embroiled in the spate 
			of bank failures in the spring of 2023 that started with Silicon 
			Valley Bank, the third-largest failure in U.S. history. Barr oversaw 
			the preparation of a report that blamed watered-down bank 
			regulations, the Fed's own staffers, and the banks' managers for the 
			failures. 
			 
			Barr then proposed to tighten bank rules, particularly for those 
			banks with $100 billion or more in assets, by requiring them to hold 
			more capital in reserve. Previously, Trump appointees at the Fed had 
			loosed rules for banks with less than $250 billion in assets. 
			 
			Yet those rules met with ferocious opposition from the banking 
			industry, prompting Powell to announce last March that they would be 
			revised. 
			 
			The Fed said Monday that it “does not intend to take up any major 
			rulemakings until a vice chair for supervision successor is 
			confirmed.” 
			
			
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