Biden faces time crunch to pick financial watchdogs
President Biden has a growing list of vacancies to fill at top financial watchdog agencies before he and his party risk losing control of the Senate.
Biden has roughly a year to nominate
and confirm some of the most important officials overseeing the financial
system before the November midterm elections, in which Republicans are thought
to have a good chance to recapture the Senate.
“2022 is going to be a very busy
year on the administrative agency level in large part because if the Democrats
lose control of the House and Senate in 2023 it changes a little bit of a
dynamic,” said Jason Rosenstock, partner at Washington. D.C. lobbying firm
Thorn Run Partners.
“It just makes it a little bit
harder to move their agenda. So I think this is the year to pounce, so to
speak.”
The Senate will see confirmation
fights over up to five Federal Reserve nominees within the first months of the
year, including the top three positions on the Fed board. But Biden has yet to
name three of those nominees — including one to be Fed’s top regulatory
official — despite teasing an announcement before the end of 2021.
Biden must also nominate a new
leader for the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), two members of
the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and cement two nominees to the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission through the Senate before he could be
forced to cut deals with a GOP Senate majority.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
(FDIC) Chairman Jelena McWilliams’ resignation last week added another major
vacancy to Biden’s list, forcing the president to prioritize his picks with
limited time to shepherd them through the Senate.
“Agencies have by and large been
able to discharge their core missions even in the absence of key appointments,”
said Hilary Allen, a banking and financial law professor at American
University, in an email.
“However, without key leadership
positions filled, it is very difficult for agencies to pivot to start
addressing new problems or to take innovative approaches to longstanding
problems,” she continued, highlighting the rise of financial technology,
cryptocurrencies and climate finance issues.
While the Senate could still confirm
nominees after the midterm elections, Congress spends much of the final six
week before election day on the campaign trail and out of the Capitol. A second
push to pass aspects of Biden’s Build Back Better plan could also suck up
Senate floor time necessary to move nominees.
With just nine months until campaign
season is set to pick up, Biden must navigate a dwindling timeline to cement
many of his top picks. The president must also contend with a small and
fractious group of Senate Democrats who’ve derailed several of his previous
picks.
“They're running up against the
clock with the elections in November,” said Ian Katz, director at research
consultancy Capital Alpha Partners.
Biden has struggled to pick
financial regulators who could win enough support from both progressive and
moderate Democrats to make it through the Senate without substantial GOP
support. SEC Chairman Gary Gensler and Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau Director (CFPB) Director Rohit
Chopra are Biden’s only two major non-Cabinet financial regulatory
nominees confirmed since he took office, and several other posts have gone
unfilled amid internal squabbling.
The president took until September
to nominate a Comptroller of the Currency who could win the support of liberal
Democrats only to see his pick, Cornell law professor Saule Omarova, derailed
by several centrist members of his own party. Biden is also facing intense pressure
from the left over his pick for Fed vice chair of supervision, particularly
after renominating Fed Chair Jerome Powell, a Republican appointed by former President
Trump to the post in 2017.
“A lot of the nominees that have
come forward would be more aligned with, you know, what people would think of
[Sen. Elizabeth] Warren (D-Mass.) presidency rather than how Biden had sort of
been seen,” Rosenstock said.
“If you look at a Venn Diagram, that
sort of sweet spot in the middle of who satisfies both sides is very small,” he
said.
Katz added that the power struggle
at the FDIC which led to McWilliams’ resignation could also spur further
backlash from Republicans and taint the water for any crossover votes.
“There's not much goodwill between
the parties,” Katz said. “This episode at the FDIC, which has really angered
Republicans who are on the relevant committees in Congress, just makes it that
much tougher.”
McWilliams, a Republican appointed
by former President Trump, announced her resignation on New Year’s Eve weeks
after the Democratic majority on the FDIC board attempted to launch a review of
bank merger practices without her approval. She and other Republicans denounced
the move as a “hostile takeover” while Democrats insisted McWilliams was
obstructing a legally binding action taken by the board’s majority.
Sen. Pat
Toomey (R-Pa.), the Republican on the Senate Banking Committee,
condemned Biden for supporting the “extremist destruction of institutional
norms and unprecedented action to undermine the independence and integrity of
our financial regulators.”
“President Biden should move swiftly
to fill the two vacant board seats and Interim Director [Martin] Gruenberg’s
seat with qualified individuals who will respect the FDIC’s tradition of
operating free from partisan political interference,” Toomey said in a Friday
statement.
Even so, Katz said the intense
Republican backlash won’t derail the Democratic agenda so long as Biden can
nail down the support of his own party.
“If they have all the Democrats,
they can get through who they want. But they really need to make sure they do,”
he said.
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