Janet Yellen, the former Chair of the Federal Reserve, is one step closer to earning the nomination of Treasury Secretary.
The Senate Committee on Finance voted unanimously to approve Yellen’s nomination Friday morning, setting the stage for a full Senate vote. Republican Senator Chuck Grassley said he hoped the GOP’s backing would signal “bipartisan” support under the new Democratic administration.
Fellow Republicans said they backed Yellen despite disagreeing on several of her policy stances. The general consensus was that she was exceptionally qualified for the job.
Committee members hoped for a full Senate vote to confirm Yellen's appointment on Friday but as of publication time, that has yet to materialize.
If confirmed as Treasury Secretary, Yellen would become a key member of President Biden’s Cabinet and will act as a principal adviser on economic issues and fiscal policy. She would also be the first woman to occupy the post.
At her Senate confirmation hearing Tuesday, Yellen called for “big action” on the Covid-19 crisis. She said:
"Economists don't always agree, but I think there is a consensus now: Without further action, we risk a longer, more painful recession now — and long-term scarring of the economy later."
Yellen headed the Federal Reserve between 2014 and 2018, becoming the first woman to do so. Under her leadership, the central bank made its first attempt at normalizing monetary policy — an initiative that was later curtailed under Jerome Powell.
The cryptocurrency industry has been following Yellen’s nomination process closely. The former Fed chief has given mixed signals on digital assets. On one hand, she has touted Bitcoin (BTC) and other digital assets as an important innovation in optimizing global transactions. On the other, she has raised concerns over crypto’s role in money laundering and illicit financing.
The final days of the Trump administration induced heavy anxiety for the cryptocurrency industry after then-Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin tried to fast-track new regulations targeted self-hosted crypto wallets.
In his first day in office, President Biden placed a general freeze on all federal-agency rulemaking, effectively blocking several Trump-era policies from advancing. The proposed crypto wallet regulation was among them.