Tag Archives: appointee

Chair of the FDIC, a Trump appointee, resigns after warning of ‘hostile takeover’ by Democrats 

Chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, a Trump appointee, resigns after warning of ‘hostile takeover’ by Democrats

  • Jelena McWilliams, 48, wrote an open letter Friday slamming Senate Dems over going around her to suit their own agenda 
  • When I immigrated to this country 30 years ago, I did so with a firm belief in the American system of government,’ McWilliams, a Serbian immigrant, wrote 
  • Her resignation appears to stem from clashes between McWilliams and Democrats over bank merger rules 
  • Rohit Chopra, the new director of the CFPB, complained that McWilliams had refused to recognize their attempts to review rules about bank mergers 
  • McWilliams said that while many senate chambers had faced an FDIC chair from the opposing party, none had ever behaved like the current crop of Democrats 










The chairperson of the FDIC resigned Friday just weeks after she attempted to warn of a ‘hostile takeover’ of the commission by Democrats.  

Jelena McWilliams, 48, wrote an open letter Friday slamming Senate Dems over going around her to suit their own agenda.  

‘When I immigrated to this country 30 years ago, I did so with a firm belief in the American system of government,’ McWilliams, a Serbian immigrant, wrote in the letter. 

McWilliams has a decades-long career in law, finance and banking policy before Trump appointed her to the chair.    

Her resignation appears to stem from clashes between McWilliams and Democrats over bank merger rules.   

Jelena McWilliams, the soon-to-be ex-Chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

McWilliams announced her resignation in a letter addressed to President Joe Biden on Friday

Rohit Chopra, a member of the FDIC board and the new director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, complained that McWilliams had refused to recognize their attempts to review rules about bank mergers.

‘This approach to governance is unsafe and unsound,’ he said. ‘It is also an attack on the rule of law.’

At a virtual meeting earlier Tuesday, McWilliams, the board’s lone Republican, struck down Chopra’s request to record in the minutes a vote on the review. McWilliams said their general counsel had ruled the vote, which had been taken earlier by the Democrats, to be invalid.  

‘During my tenure at the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, the United States Senate, and the FDIC, I have developed a deep appreciation for these venerable institutions and their traditions.’  

Rohit Chopra, a member of the FDIC board and the new director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, complained that McWilliams had refused to recognize their attempts to review rules about bank mergers

Martin J. Gruenberg served as acting chairman of FDIC and still serves as a board member under McWilliams

McWilliams said that while many senate chambers had faced an FDIC chair from the opposing party, none had ever behaved like the current crop of Democrats.

‘Of the 20 chairmen who preceded me at the FDIC, nine faced a majority of the board members from the opposing party, including [Martin J. Gruenberg] as chairman under President Trump until I replaced him as chairman in 2018,’ McWilliams wrote in her op-ed. ‘Never before has a majority of the board attempted to circumvent the chairman to pursue their own agenda.’ 

She made it clear that her departure had nothing to do with bank merger disputes.

‘This conflict isn’t about bank mergers. If it were, board members would have been willing to work with me and the FDIC staff rather than attempt a hostile takeover of the FDIC internal processes, staff and board agenda.’ 

McWilliams resignation will be effective February 4. Her replacement is not immediately clear.

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Trump Appointee Resigns After Fight With Democratic Bank Regulators

The Republican chairwoman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, who was appointed by former President Donald J. Trump, said on Friday that she was cutting short her term after a clash with Democratic banking regulators.

Jelena McWilliams, who started a five-year term as chair in June 2018, will resign effective Feb. 4, she wrote in a letter to President Biden. She is also stepping down as a director of the F.D.I.C.’s board. Ms. McWilliams is the only Republican currently on the five-member board, and her departure will add a second vacancy.

“Throughout my tenure, the agency has focused on its fundamental mission to maintain and instill confidence in our banking system,” she wrote. “Today, banks continue to maintain robust capital and liquidity levels to support lending and protect against potential losses.”

Her exit came after Rohit Chopra, a member of the F.D.I.C. board and the new director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, complained earlier this month that Ms. McWilliams had refused to recognize attempts by Democratic regulators to review rules about bank mergers. Ms. McWilliams called the conflict a “hostile takeover” by other board members in an essay in The Wall Street Journal.

Ms. McWilliams has mostly adhered to Republican ideological lines during her tenure. That made her something of a barrier to President Biden’s agenda, which involves shifting the federal government’s stance on big issues like climate change and income inequality.

The Democrats on the board of the F.D.I.C., which is chiefly known for backing consumer deposits but has a hand in overseeing all of the nation’s banks, contended that Ms. McWilliams was stonewalling attempts by the majority to set policy.

The partisan fight atop the sleepy bank regulator, believed by some experts to be part of an effort by Democrats to unseat Ms. McWilliams, spilled into public view in early December. Mr. Chopra and two other Democrats on the board — Martin J. Gruenberg, a longtime member, and Michael J. Hsu, the acting comptroller of the currency — voted over email to request public comment on the issue of bank mergers. A statement on the request was posted not on the F.D.I.C.’s site but on the site of the consumer bureau that Mr. Chopra leads. The F.D.I.C. soon released a statement saying it had not approved such a request for comment.

A week later, after a meeting on Dec. 14, Mr. Chopra said in a statement, “This approach to governance is unsafe and unsound.” In refusing to recognize the vote by other board members, he wrote, Ms. McWilliams had made “an attack on the rule of law.” She fired back the next day, accusing other board members of trying to “wrest control” from the head of an independent agency. Banking industry groups urged calm and transparency.

Pat Toomey, a Republican who sits on the Senate Banking Committee, issued a statement on Friday criticizing the Democratic board members for ending the bipartisan cooperation that has endured during the F.D.I.C.’s 88-year history.

“The recent, reckless effort by Director Chopra and Interim Director Gruenberg to take over the F.D.I.C. board leaves a dark mark on both the F.D.I.C. and their own personal records,” Mr. Toomey wrote. “I am deeply troubled to see the administration support this extremist destruction of institutional norms and unprecedented action to undermine the independence and integrity of our financial regulators.”

The C.F.P.B. did not immediately respond to a phone message and email requesting comment.

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Trump State Department appointee arrested in connection with Capitol riot

The FBI arrested Federico Klein, one of former President TrumpDonald TrumpHouse passes voting rights and elections reform bill DEA places agent seen outside Capitol during riot on leave Georgia Gov. Kemp says he’d ‘absolutely’ back Trump as 2024 nominee MORE’s appointees for State Department, on Thursday in connection with the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Samatha Shero, a spokesperson for the FBI’s Washington Field Office, confirmed the arrest to The Hill on Thursday evening, but referred additional questions to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for D.C.

Klein’s arrest is the first known instance of one of Trump’s political appointees facing criminal charges in connection with the riot. It comes as some on the right seek to shift the blame away from Trump for the insurrection. 

Trump was impeached for inciting the riots, but the Senate ultimately voted 53-47 to acquit him.

Over 300 people have been charged in connection with the riot that forced Congress to halt certification of President BidenJoe BidenThe West needs a more collaborative approach to Taiwan Abbott’s medical advisers were not all consulted before he lifted Texas mask mandate House approves George Floyd Justice in Policing Act MORE’s electoral college victory and resulted in the deaths of five people. 

News of Klein’s arrest was first reported by Politico. According to the news outlet, he was taken into custody in Virginia.

According to a financial disclosure published by ProPublica, Klein was appointed to the State Department on Jan 22, 2017 as a special assistant. Prior to his appointment, he worked on Trump’s 2016 campaign, and reported making $15,000 in income.

At the State Department, Klein was a special assistant in the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs at the State Department, and was a “Schedule C” political appointee, Politico reported.

Klein’s mother, Cecilia, told Politico in a telephone interview that she discussed the Jan. 6 events with her son, and confirmed that he was in Washington, D.C. that day.

She told Politico that she came away with the impression that her son hadn’t entered the Capitol but couldn’t recall whether he specifically denied it.

“As far as I know, he was on the Mall. That’s what he told me,” Cecilia Klein told Politico.



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Trump appointee sues Biden over alleged ouster from advisory board

Trump announced his intention to appoint Severino to the advisory board in July, and Severino received his commission just over two weeks ago. He argued that the council is separate from any executive power and that the president does not have the authority to fire him at will. When he asked for a reason for his termination, the White House did not respond, the suit alleges.

“The Council does not wield any executive power — indeed, it does not wield any power at all as a purely advisory entity — so President Biden has no constitutional power to terminate Mr. Severino or any other member of the Council,” the lawsuit said.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment for this article.

The suit comes as the Biden administration works to weed out political holdovers from the Trump presidency still working in the executive branch. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin ousted members of 31 defense advisory boards who were appointed in the twilight days of Trump’s presidency. Other members of defense advisory boards, including those appointed by Trump himself, remain under review.

Severino had previously served as head of the Department of Health and Human Services civil rights office, where he shored up protections for health care workers objecting to abortions on religious reasons and defended a rollback of protections for LGBT patients.

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