Bowman nod for Fed supervision czar advances to full Senate

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Federal Reserve Gov. Michelle Bowman is one step closer to becoming the central bank’s vice chair for supervision.

The Senate Banking Committee advanced Bowman’s nomination Tuesday to the full chamber, by a 13-11 party-line vote.

Bowman joins former Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. board member Jonathan McKernan and Jonathan Gould, former senior deputy comptroller at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, among Trump administration nominees awaiting full-Senate votes to take crucial posts at financial regulators. The banking committee in March advanced McKernan’s nomination to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. It advanced Gould’s nod to lead the OCC in April.

In a statement Tuesday, the panel’s chair, Sen. Tim Scott, R-SC, highlighted the importance of confirming nominees to fill critical government roles.

“It is imperative that we continue to move at a rapid pace to get qualified nominees into the Executive Branch,” Scott said. “These nominees are not just capable but essential to our nation's prosperity. Their roles demand accountability and expertise to protect American interests both at home and abroad.”

Not every senator was as quick to embrace the nominations. Ahead of the vote, the panel’s ranking member, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-MA, posted dozens of what she called “troubling responses” given by several nominees, including Bowman, at their respective confirmation hearings.

At a hearing last month, Warren grew demonstrably frustrated at Bowman’s responses regarding the potential effect of tariffs pushed by President Donald Trump on financial stability.

“President Trump is fanning the flames of disaster with his mismanagement of the nation’s economy,” Warren wrote in a letter to Bowman. “And I am concerned that instead of showing up with the fire department, you will bring a can of gasoline.” 

Warren accused Bowman, at the hearing, of dodging questions on the subject.

“I think, as we were watching and waiting to see how the path for these policies continues to evolve, we’ll understand what the economic effects of those policies will be,” Bowman replied.

“All of the things that have happened in the last week and in the last two months, you’re just going to cover your eyes and cover your ears and say, I’m sure the banks will be fine, we’ll check them out in several months?” Warren said.