Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Putting Tubman on $20 redesign delayed

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WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said Wednesday the redesign of the $20 bill to feature 19th-century abolitioni­st leader Harriet Tubman has been delayed.

The decision to replace Andrew Jackson, the nation’s seventh president, with Tubman on the $20 bill had been made by Mnuchin’s predecesso­r, former Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew, who had served in President Barack Obama’s administra­tion.

Tubman’s fate had been in doubt since the 2016 campaign based on critical comments by then-candidate Donald Trump, who branded the move an act of “pure political correctnes­s.”

Mnuchin, however, said the delay in unveiling a $20 redesign had been prompted by the decision to redesign the $10 bill and the $50 bill first for security reasons to make it harder for the bills to be counterfei­ted. He said those bills will now be introduced before a redesigned $20 bill.

“It is my responsibi­lity to focus on the issue of counterfei­ting and the security features,” Mnuchin said.

Mnuchin made the announceme­nt of the delay in response to questions from U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass., during an appearance before the House Financial Services Committee.

The unveiling of the redesigned $20 bill featuring Tubman, famous for her efforts spiriting slaves to freedom on the Undergroun­d Railroad, had been timed by the Obama administra­tion to coincide with the 100th anniversar­y in 2020 of the passage of the 19th Amendment giving women the right to vote.

“Currently our currency does not reflect the diversity of people who have contribute­d to our great American history,” Pressley told Mnuchin.

Mnuchin would not say whether he supported keeping Tubman on the redesigned $20. He said under the revised timeline, that decision will be left to whoever is Treasury secretary in 2026.

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