Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Senate confirms ex-banker Mnuchin as Treasury secretary

- By Stephen Ohlemacher

WASHINGTON >> A bitterly divided Senate on Monday confirmed Steven Mnuchin as treasury secretary despite strong objections by Democrats that the former banker ran a “foreclosur­e machine” when he headed OneWest Bank.

Republican­s said Mnuchin’s long tenure in finance makes him qualified to run the department, which will play a major role in developing economic policy under President Donald Trump.

“He has experience managing large and complicate­d private-sector enterprise­s and in negotiatin­g difficult compromise­s and making tough decisions — and being accountabl­e for those decisions,” said Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, chairman of the Finance Committee.

Votes on President Donald Trump’s Cabinet picks have exposed deep partisan divisions in the Republican-controlled Senate, with many of the nominees approved by mostly partyline votes.

The vote on Mnuchin followed the same pattern. He was confirmed by a mostly party-line vote of 53-47. Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia joined the Republican­s.

The Senate also headed toward a vote on a less divisive nominee, physician David Shulkin, to be secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Like others in Trump’s Cabinet, Mnuchin is a wealthy businessma­n. He is a former top executive at Goldman Sachs and served as finance chairman for Trump’s presidenti­al campaign. As Treasury secretary, Mnuchin is expected to play a key role in Republican efforts to overhaul the nation’s tax code for the first time in three decades. Trump has promised to unveil a proposal in the coming weeks.

Mnuchin will also be in charge of imposing economic sanctions on foreign government­s and individual­s, including Russia.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Mnuchin “is smart, he’s capable, and he’s got impressive private-sector experience.”

Democrats complained that Mnuchin made much of his fortune by foreclosin­g on families during the financial crisis.

In 2009, Mnuchin assembled a group of investors to buy the failed IndyMac bank, whose collapse the year before was the second biggest bank failure of the financial crisis. He renamed it OneWest and turned it around, selling it for a handsome profit in 2014.

“Mr. Mnuchin has made his career profiting from the misfortune­s of working people,” said Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich. “OneWest was notorious for taking an especially aggressive role in foreclosin­g on struggling homeowners.”

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., said, “I simply cannot forgive somebody who took a look at that banking crisis and took a look at the pain that Wall Street had sent in a wave across all of America, and thought, ‘Ah, there’s a great new way to make money, foreclosin­g on people.’”

Rep. Maxine Waters of California, the top Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, called Mnuchin “the foreclosur­e king.”

Mnuchin has said he had worked hard during the financial crisis to assist homeowners with refinancin­g so that they could remain in their homes.

He said his bank had extended more than 100,000 loan modificati­ons to borrowers.

But several Democratic senators raised examples of residents in their states who they said were not treated fairly by OneWest, including elderly homeowners and members of the military.

Democrats also complained that Mnuchin failed to disclose nearly $100 million in assets on forms he filed with the Senate Finance Committee.

In his testimony before the committee, Mnuchin defended his actions while heading OneWest. He said he had worked hard during the financial crisis to assist homeowners with refinancin­g so that they could remain in their homes.

He told the committee that his bank had extended more than 100,000 loan modificati­ons to borrowers.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Treasury Secretaryd­esignate Steven Mnuchin testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington at his confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Finance Committee on Jan. 19.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Treasury Secretaryd­esignate Steven Mnuchin testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington at his confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Finance Committee on Jan. 19.

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