Lodi News-Sentinel

Tubman $20 bill won’t be released until 2028

- By Chelsea Mes and John Harney

WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said that a redesigned $20 bill would not be released until 2028, essentiall­y punting a decision to put Harriet Tubman on the note to a future administra­tion.

“The imagery feature will not be an issue that comes up until most likely 2026,” Mnuchin told the House Financial Services Committee Wednesday in response to questions from Massachuse­tts Democrat Ayanna Pressley. Asked whether he supported Tubman being on the $20 bill, Mnuchin replied that he’d “made no decision as it relates to that and that decision won’t be made, and as I said, it won’t most likely be until 2026.”

“It’s not a decision that is likely to come until way past my term, even if I serve the second term for the president. So I am not focused on that at the moment,” Mnuchin said. Trump’s first term ends in January of 2021. If reelected, a second and final term would end in January of 2025.

The decision to put Tubman, a former slave who helped others to freedom, on the front of the $20 bill was made during the Obama administra­tion when Jacob Lew was Treasury secretary. The face of Andrew Jackson, the seventh American president, was to be relegated to back of the $20 bill, along with the image of the White House.

Lew had first proposed putting a woman on the $10 bill in 2015, replacing the nation’s first Treasury secretary, Alexander Hamilton, but he was enjoying a resurgence in popularity because of the Broadway musical about his life, and that plan was shelved.

President Donald Trump is known to be an admirer of Jackson and hung a portrait of him in the Oval Office. During his campaign, he said the movement to replace Jackson with Tubman was “pure political correctnes­s.”

Mnuchin said in 2017 he would review the Obama administra­tion initiative, adding that it was not a high priority amid a heavy policy agenda that included the first major tax overhaul in three decades.

Tubman escaped slavery and became a leading figure in the abolition movement in the years before the Civil War. She led hundreds to freedom along the Undergroun­d Railroad to the North. During the war, she was a spy for the Union Army.

Senator Jeanne Shaheen, a New Hampshire Democrat who has sponsored legislatio­n to put women on the nation’s currency, said Mnuchin’s decision was unacceptab­le. “There is no excuse for the administra­tion’s failure to make this redesign a priority,” Shaheen said in a statement.

“Sadly, this delay sends an unmistakab­le message to women and girls, and communitie­s of color, who were promised they’d see Harriet Tubman on the $20 bill.”

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