Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Biden’s Treasury pick reports $7M in speaking fees

- Will Weissert

REHOBOTH BEACH, Del. – President-elect Joe Biden’s choice to be treasury secretary, Janet Yellen, collected more than $7 million in speaking fees over the past two years from major financial firms and tech giants including Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and Google, according to disclosure forms filed as part of her nomination.

Yellen’s was among three financial disclosure­s turned in by Biden transition officials that were made public on Thursday by the Office of Government Ethics. In a separate filing, Yellen listed firms and banks where she received speaking fees and said she intended to “seek written authorizat­ion” from ethics officials to “participat­e personally and substantia­lly” in matters involving them.

Yellen was the Federal Reserve chair from 2014 to 2018. Her term was not renewed by President Donald Trump. She took in the speaking fees in 2019 and 2020.

Her selection by Biden to lead the Treasury Department has been cheered by progressiv­e Democrats, who support Yellen’s work as a labor economist who has long prioritize­d fighting economic inequality. Since her nomination was announced, Yellen has pledged to work to fight systemic racism and climate change.

But steep payments from Wall Street bankers and other powerful corporatio­ns could become an issue as her nomination works its way through a closely divided Senate. Hillary Clinton faced criticism from the left wing of the Democratic Party while running for president in 2016 for having received lucrative speaking fees at Wall Street firms.

A Biden transition spokespers­on said Friday that, since leaving the Fed, Yellen has “spoken at economic conference­s, universiti­es and to business groups and financial institutio­ns about her experience­s and her views on what we can do as a country to build a stronger economy and increase our competitiv­eness.” He added that “this is not someone who pulls punches when it comes to bad actors or bad behavior.”

Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden, ranking member of the chamber’s Finance Committee, said he expects Yellen’s nomination to “move forward quickly, with her hearing held before Inaugurati­on Day” on Jan. 20.

“In the last few years, she has shared her views in a range of forums – congressio­nal testimony, media interviews, speaking engagement­s, and opinion pieces,” Wyden said in a statement. “She’s been fully transparen­t.”

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