U.S. Sen. Manchin Wants Fed Nominee Vote To Go Ahead, Without Raskin

U.S. Sen. Manchin Wants Fed Nominee Vote To Go Ahead, Without Raskin

(Reuters) – U.S. Senator Joe Manchin wants his fellow Democrats on the Senate Banking committee to move ahead with four of President Joe Biden’s five nominees to the Federal Reserve, dropping the fifth nominee, Sarah Bloom Raskin, Politico reported on Thursday.

Republicans last month blocked a vote on the full Fed slate over objections to Raskin, a former Fed governor and Biden’s pick to be the central bank’s vice chair for supervision.

They worry Raskin would use her position to police climate change and make it harder for oil and gas companies to access credit. They have also raised questions about her actions as a director for a financial firm in 2017.

Senator Pat Toomey, the panel’s top Republican, says he would support a vote on the other four nominees, but not Raskin.

“If they’re willing to move four out of five? Take it and run with it. It’s a win,” Manchin told Politico. Though Manchin is not on the Senate Banking Committee, his is a critical vote in the evenly divided Senate.

The panel’s chair, Sherrod Brown, is adamant that the five remain a package deal.

The nominees include Fed chief Jerome Powell, who was renominated for another four-year term and has bipartisan support.

Next week he is expected to announce the first of what will likely be a series of interest rates hikes to battle high inflation.

Consumer prices rose 7.9% last month, a report early Thursday showed, and are set to rise even faster this month as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine boosts the price of oil and other commodities.

“Newly released economic data makes it crystal clear: Republicans need to do their jobs and vote on these critical nominees so that we can tackle inflation and address our global economic uncertainty,” a Brown spokesperson said.

(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by David Gregorio)