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U.S. Department of the Treasury

Steven Mnuchin confirmed as Treasury secretary

Roger Yu
USA TODAY
Steven Mnuchin, nominee for secretary of the Treasury, appears before the Senate Finance Committee for his confirmation hearing on Jan. 19, 2017.

Steven Mnuchin, whose previous roles have included former CEO of OneWest Bank, Wall Street banker and film financier, was confirmed Monday as Treasury secretary, ensuring his place in President Trump’s economic inner circle after a contentious row over his company’s foreclosure practice and failure to disclose overseas business interests.

Facing opposition from Democrats and consumer activists, Mnuchin was one of Trump’s most controversial cabinet picks as his résumé and confirmation hearing seemingly ran counter to Trump’s populist campaign message of reining in Wall Street’s influence. The U.S. Senate voted for his confirmation 53-47. Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W. Va.) was the only Democrat voting for the confirmation.

Mnuchin’s path to confirmation was tumultuous. The Senate Finance Committee had been scheduled to vote on Jan. 30 whether to send Mnuchin's nomination to the full Senate. Using a procedural mechanism, Democrats on the committee skipped the hearing.

As Treasury secretary, Mnuchin, 54, will oversee a massive department that runs the federal tax system, pays the nation's bills and produces currency and stamps. As one of Trump’s top advisors, the New York City native will have the president ear in his key economic priorities, including tax reform, rolling back regulations on banks established by the Dodd-Frank Act, infrastructure project funding and changing or repealing Obamacare. He served as Trump's 2016 national campaign finance chief.

Democrats criticized the vote outcome. ““Trump and his fellow Republicans in Congress are determined to pack the Administration with bankers and billionaires, ensuring that special interests are represented, not the needs of hardworking Americans,” said Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) ranking member of the House Committee on Financial Services.

At his hearing, Mnuchin said “there would be no absolute tax cut for the upper class," prompting Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) to label the pledge “the Mnuchin Rule.” But revising tax codes and Trump’s other policy proposals would result in abandoning the rule, Wyden and other Democrats said.

"Mr. Mnuchin helped craft economic proposals that include the tried-and-failed tax cuts for high-income households that exacerbate inequality while increasing deficits,” Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.) said in a statement.

Mnuchin, who was involved in the production of films such as Avatar and The X-Men franchise and spent 17 years at Goldman Sachs before starting his hedge fund, fielded combative questions from Democrats during his Senate Finance Committee hearing about his offshore assets and reign at OneWest, which has been accused of aggressive foreclosures.

“It has been said that I ran a ‘foreclosure machine,’” Mnuchin said during his confirmation hearing. “This is not true." He also came under fire for initially failing to disclose major financial assets in a federal disclosure statement.

Mnuchin said, if confirmed, he would pursue pro-growth policies that would unleash business investment and boost jobs. He also told lawmakers he would deal impartially with Trump's vast business holdings to ensure there are no conflicts of interest; enforce the toughened economic sanctions imposed on Russia; and would keep the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a target of many Republicans, but seek to make its funding dependent on congressional approval.

He also plans to oppose large bank bailouts but support a "21st Century" reintroduction of the Glass-Steagall Act, which prohibited commercial banks from engaging in investment banking.

Trump's Treasury nominee Steven Mnuchin denies he ran 'foreclosure machine'

With the Senate controlled by Republicans, Mnuchin’s confirmation was considered a foregone conclusion.

In supporting Mnuchin’s nomination, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) said his financial sector experience would give him an edge.

“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," Hatch said.

Homeowners slam Mnuchin bank's foreclosure record

Follow USA TODAY reporter Roger Yu on Twitter @ByRogerYu.

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