The U.S. Treasury is denying a piece from the New York Times which accused the Trump administration of delaying the release of the $20 Harriet Tubman bill and doing so for political reasons.
The New York Times ran a piece Friday, wrought with speculation on Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin’s rationale for “delaying” the release of Harriet Tubman’s $20 bill.
Former Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew set the process in motion in 2016. Proponents of the bill change hoped that it would be completed by 2020, in conjunction with the 100th anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment. However, during an appearance before the House Financial Services Committee in May, Mnuchin noted that a 2020 rollout was improbable– if not impossible– due to daunting technical issues. Mnuchin indicated that the redesigned bill would make an emergence in 2028 with designs coming out two years prior.
Canadian leader meets with Trump at Mar-a-Lago to discusses energy relationship
FBI searching for operator of privately owned drone that punched hole in Canadian firefighting plane
McDonald’s Tosses Woke Programs After Pressure from Conservative Activist
Trump tasks blue state Republicans with ‘homework’ as GOP plots massive conservative policy overhaul
Wild video shows thief brazenly rip package right out of FedEx driver’s arms in Massachusetts robbery
Days After WWE’s Momentous Netflix Debut, Vince McMahon Pays $1.7 Million for SEC Charges
Stabbed, Shot, Sued: New York Cops Explain Why No One Wants to Work for the NYPD
Two Birds, One Stone: Congressman Reveals Simple Way to Cut Border Crossings and Welfare Spending
Apple Just Announced a Massive $95 Million Settlement: Here’s How to Get Your Share
Sullivan claims Biden admin leaves Russia, China and Iran ‘weaker,’ America ‘safer’ before Trump handoff
America’s most expensive natural disasters in recent decades
Newsom defends fire response with fact-check site linking to Dem Party fundraising platform
NYC Woman, Nearly 80, Punched in Head up to 20 Times by Young Girl on Street: Report
Los Angeles burglary suspect disguised as firefighter, as looting arrests reach about 29 people: sheriff
Students who saw campuses devolve into anti-Israel chaos witness first-hand successes of Abraham Accords
However, the New York Times spoke to an anonymous employee of the bureau, who supposedly viewed a digital image of the redesigned bill.
The development of the note did not stop there. A current employee of the bureau, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter, personally viewed a metal engraving plate and a digital image of a Tubman $20 bill while it was being reviewed by engravers and Secret Service officials as recently as May 2018. This person said that the design appeared to be far along in the process.
Here’s an early design of the Harriet Tubman $20 bill created by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Steven Mnuchin said designs would be delayed until 2026 and a future Treasury secretary will decide who’s on the face of the note. https://t.co/brRwxuu8F1 pic.twitter.com/o0ffu53tF2
— Alan Rappeport (@arappeport) June 14, 2019
Canadian leader meets with Trump at Mar-a-Lago to discusses energy relationship
FBI searching for operator of privately owned drone that punched hole in Canadian firefighting plane
McDonald’s Tosses Woke Programs After Pressure from Conservative Activist
Trump tasks blue state Republicans with ‘homework’ as GOP plots massive conservative policy overhaul
Wild video shows thief brazenly rip package right out of FedEx driver’s arms in Massachusetts robbery
Days After WWE’s Momentous Netflix Debut, Vince McMahon Pays $1.7 Million for SEC Charges
Stabbed, Shot, Sued: New York Cops Explain Why No One Wants to Work for the NYPD
Two Birds, One Stone: Congressman Reveals Simple Way to Cut Border Crossings and Welfare Spending
Apple Just Announced a Massive $95 Million Settlement: Here’s How to Get Your Share
Sullivan claims Biden admin leaves Russia, China and Iran ‘weaker,’ America ‘safer’ before Trump handoff
America’s most expensive natural disasters in recent decades
Newsom defends fire response with fact-check site linking to Dem Party fundraising platform
NYC Woman, Nearly 80, Punched in Head up to 20 Times by Young Girl on Street: Report
Los Angeles burglary suspect disguised as firefighter, as looting arrests reach about 29 people: sheriff
Students who saw campuses devolve into anti-Israel chaos witness first-hand successes of Abraham Accords
That source fueled speculation from the New York Times, which pondered if Mnuchin “delayed” the release in order to avoid conflict from Trump, who is a fan of the Andrew Jackson $20 bill.
But the Treasury Department, which oversees the engraving bureau, decided that a new $20 bill would not be made public next year. Current and former department officials say Mr. Mnuchin chose the delay to avoid the possibility that Mr. Trump would cancel the plan outright and create even more controversy.
Mnuchin has denied that.
Further, by citing the anonymous employee, the Times implied that the design is much further along than the current administration is willing to admit.
The U.S. Treasury Department is denying the Times’ story altogether. Senior Adviser for Public Affairs to the Secretary of the Treasury Monica Crowley said the existing timetable is “consistent” with the previous administration’s, adding that Mnuchin is focused solely on “security features and anti-counterfeiting measures.”
“The scheduled release (printing) of the $20 bill is on a timetable consistent with the previous administration,” Crowley said in a statement.
“The Secretary at this point is focused on security features and anti-counterfeiting measures related to the currency,” the statement continued. “The suggestion that the process is being delayed is completely erroneous.”
Canadian leader meets with Trump at Mar-a-Lago to discusses energy relationship
FBI searching for operator of privately owned drone that punched hole in Canadian firefighting plane
McDonald’s Tosses Woke Programs After Pressure from Conservative Activist
Trump tasks blue state Republicans with ‘homework’ as GOP plots massive conservative policy overhaul
Wild video shows thief brazenly rip package right out of FedEx driver’s arms in Massachusetts robbery
Days After WWE’s Momentous Netflix Debut, Vince McMahon Pays $1.7 Million for SEC Charges
Stabbed, Shot, Sued: New York Cops Explain Why No One Wants to Work for the NYPD
Two Birds, One Stone: Congressman Reveals Simple Way to Cut Border Crossings and Welfare Spending
Apple Just Announced a Massive $95 Million Settlement: Here’s How to Get Your Share
Sullivan claims Biden admin leaves Russia, China and Iran ‘weaker,’ America ‘safer’ before Trump handoff
America’s most expensive natural disasters in recent decades
Newsom defends fire response with fact-check site linking to Dem Party fundraising platform
NYC Woman, Nearly 80, Punched in Head up to 20 Times by Young Girl on Street: Report
Los Angeles burglary suspect disguised as firefighter, as looting arrests reach about 29 people: sheriff
Students who saw campuses devolve into anti-Israel chaos witness first-hand successes of Abraham Accords
Treasury spokesperson response to today’s misleading New York Times story: pic.twitter.com/PeMcoVL8tC
— Treasury Public Affairs (@TreasurySpox) June 14, 2019
Bureau of Engraving and Printing Director Len Olijar also released a strong statement denying the existence of a potential 2020 release. That was never going to happen, he claimed, while adding that the focus lies squarely with implementing advanced security features. Because those take years to finalize, it would be impossible to make legitimate mock-ups of the bill public.
The statement reads in part:
“As technology has evolved, banknote production has vastly changed over the last three decades. The next family of notes require new, overt and covert security features for the public, the banknote equipment manufacturers, and the central bank, to keep our currency safe and secure. Security features also need to work in mass production. A design can change during testing. The overwhelming success of the redesigned $100 in thwarting counterfeiting, is greatly due to the effectiveness of the blue security thread which is a public feature (and which a design was integrated around afterwards). That development alone of that security feature took approximately 10 years to finalize.
Canadian leader meets with Trump at Mar-a-Lago to discusses energy relationship
FBI searching for operator of privately owned drone that punched hole in Canadian firefighting plane
McDonald’s Tosses Woke Programs After Pressure from Conservative Activist
Trump tasks blue state Republicans with ‘homework’ as GOP plots massive conservative policy overhaul
Wild video shows thief brazenly rip package right out of FedEx driver’s arms in Massachusetts robbery
Days After WWE’s Momentous Netflix Debut, Vince McMahon Pays $1.7 Million for SEC Charges
Stabbed, Shot, Sued: New York Cops Explain Why No One Wants to Work for the NYPD
Two Birds, One Stone: Congressman Reveals Simple Way to Cut Border Crossings and Welfare Spending
Apple Just Announced a Massive $95 Million Settlement: Here’s How to Get Your Share
Sullivan claims Biden admin leaves Russia, China and Iran ‘weaker,’ America ‘safer’ before Trump handoff
America’s most expensive natural disasters in recent decades
Newsom defends fire response with fact-check site linking to Dem Party fundraising platform
NYC Woman, Nearly 80, Punched in Head up to 20 Times by Young Girl on Street: Report
Los Angeles burglary suspect disguised as firefighter, as looting arrests reach about 29 people: sheriff
Students who saw campuses devolve into anti-Israel chaos witness first-hand successes of Abraham Accords
“Moreover, BEP was never going to unveil a note design in 2020. To keep our currency safe and secure, it is unwise to give counterfeiters a look at a potential future note far in advance of a note going into circulation. Additionally, if the concept of a note that was made public by the government were to change during that lengthy amount of time, it would create confusion in the global marketplace, further aiding counterfeiters.”
“No Bureau or Department official has ‘scrapped’ anything; it is too early to develop an integrated concept or design until security features are finalized. The aesthetics or look of the note has always come after and been driven by the security features. Everything remains on the table.
Olijar added that the Times’ “sneak peek” of the Tubman $20 bill is not anything new. Rather, it is merely a “copy of an old Series note with the signatures of former officials, with a different image super-imposed on it.”
“It is not a new $20 note, as incorrectly stated by the New York Times, in any way, shape or form,” Olijar said. “The facsimile contained no security features or offset printing included on currency notes.”
“There is nothing about that illustration that even begins to meet technical requirements for the next family of notes,” he added.
Story cited here.