(Bloomberg Markets) — A red baseball cap sits above Michelle Bowman’s filing cabinet in her office at the US Federal Reserve in Washington. It’s emblazoned with the words “make community banks great again.” The TV in her office is tuned to Fox News, and the self-described workaholic has a sticky note on her door asking visitors to knock loudly because the door is heavy.
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Already a Fed governor, Bowman will become one of the central bank’s key leaders, in charge of banking regulation. The Senate Banking Committee voted along party lines to advance her nomination as vice chair for supervision, and the full Republican-controlled chamber gave her its nod on Wednesday. The industry has praised Bowman’s nomination, highlighting her drive to scale back a massive bank-capital proposal that it says will hurt lending, erode its competitive edge and potentially reduce economic growth. Critics are concerned that she’s too focused on what banks want — at a time when the White House is embarking on a deregulatory drive, threatening the Fed’s independence and introducing tariff-fueled economic uncertainty that could put the financial system under pressure.
The timing of her nomination was due to Michael Barr’s surprise announcement that he would leave the job. Barr stepped down in February while remaining a governor, even though his term as vice chair extended to July 2026. He wanted to avoid a protracted legal fight over a possible demotion by Trump.
Bowman, who asks everyone she meets to please call her “Miki,” quickly made her interest in the job clear. She talked to state bank regulators who had lobbied to get her onto the Fed board in 2018, according to people familiar with the matter who didn’t want to be identified discussing the private communications. She asked some of them to signal to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent that he should push Trump to fill Barr’s seat rather than leave it vacant, and pitched herself as a regulatory insider who wouldn’t even need to wait for Senate confirmation to get started. Industry players like the Independent Community Bankers of America and the American Bankers Association also rallied behind her. Bowman herself points to the experience she has gained in an eventful last seven years.