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Rlzn Former top defense aide Kash Patel, three other witnesses appear before January 6 select committee
WASHINGTON ndash; Federal Reserve board member Daniel Tarullo, a key official guiding bank regulation efforts, will resign this spring, the Fed sai <a href=https://www.stanley-quencher.co.uk>stanley thermos</a> d Friday.Tarullorsquo  decision will clear the way for President Donald Trump to select a candidate for the bank supervision position. Trump is likely to choose someone more in line with his desires to roll back the regulations put in place by the Dodd-Frank Act, which overhauled bank supervision in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.Tarullo said in a short resignation letter to Trump that he planned to step down on or around April 5, 2017. He did not provide a reason for his decision.                                        The Fed board currently has two vacancies because Congress refused to confirm two n <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.ca>stanley mugs</a> ominees of former President Barack Obama. Tarullorsquo  departure will mean Mr. Trump will have the chance to fill three Fed vacancies in his first months in office.                                                                                   <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.fr>stanley mug</a>                       How Trump rolling back financial regulations may impact consumers          01:54                                                                      The Dodd-Frank Act created a position of vice chairman for bank supervision. But the Obama administration never filled the post, reflecting in part the sharp disagreements between Democrats and Republicans in Congress over how the financial system should be regulated. Instead, Tarullo has effective Wdto Freedom s Watch Launches Robocalls Against Dems
To convince Congress he has nothing to hide, former President Bill Clinton says three of his closest ex-aides are free to tell a House committee whatever they wish about the clemencies he granted in his last hours in the White House.   Clinton has waived his claim to executive privilege, which could have kept his former aides from telling lawmakers everything they know about the pardon of billionaire Marc Rich, who has lived in Switzerland since just before he was indicted in 1983 on charges of tax evasion, fraud and making illegal oil deals with Iran.   Rich declined to be a witness before the House Government Reform Committee, which is trying to determine whether money played a role in the p <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.com.de>stanley kaffeebecher</a> ardons of Rich and others.                                           Rich also refused Tuesday to free his lawyers from attorney-client privilege that would allow them to share details on the pursuit of clemency. If he did, his lawyer said it could be later argued in criminal or civil proceedings that <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.es>stanley taza</a>  the privilege no longer exists. The Rich pardon is the subject of a criminal investigation by U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White in New York City.          The Clinton FileRelated Stories on CBSNewsClinton s Pardon PartyInteractive FeatureOh, Brother!By Dotty LynchClinton Pard <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.co.nz>stanley cup</a> ons ListRead  Em All HereWho s Hugh Meet Mr. RodhamThen Came HughBy Dick Meyer Time To Move Forward Bush Steers ClearA Georgia JabCarter Blasts ClintonWhy He Did ItClinton Defends PardonThe FugitiveMeet Marc Rich Marc s Money
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