The National League of Cities holds a summit on housing beginning at 8:30 a.m.. … The Peterson Institute for International Economics holds a virtual discussion on audit firms at 9 a.m. …The Senate Banking Committee holds a hearing on the nomination of Scott Turner to be Housing and Urban Development secretary at 10 a.m…The Senate Finance Committee holds a hearing on the nomination of Scott Bessent to be Treasury secretary at 10:30 a.m…. Bessent faces first Senate test: Bessent, the hedge fund manager who emerged last year as a top Trump economic adviser, faces Senate Finance this morning in his quest to become Treasury secretary. The confirmation hearing could offer the most high-profile clash yet on Capitol Hill over Trump’s sweeping economic agenda days before he’s sworn into office. What to expect: Senate Republicans are all in on Bessent, even as some in the GOP – and Wall Street – have reservations about Trump’s maximalist rhetoric on tariffs. Some moderate Democratic votes might be up for grabs for Bessent while most progressives are expected to oppose the wealthy financier and Trump megadonor. Bessent plans to make the case that Trump’s economic agenda will “usher in a new, more balanced era of prosperity,” according to excerpts of the prepared testimony. He’ll make a call to “secure supply chains that are vulnerable to strategic competitors” and “carefully deploy sanctions as part of a whole-of-government approach to address our national security requirements.” On taxes, Bessent will call for making permanent the 2017 GOP tax law along with “new pro-growth policies to reduce the tax burden on American manufacturers service workers and seniors,” a nod to Trump’s various campaign tax proposals.
On Trump’s plans for tariffs, Bessent plans to say that “Trump was the first president in modern times to recognize the need to change our trade policy and stand up for American workers.” Sen. Mike Crapo, the Republican committee chair, has vowed to usher Bessent’s nomination quickly through the process. “Bessent has worked for the last three decades as one of the sharpest minds in the global finance industry,” Crapo plans to say this morning, praising his “background, experience, and character.” Democrats, meanwhile, have an opening to lay down a marker as they confront the first of Trump’s economic nominees on the Hill. They’re planning to focus heavily on criticizing the 2017 Republican tax law that Bessent will be responsible for negotiating with Congress to extend.
Sen. Ron Wyden, the top Democrat on the committee, plans to say that Bessent would be at the center of advancing Trump’s “class war on typical American families” through a tax plan Wyden said would favor the rich. — To that end, Benjamin Guggenheim reports that the Democrats are preparing a fresh line of attack on Bessent. A memo prepared by Wyden’s staff alleges the hedge fund executive improperly claimed nearly $2 million in tax losses and owes nearly $1 million in taxes related to his firm, Key Square Group. A spokesperson for the Trump transition called the claims "meritless." Meet Scott Turner — Motivational speaker and former NFL player Scott Turner is poised to be the next secretary of HUD. He’ll be tasked with solving an intractable nationwide housing shortage that is driving up inflation and activating voters during the 2024 presidential campaign. Unlike other members of Trump’s economic team — including Bessent, Kevin Hassett or Stephen Miran — Turner remains a relative unknown on matters of policy. On Thursday morning, lawmakers on Senate Banking will finally have an opportunity to hear him outline his playbook on the record. Turner led the White House Opportunity and Revitalization Council during Trump’s first term, where he oversaw a multi-agency effort to encourage investment in distressed communities through opportunity zone incentives created through the 2017 tax law. And while those efforts have elicited praise from homebuilders, mortgage lenders, insurers and other industry groups — as well as prominent Trump proxies like Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fl.) — he has a lower profile than many other Trump appointees. A spokesperson for Senate Banking Chair Tim Scott said the South Carolina Republican “looks forward to hearing Scott Turner's vision for reforming our failed federal housing policies to increase access to affordable housing, remove burdensome red tape, and put more Americans on the path towards homeownership.” Parting words — Bloomberg’s Josh Wingrove and Akayla Gardner: “President Joe Biden warned Americans of a ‘dangerous concentration of power’ in the hands of a ‘very few ultra-wealthy people’ and the impact he feared it would have on the country’s democracy as he delivered a farewell address Wednesday from the Oval Office.”
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