Friday, November 15, 2024

The public (and sometimes messy) race to become Trump’s Treasury secretary

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The public drama surrounding most of Donald Trump’s cabinet choices so far came after they were announced, but not so much for the closely watched contest to become the next Treasury secretary.

The frenzy of that race is playing out before a pick is even made.

The two leading contenders — between private entreaties and Fox News appearances and op-eds — are making a case directly to the president-elect as well as through public signals to perhaps sway markets to their side.

Hanging over the entire process is President-elect Trump himself, who has already surprised political observers multiple times this week by discarding conventional choices for other posts and announcing nominees that few saw coming.

“Trump of course likes to do things a bit differently, as we’ve noticed,” said Puck News founding partner William D. Cohan on the latest episode of Yahoo Finance’s Capitol Gains podcast.

One notable subplot in recent days surrounds Howard Lutnick, CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, who is heading up Trump’s transition team but has also emerged as a candidate in his own right.

He’s “interested in pulling a bit of a Dick Cheney here,” Cohan added in reference to how Cheney famously headed up George W. Bush’s vice presidential search before securing the job for himself.

Howard Lutnick, co-chair of the Trump 2024 Transition Team, speaks at a rally for at Madison Square Garden in New York on October 27. (ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images) · ANGELA WEISS via Getty Images

In addition to Lutnick, the other most oft-mentioned name these days is Scott Bessent, a former Soros Fund Management investing chief and regular campaign trail partner of Trump.

Bessent has long been considered a frontrunner for the job and appears set to meet with Trump Friday at Mar-a-Lago for a second face-to-face conversation.

There’s also a whole stable of dark horse candidates who have appeared on varied lists and could rise in the hours and days ahead depending on Trump’s preferences, from former trade representative Robert Lighthizer to Blackstone CEO Stephen Schwarzman to former National Economic Council director Gary Cohn to Fox Business Network host Larry Kudlow.

On Tuesday, billionaire investor John Paulson took his hat out of the ring for contention for the job, saying “complex financial obligations” would keep him in the private sector. JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon also made it clear Thursday he won’t be working for Trump in the coming years.

Much of the lobbying has taken place behind closed doors as Trump assembles his advisers at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida to pick his team — and then quickly post them on Truth Social.

Aides have been circumspect, with Karoline Leavitt, a Trump-Vance transition spokesperson, telling Yahoo Finance only that “President-elect Trump is making decisions on who will serve in his second administration. Those decisions will be announced when they are made.”

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