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Obama taps Lew to lead Treasury

By Zachary A. Goldfarb, Jim Tankersley and Chris Cillizza / The Washington Post
Published: January 10. 2013 4:00AM PST
Lew

Lew

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama recently said he would love to hire a top executive into his administration. But for the job of Treasury secretary, he didn’t pick a corporate executive, a famous economist or a former politician — he tapped his trusted adviser, White House Chief of Staff Jacob Lew, an expert on the nation’s ongoing budget wars.

Obama chose Lew to take over from Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, the president’s longest-serving economic adviser, according to two people familiar with the pick. The selection of Lew signals that Obama’s second term will not initially focus on big new ideas to create jobs or expand government investment in the economy.

Rather, it will involve a sustained conflict with congressional Republicans over the nation’s finances. The government is likely to face a deadline to raise the $16.4 trillion federal debt ceiling no later than March 1 — as well as a series of deep and automatic spending cuts known as sequestration set to begin around the same time.

These upcoming battles will once again pit Democrats’ economic vision against that of Republicans. Democrats say they want to raise taxes on the wealthy to shrink the deficit but reduce government spending sparingly so as to preserve funding for domestic priorities such as education. Republicans oppose new taxees, saying they would crimp economic growth, and favor deep cuts to spending.

Lew, 57, is a veteran of these fights. He was formerly the budget director for Obama and President Bill Clinton. He has been negotiating compromises over taxes and spending since the 1980s, when he was a top aide to then-House Speaker Thomas “Tip" O’Neill Jr., D-Mass.

“Jack Lew is a great budget man taking over Treasury at exactly the moment that budget and tax issues have become the dominant economic issue in Washington," said Austan Goolsbee, a former chairman of Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers.

Some Democrats say that although Lew may be the best choice at the moment, the White House must address unemployment and keep pushing for measures to create jobs.

“Jack Lew is the guy you’d want there for upcoming fiscal deals, but it’s also very important to have folks on the team who will push the Keynesian, or jobs, imperative from the inside, even if that means a temporarily larger budget deficit," said Jared Bernstein, a former White House economic adviser.

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