财政部任命官员推动将特朗普头像印在全新的250美元纸币上
Treasury Appointees Push To Put Trump's Face On A Brand-New $250 Bill

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/treasury-appointees-push-put-trumps-face-brand-new-250-bill

据《华盛顿邮报》报道,两名财政部政治任命官员曾向雕版印刷局(Bureau of Engraving and Printing)的工作人员施压,要求他们为一张印有唐纳德·特朗普肖像、未经授权的250美元纸币开发原型。该计划遭到内部强烈抵制,雕版印刷局局长帕特里夏·索利梅内(Patricia Solimene)警告称,该项目缺乏法律依据,且需要数年时间才能研发完成。 拟议中的纸币违反了联邦法律,该法律禁止在美钞上印制在世人物,并限制了法定面额。尽管未获国会批准,据报道,该项目仍直接得到了特朗普本人的反馈,他与艺术家伊恩·亚历山大(Iain Alexander)合作进行了设计。 索利梅内拒绝推进该项目后,于4月被调离职位,并由推动该法案的任命官员之一接替。尽管财政部坚称只有在国会通过立法后才会推进该纸币,但已证实计划发行印有特朗普签名的100美元纸币。目前,在众议院授权发行250美元纸币的立法尝试已陷入停滞,财政部也拒绝了在获得正式授权前印制该货币的请求。

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原文

Two political appointees at the Treasury Department spent months pressing Bureau of Engraving and Printing staff to develop prototypes for a $250 bill bearing Donald Trump's portrait, even as bureau officials repeatedly warned them the project had no legal foundation and could take nearly a decade to execute properly, the Washington Post reports.

U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach and senior adviser Mike Brown, both political appointees, began pushing bureau staff last year to prepare designs for the note. Beach handed over mock-up materials in August and September, including a design placing Trump's face at the center of the bill, flanked by Trump's and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's signatures. The effort would mark the first time a living person appeared on U.S. currency since 1866, and current employees, speaking anonymously out of fear of retaliation, claim the internal pressure was real.

The artist behind the designs, British painter Iain Alexander, said he discussed the project directly with Trump and received feedback on specifics. "He likes to call me his favorite British artist," Alexander said.

Trump reportedly pushed for American flag colors and a "250" logo tied to the nation's semiquincentennial, and Alexander said Trump "absolutely loved" the proposed reverse side of the note, which would feature a women's liberation theme with Betsy Ross.

Bureau director Patricia "Patty" Solimene, a 24-year Army veteran and the first woman to lead the bureau, told Beach and Brown plainly that the project was unauthorized. One employee described her position this way: "She had told them we're not authorized to do this. We can't progress any further, and all the stakeholders have not even met to discuss the next steps." The same employee noted that "currency often takes six to eight years to produce a new bill, particularly one of such high value."

Solimene was reassigned from her position on April 27. The following day, she sent a farewell email to staff that read, in part, "The buck stopped here," and acknowledged the move was "not my choice." Brown subsequently became the bureau's acting director. Treasury declined to comment on the circumstances of Solimene's reassignment, and the White House did not respond to requests for comment.

Legally, the proposed bill faces several obstacles. Federal law restricts living individuals from appearing on U.S. currency, a rule that has been on the books for over 150 years. Beyond the portrait question, the bureau is authorized to produce only specific denominations, and $250 is not among them. Former bureau director Larry R. Felix explained that "a $250 note is not statutorily authorized" without congressional action, adding, "The secretary has to be given authority to do that." Alexander said he, too, had been told legislation was necessary.

And it is unlikely that Congress would approve it. Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.) previously introduced a bill in February 2025 directing the Treasury to issue $250 Federal Reserve notes featuring Trump's image, tied to the 250th anniversary celebrations beginning in July. The bill stalled in the House Financial Services Committee and did not receive a hearing.

A department spokesperson said the bureau is "conducting appropriate planning and due diligence" and would proceed with a commemorative $250 note only if Congress passes the required legislation. Treasury also said Beach has "never asked staff to print the bill before congressional passage." At the same time, the department confirmed Bessent would recognize Trump's "historic achievements" by adding his signature to existing currency, noting no law prohibits a sitting president's signature on bills. Solimene and her staff had separately agreed to print $100 bills featuring Trump's signature, which employees said were already in production at the bureau's Washington facility.

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