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Four women join CFTC in U.S. Senate vote hailed as historic

By Pete Schroeder WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Four women will take seats on the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, returning the derivatives regulator to full strength, after a unanimous U.S. Senate vote hailed as historic by the chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee.

By Pete Schroeder

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Four women will take seats on the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, returning the derivatives regulator to full strength, after a unanimous U.S. Senate vote hailed as historic by the chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee.

“This confirmation makes history because all four nominees are women, three of whom are women of color,” Senator Debbie Stabenow, the chair, said in a statement.

Senators on Monday confirmed President Joe Biden’s nominations of Kristin Johnson and Christy Goldsmith Romero to Democratic seats on the bipartisan commission and Summer Kristine Mersinger and Caroline Pham to Republican seats.

The five-member commission was being run only by Chairman Rostin Behnam and Commissioner Dawn Stump, who has said she intends to step down from the agency when her term expires in April. Behnam remains as chairman.

The agency polices commodities markets that have become increasingly tumultuous amid a slew of Western sanctions applied to Russia over Ukraine.

The agency is looking also to carve out a central role in monitoring burgeoning cryptocurrency markets, where the agency already monitors some crypto-related products.

(Reporting by Pete Schroeder; Editing by Howard Goller)

By Reuters

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