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- Alarm grows as Israel launches new 'extensive' strikes on Lebanon
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- Biden warns against clinging to power in UN farewell
- Alarm grows as Israel launches new strikes on Lebanon
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- Multiple arrests after US woman uses machine-assisted suicide in Switzerland
- Dubois will next fight Joshua or Usyk, 'whoever pays me the most'
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- UN chief warns Lebanon on 'brink' as world leaders gather
- Surprise start for Libbok as Etzebeth set for Springboks record
- Ten Hag says expanded schedules make injuries 'almost unavoidable'
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- UN says tens of thousands flee Lebanon strikes
US Senate confirms Brainard as Fed vice chair
The US Senate on Tuesday confirmed Lael Brainard to serve as the Federal Reserve's vice chair, but Covid infections among Democratic senators allowed Republicans to block a vote on Lisa Cook becoming the first Black woman on the board.
Brainard, who has served on the Fed board since 2014, was promoted to her new post by a 52-43 vote with the support of seven Republicans.
But the upper house of Congress failed to hold a final vote on Cook's nomination, amid Republican opposition and because Democrats, who hold a slim edge, were unable to force the issue since two senators announced they have Covid, as does Vice President Kamala Harris who could cast a tie-breaking vote.
Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio blasted Republicans.
"It is disappointing that Senate Republicans are exploiting the absences of our colleagues to stop a qualified Black woman – the first African-American woman ever nominated to serve on the Federal Reserve Board," he said in a statement.
"Once again, they've decided that scoring political points is more important than serving the public and bringing down prices for American families," he said, vowing that the Senate will reconsider Cook's nomination "expeditiously."
Fed Chair Jerome Powell is still awaiting confirmation for a second term at the helm of the central bank, which is set to raise interest rates aggressively to combat record-high inflation.
Even Brainard, who is generally less hawkish on inflation, supports a series of rate hikes to try to cool prices that have risen to a 40-year high.
Powell, a Republican, is still leading the central bank but his term officially expired February 4, and Philip Jefferson also is awaiting confirmation to join its Board of Governors.
The powerful post of Fed vice chair for supervision, which oversees the nation's banks, remains in question after President Joe Biden's nominee Sarah Bloom Raskin withdrew amid opposition from a key Democratic senator made her confirmation unlikely.
R.Adler--BTB